Got a light? See? Careful. I'm everything you ever dreamed.
Author
Ali Smith
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Ali Smith currently has 38 indexed quotes and 9 linked works on QuoteMust. This page is the canonical destination for that author archive.
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Outside the leaves on the trees constricted slightly they were the deep done green of the beginning of autumn. It was a Sunday in September. There would only be four. The clouds were high and the swallows would be here for another month or so before they left for the south before they returned again next summer.
It is important to know the stories and histories of things, even if all we know is that we don't know.
A game one of my sisters will play with me in my first year of being alive is called Good Baby, Bad Baby. This consists of being told I am a good baby until I smile and laugh, then being told I am a bad baby until I burst into tears. This training will stand me in good stead all through my life.
Above the keyhole the door has a latch. It is pretending to be an authentic old latch. The door is pretending to be an authentic old door. Maybe everything there is isn't authentic any more. Maybe everything there is is a kind of pretending.
Then I saw her smile so close to my eye that there was nothing to see but the smile and the thought came into my head that I__ never been inside a smile before. Who__ have thought being inside a smile would be so ancient and so modern both at once
And it was always the stories that needed the telling that gave us the rope we could cross any river with. They balanced us high above any crevasse. They made us be natural acrobats. They made us brave. They met us well. They changed us. It was in their nature to.
Democracy or reading, democracy of space: our public library tradition, wherever we live in the wide world, was incredibly hard-won for us by the generations before us and ought to be protected, not just for ourselves but in the name of every generation after us.
Maybe it's easier to talk to someone who won't ever actually hear what you say.
He was the most beautiful boy I had ever seen in my life. But he really looked like a girl. She was the most beautiful boy I__ ever seen in my life.
It is perhaps rather fine, after all, being dead. Highly underrated in the modern western world.
It makes Brooke feel strange in her stomach. It is like the feeling when she reads a book like the one about the man with the bomb, or thinks a sentence, just any old sentence like: the girl ran across the park, and unless you add the describing word then the man or the girl are definitely not black, they are white, even though no one has mentioned white, like when you take the the out of a headline and people just assume it's there anyway. Though if it were a sentence about Brooke herself you'd have to add the equivalent describing word and that's how you'd know. The black girl ran across the park.
She had not expected, out in the world, to find herself quite so much the wrong sort of person.
I wished that my own bones were unbound, I wished they were mingling, picked clean by fish, with the bones of another body, a body my bones and heart and soul had loved with unfathomable certainty for decades, and both of us down deep now, lost to everything but the fact of bare bones on a dark seabed.
Is there never any escaping the junkshop of the self?
Cause nobody's the slightest idea who we are, or who we were, not even we ourselves - except, that is, in the glimmer of a moment of fair business between strangers, or the nod of knowing and agreement between friends. Other than these, we go out anonymous into the insect air and all we are is the dust of colour, brief engineerings of wings towards a glint of light on a blade of grass or a leaf in a summer dark.
She looked at the girl in the chair and she saw what youth was. It was oblivious, with things in its ears.
And they all lived happily ever after, until they died.