"Words bounce. Words, if you let them, will do what they want to do and what they have to do."
"To be running breathlessly, but not yet arrived, is itself delightful, a suspended moment of living hope."
Source: Anne Carson (2014). “Eros the Bittersweet: An Essay”, p.11, Princeton University Press
About the author
Anne Carson
Poet
Anne Carson is a Canadian poet and essayist known for her innovative works that blend poetry, prose, and classical themes, particularly in 'Autobiography of Red'.
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"As Sokrates tells it, your story begins the moment Eros enters you. That incursion is the biggest risk of your life. How you handle it is an index of the quality, wisdom, and decorum of the things inside you. As you handle it you come into contact with what is inside you, in a sudden and startling way. You perceive what you are, what you lack, what you could be."
"One of the principle qualities of pain is that it demands an explanation."
"The words we read and words we write never say exactly what we mean. The people we love are never just as we desire them. The two symbola never perfectly match. Eros is in between."
"You remember too much," my mother said to me recently. "Why hold onto all that?" And I said, "where can I put it down?"
"Eros is an issue of boundaries. He exists because certain boundaries do. In the interval between reach and grasp, between glance and counterglance, between ‘I love you’ and ‘I love you too,’ the absent presence of desire comes alive. But the boundaries of time and glance and I love you are only aftershocks of the main, inevitable boundary that creates Eros: the boundary of flesh and self between you and me. And it is only, suddenly, at the moment when I would dissolve that boundary, I realize I never can."