Date: 1959
"(A slight miracle might cleanse / His brain / Of all attachments, claw-roots of sense)"
preview | full record— Hill, Geoffrey (b. 1932)
Date: 1959, 1964
"run your finger along your no-moss mind / that's not a thought that's soot"
preview | full record— O'Hara, Francis Russell "Frank" (1926-1966)
Date: 1960
"Different persons growing up in the same language are like different bushes trimmed and trained to take the shape of identical elephants."
preview | full record— Quine, W. V. O. (1908-2000)
Date: 1960
"Physical things generally, however remote, become known to us only through the effects which they help induce at our sensory surfaces."
preview | full record— Quine, W. V. O. (1908-2000)
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)
Date: 1962
"Sandy screwed her eyes even smaller in the effort of seeing with her mind."
preview | full record— Spark, Muriel (1918-2006)
Date: 1962
"By the end of the year it happened that she had quite lost interest in the man himself, but was deeply absorbed in his mind, from which she extracted, among other things, his religion as a pith from a husk."
preview | full record— Spark, Muriel (1918-2006)
Date: 1962
"Her mind was as full of religion as a night sky is full of things visible and invisible. She left the man and took his religion and became a nun in the course of time."
preview | full record— Spark, Muriel (1918-2006)