Date: 1954
"The furniture of our minds consists of what we hear, read, observe, discuss and think each day."
preview | full record— Watson, Thomas J. (1874-1956)
Date: April 1955
"The something gloom Of my soul's deep and dreary catacomb."
preview | full record— Huxley, Aldous (1894-1963)
Date: April 1955
"'The something gloom,' she declaimed triumphantly, 'Of my soul's irremediable tomb.'"
preview | full record— Huxley, Aldous (1894-1963)
Date: 1955
"The courtyards of the inner heart go round / And round, so sure are they / Where they will end; the brick / Convolutions enter and extend / The individual life, and come to end."
preview | full record— Miles, Josephine (1911-1985)
Date: 1957
"This direction, of course, is towards the delineation of the domestic life and the private experience of the characters who belong to it: the two go together--we get inside their minds as well as inside their houses."
preview | full record— Watt, Ian (1917-1999)
Date: 1959
Dostoevsky advances "in the labyrinth of the unnatural, into the cellarage and morass of the soul."
preview | full record— Steiner, George (b. 1929)
Date: 1959
"Look, the fixed stars, all just alike / as lack-land atoms split apart, / and the Republic summons Ike, / the mausoleum in her heart."
preview | full record— Lowell, Robert (1917-1977)
Date: 1959
"And I believe in the spurred flame, / Those racing tongues, but cannot come / Out of my heart's unbroken room."
preview | full record— Hill, Geoffrey (b. 1932)
Date: 1961
"A highly symbolic position, which will doubtless remain his until our own day, if we are wililng to admit that what was formerly a visible fortress of order has now become a castle of conscience."
preview | full record— Foucault, Michel (1926-1984)
Date: 1962
"And let me add here how much I was honored a fortnight later to meet in Washington that limp-looking, absent-minded, shabbily dressed splendid American gentleman whose mind was a library and not a debating hall."
preview | full record— Nabokov, Vladimir (1899-1977)