20 Quotes About The Stars

Love’s harbinger…
Paradise Lost, II. XI
Of the night for the morrow,
The devotion to something afar
From the sphere of our sorrow.
Percy Bysshe Shelley
Yet I felt my will and desire being
Turned, like a wheel, all at one speed,
By the Love which moves the sun and other stars.
Dante, Paradiso
One sees the mud, and one the stars.
Frederick Langbridge
We are left alone with our day,
and the time is short and
History… may say ‘Alas.’ but cannot help or pardon.
W.H. Auden, ‘Spain, 1937’
Look we for any kinship with the stars.
George Meredith
Those green-robed senators of mighty night,
Tall oaks, branch-charmèd by the earnest stars,
Dream, and so dream all night without a stir…
John Keats, ‘Hyperion,’ Book I.
(Through tribulation, the rough road, to the stars.)
Seneca the Younger
Blueblack, with the much-poked periods of stars
Letting in the light, peephole after peephole—
A bonewhite light, like death, behind all things.
Sylvia Plath, ‘Insomniac’
Fair as a star, when only one
Is shining in the sky.
William Wordsworth
Get with child a mandrake roote,
Tell me where all past years are,
Or who cleft the Devil’s foot;
Teach me to hear mermaides singing,
Or to keep off envies stinging,
And find
What wind
Serves to advance an honest mind.
…If thou be’est born to strange sights,
Things invisible to see,
Ride ten thousand days and nights
Till age snow white hairs on thee;
Thou, when thou return’st, wilt tell me
All strange wonders that befell thee…
John Donne, ‘Song: Goe and catche a falling starre’ (ca. 1597)
(No Googling was committed in writing this article; all quotes were either taken from memory, then double-checked, or were taken from the Penguin Dictionary of Quotations (1960, edited by J..M. Cohen), which I found lying in an abandoned bookcase in a halfway house, and which itself, though, is like a prehistoric version of the internet, the Dictionary is, with quotes arranged by subject in a very tiny index with the difference that it takes ten hours to find anything…) [tc-mark]
