Clarice Lispector

Near to the Wild Heart

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  • dawghas quoted5 days ago
    The aunt’s bosom was deep, one could plunge their hand in as if reaching into a bag and pull out a surprise, a critter, a box, goodness knows what.
  • dawghas quoted5 days ago
    The door to the inside of the house opened finally and her aunt in a robe with a large flower print launched herself at her. Before she could make a move to defend herself, Joana was buried between two masses of soft, warm flesh that shook with sobs. From inside there, from the darkness, as if she was hearing it through a pillow, she heard the tears
  • dawghas quoted7 days ago
    She breathed in the warm, clear afternoon air and the part of her that needed water was still tense and stiff like someone waiting blindfolded for a gunshot
  • dawghas quoted7 days ago
    Otávio,” she’d suddenly say to him, “has it ever occurred to you that a dot, a single dot without dimensions, is the utmost solitude?
  • dawghas quoted7 days ago
    Why did a waxed, clean house make her feel lost as if she were in a monastery, forlorn, wandering its corridors? And a lot of other things that she also observed.
  • dawghas quoted17 days ago
    Besides: how could she tie herself to a man without allowing him to imprison her? How could she prevent him from developing his four walls over her body and soul? And was there a way to have things without those things possessing her?
  • dawghas quoted17 days ago
    “Didn’t you think it was odd . . . funny that I told you to write the question down to keep?”

    “No,” she said.

    She turned back to the courtyard.
  • dawghas quoted17 days ago
    “Didn’t you think it was odd . . . funny that I told you to write the question down to keep?”
  • dawghas quoted17 days ago
    The last sunlight trembled outside in the green branches. The pigeons scratched the loose earth. From time to time the breeze and the silence of the school courtyard reached the classroom. Then everything became lighter, the teacher’s voice floated like a white flag.

    “And he and his whole family lived happily ever after.” Pause—the trees rustled in the garden, it was a summer’s day. “Write a summary of this story for our next class.”

    Still immersed in the story the children moved slowly, eyes light, mouths satisfied.

    “What do you get when you become happy?” Her voice was a clear, sharp arrow. The teacher looked at Joana.

    “Repeat the question . . . ?”

    Silence. The teacher smiled as she stacked up the books.

    “Ask it again, Joana. I didn’t hear you properly.”

    “I’d like to know: once you’re happy what happens? What comes next?” she repeated obstinately.

    The woman stared at her in surprise.

    “What a thought! I don’t think I know what you mean, what a thought! Ask it again in other words . . .”

    “Being happy is for what?”

    The teacher flushed—no one was ever sure why she went red. She noticed the whole class and sent them off for their break
  • dawghas quoted17 days ago
    The last sunlight trembled outside in the green branches. The pigeons scratched the loose earth. From time to time the breeze and the silence of the school courtyard reached the classroom. Then everything became lighter, the teacher’s voice floated like a white flag
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