Quotes about Symbolism
When written in Chinese, the word "crisis" is composed of two characters. One represents danger, and the other represents opportunity.
- John F. Kennedy
Billie offers to dig the garbage pit but does so by digging a neat tiny coffinshaped grave instead of just a garbage hole—Even Dave Wain blinks to see it—It's exactly the size fit for putting a little dead Elliott in it, Dave is thinking the same thing I am I can tell by a glance he gives me—We've all read Freud sufficiently to understand something there
- Jack Kerouac
Marriage is like a golden ring in a chain, whose beginning is a glance and whose ending is eternity.
- Khalil Gibran
A man's life of any worth is a continual allegory, and very few eyes can see the mystery of his life, a life like the scriptures, figurative.
- John Keats
All the birds that fly hold the thread of infinity in their claws. Germination
- Victor Hugo
We tap our toes to chaste love songs about the silvery moon without recognizing them as hymns to copulation.
- Barbara Kingsolver
The symbolism seemed so apt. The same technology that can propel apocalyptic weapons from continent to continent would enable the first human voyage to another planet. It was a choice of fitting mythic power: to embrace the planet named after, rather than the madness ascribed to, the god of war.
- Carl Sagan
The people who wrote down the Bible and the people who wrote down the Mahayana sutras were artists. They used images to express their insights.
- Thich Nhat Hanh
Reality and symbolism in the sacraments ... Only if we reject false dilemmas ... it will be possible to delve deeper, to discern the sovereign manner in which God stoops down to us, taking up simple earthly elements and using them for the affirmation and strengthening of our faith.
- GC Berkouwer
and he whose intense thinking thus makes him a Prometheus; a vulture feeds upon that heart for ever; that vulture the very creature he creates.
- Herman Melville
Wherefore, for all these things, we account the whale immortal in his species, however perishable in his individuality
- Herman Melville
But not yet have we solved the incantation of this whiteness, and learned why it appeals with such power to the soul; and more strange and far more portentous—why, as we have seen, it is at once the most meaning symbol of spiritual things, nay, the very veil of the Christian's Deity; and yet should be as it is, the intensifying agent in things the most appalling to mankind.
- Herman Melville