"Only in dreams, in poetry, in play do we sometimes arrive at what we were before we were this thing that, who knows, we are.

Wordplay hides a key to reality that the dictionary tries in vain to lock inside every free word.
~ Julio Cortázar ~












Wordplay hides a key to reality that the dictionary tries in vain to lock inside every free word.

More Julio Cortázar quotes
"Man has reached the moon, but twenty centuries ago a poet knew the enchantments that would make the moon come down to earth.
"An admirable line of Pablo Neruda’s, “My creatures are born of a long denial,” seems to me the best definition of writing as a kind of exorcism, casti...
"I am talking about the responsibility of the poet, who is irresponsible by definition, an anarchist enamored of a solar order and never of the new ord...
"I think it is vanity to want to put into a story anything but the story itself.
"We know that attention acts as a lightning rod. Merely by concentrating on something one causes endless analogies to collect around it, even penetrate...
"All European writers are ‘slaves of their baptism,’ if I may paraphrase Rimbaud; like it or not, their writing carries baggage from an immense and alm...
"Thirsty for being, the poet ceaselessly reaches out to reality, seeking with the indefatigable harpoon of the poem a reality that is always better hid...
"Skill alone cannot teach or produce a great short story, which condenses the obsession of the creature; it is a hallucinatory presence manifest from t...
"The best literature is always a take [in the musical sense]; there is an implicit risk in its execution, a margin of danger that is the pleasure of th...
"All profound distraction opens certain doors. You have to allow yourself to be distracted when you are unable to concentrate.
"For me the thing that signals a great story is what we might call its autonomy, the fact that it detaches itself from its author like a soap bubble bl...
"The more a book is like an opium pipe, the more the Chinaman reader is satisfied with it and tends to discuss the quality of the drug rather than its ...
"Nothing is more comical than seriousness understood as a virtue that has to precede all important literature
"The mysterious does not spell itself out in capital letters, as many writers believe, but is always between, an interstice.