"You need me like ice needs the mountain
On which it breeds. Like print needs the page.
You move in me like the tongue in a mouth,
Like wind in the leaves of summer trees,
Gust-fists, hollow except for movement and desire
Which is movement. You taste me the way the claws
Of a pigeon taste that window-ledge on which it sits,
The way water tastes rust in the pipes it shuttles through
Beneath a city, unfolding and luminous with industry.
Before you were born, the table of elements
Was lacking, and I as a noble gas floated
Free of attachment. Before you were born,
The sun and the moon were paper-thin plates
Some machinist at his desk merely clicked into place."
— Monica Ferrell, Rime Riche.
"Love one another, but make not a bond of love:
Let it rather be a moving sea between the shores of your souls.
Fill each other’s cup but drink not from one cup.
Give one another of your bread but eat not from the same loaf.
Sing and dance together and be joyous, but let each one of you be alone,
Even as the strings of a lute are alone though they quiver with the same music."
— Khalil Gibran, The Prophet.
"Something made them laugh, staring into each other’s faces with joy and triumph pouring into their minds. The night was inconceivably bright and glamourous, and the saffron flood in the western sky like a reflection from the doorway of paradise. Hand in hand they ran down the street and vanished into the dark maze of alleys that led to the city."
— Ruth Park, The Harp in the South (pp.170)
"Mumma gave a silent groan, for she knew so well that the sort of love which wanted to serve the beloved was the sort you never escaped. It was around your neck, a silken cord of inconceivable strength, till the moment you died, and probably afterward."
— Ruth Park, The Harp in the South (pp.167)
"She was sharply aware of their exact location to each other and the world, in her mind’s eye she saw the sea lapping on the beach below them, encircling the island and stretching for thousands of lonely miles into the darkness, and above them the stars swinging over their heads, fierce as frozen lightning. The two of them were like a small luminous spot in the middle of the endless darkness, the night arching over them millions of light-years into the past."
— Rosie Scott, Nights with Grace (pp.41)
"Life is so often unfair and painful and love is hard to find and you have to take it whenever and wherever you can get it, no matter how brief it is or how it ends."
— Jenna Blum, Those Who Save Us.