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Quote by Gwendolyn MacEwen

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Gwendolyn MacEwen
Gwendolyn MacEwen

Gwendolyn MacEwen was a Canadian poet known for her innovative and experimental style. Born on September 1, 1941, in Toronto, Ontario, she explored themes of identity, love, and the human condition in her work. MacEwen's poetry often incorporated elements of surrealism and symbolism, and she was a prominent figure in the Canadian literary scene of the 1960s and 1970s. She passed away on November 29, 1987. more

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“The most degrading of human passions is the fear of death. It tears away the restraints and the conventions which alone make social life possible to man; it reveals the brute in him which underlies them all. In the desperate hand-to-hand struggle for life there is no element of nobility. He who is engaged upon it throws aside honor, he throws aside self-respect, he throws aside all that would make victory worth having - he asks for nothing but bare life.”

“I've been busy with a long memorandum about the whole of our central Arabian relations, which I've just finished. It will now go to all the High and Mighty in every part. One can't do much more than sit and record if one is of my sex, devil take it; one can get the things recorded in the right way and that means, I hope, that unconsciously people will judge events as you think they ought to be judged. But it's small change for doing things, very small change I feel at times.”

“... at times they are good and quiet company, the dead; they will not interrupt your musings, but when they speak, whether they be Jews or Turks or heathens, they will speak in a tongue all can understand. there are even countries where the moving, breathing people are less intelligible, dwell in a world further apart form you, than that silent population under the earth.”