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Tonight I think again of many days that are sacrificed for one night of love. Of the waste and the fruit of the waste, of plenty and of fire. And how painlessly-time.
Yehuda Amichai
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Yehuda Amichai
Age: 76 †
Born: 1924
Born: May 3
Died: 2000
Died: September 22
Educator
Novelist
Playwright
Poet
Translator
Writer
Kreisfreie Stadt Würzburg
Love
Plenty
Think
Fruit
Thinking
Waste
Days
Fire
Night
Painlessly
Many
Sacrificed
Time
Tonight
More quotes by Yehuda Amichai
Behind all this, some great happiness is hiding.
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The phrase I like to use to describe my sense of time-a play on comparative literature - is comparative time.
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The memory of my father is wrapped up in white paper, like sandwiches taken for a day of work. Just as a magician takes towers and rabbits out of his hat, he drew love from his small body.
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Love is like a reservoir of kindness and pleasure, like silos and pools during a siege.
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From the place where we are right, flowers will not grow in the spring.
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Every intelligent person, whether hes an artist or not - a mathematician, a doctor, a scientist - possesses a poetic way of seeing and describing the world.
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I try to stay a civilian, to live as a human, not as a poet.
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God has pity on kindergarten children
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The soul inside me is the last foreign language I'm learning.
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I've often said that all poetry is political. This is because real poems deal with a human response to reality and politics is part of reality, history in the making. Even if a poet writes about sitting in a glass house drinking tea, it reflects politics.
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I’ve never been in those places where I’ve never been and never will be, I have no share in the infinity of light-years and dark-years, but the darkness is mine, and the light, and my time is my own.
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Even if a poet writes about sitting in a glass house drinking tea, it reflects politics.
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I was a very religious child - I went to synagogue at least once, sometimes twice, a day. And I remember my religiousness as good - I think religion is good for children, especially educated children, because it allows for imagination, a whole imaginative world apart from the practical world.
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What are you going to do now? You'll collect loves like stamps. You've got doubles and no one will trade with you. And you've got damaged ones.
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And as we stray further from love, we multiply the words. Had we remained together we could have become a silence.
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I think the end is endless. It's either a big black hole or a big white light or both together. But it's totally meaningless, because even if someone would explain it, I wouldn't understand it.
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The world of religion isn't a logical world that's why children like it. It's a world of worked-out fantasies, very similar to children's stories or fairy tales.
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Knowledge of peace passes from country to country, like children's games, which are so much alike, everywhere.
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And I said to myself: That's true, hope needs to be like barbed wire to keep out despair, hope must be a mine field.
Yehuda Amichai
There are two languages: one as things seem to us and the other of knowledge.
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