Quotes about Longing
She has never been in the presence, before, of two people who are in love with each other. She feels like a stray child, ragged and cold, with her nose pressed to a lighted window. A toy-store window, a bakery window, with fancy cakes and decorated cookies. Poverty prevents her entrance. These things are for other people; nothing for her.
— Margaret Atwood
But also I'm hungry. This is monstrous, but nevertheless it's true. Death makes me hungry. Maybe it's because I've been emptied; or maybe it's the body's way of seeing to it that I remain alive, continue to repeat its bedrock prayer: I am, I am. I am, still. I want to go to bed, make love, right now. I think of the word relish. I could eat a horse.
— Margaret Atwood
My heart would hear her and beat, Were it earth in an earthy bed; My dust would hear her and beat, Had I lain for a century dead; Would start and tremble under her feet, And blossom in purple and red. —ALFRED, LORD TENNYSON, Maud, 1855.
— Margaret Atwood
I watched your snapshot fade for twenty years.
— Margaret Atwood
she'd have been gnawing her way through his bedroom walls to sink her avid fingers into his youthful flesh.
— Margaret Atwood
Part of the life she should have had is just a gap, it isn't there, it's nothing.
— Margaret Atwood
She was something of his own that he had lost.
— Margaret Atwood
But what if she discovers the truth? What he suspects is the truth. That he's patchwork, a tin man, his heart stuffed with sawdust. He thinks of her waiting for him, somewhere else, an island, subtropical, not muggy, her long hair waving in the sea breeze, a red hibiscus tucked behind one ear. If he's lucky she'll wait till that happens, till he can get there to be with her.
— Margaret Atwood
What would that be like - to long, to yearn for someone who is right there before your eyes, day in and day out?
— Margaret Atwood
What well-to-do and once-young, once-beautiful woman or man, cranked up on hormonal supplements and shot full of vitamins but hampered by the unforgiving mirror, wouldn't sell their house, their gated retirement villa, their kids, and their soul to get a second kick at the sexual can?
— Margaret Atwood
Whenever someone comes in from outside, with the wind in their clothes and the cold on their cheeks, I feel like burying my head under the blankets to keep from thinking, "When will we be allowed to breathe fresh air again?
— Anne Frank
Everyone here is dreading the great terror known as winter.
— Anne Frank