Know a man by his metaphors.
John Connolly.
“If it is true that nature abhors a vacuum, then criminality regards it as a business opportunity.”
“He became merely the broken statue of a beast, now without another's fear to animate it.”
“I think the act of reading imbues the reader with a sensitivity toward the outside world that people who don't read can sometimes lack. I know it seems like a contradiction in terms; after all read...”
“When one encounters enough strangeness, then what is strange ultimately becomes familiar.The mind can accommodate itself to almost anything, given time: pain, grief, loss, even the possibility that...”
“Once upon a time for that is how all stories should begin there was a boy who lost his mother.”
“We are not meant to know the time or the nature of our deaths (for all of us secretly hope that we may be immortal).”
“When man will return to nature, nature will return to him.”
“The sky is an enormous man.”
“When the full-grown poet came,Out spake pleased Nature (the round impassive globe, with all its shows of day and night,) saying, He is mine;But out spake too the Soul of man, proud, jealous and unr...”
“Between the beach and the big breaking waves about a quarter mile off was a stretch of bumpy, glistening reef, its usual blanket of water pulled back by a celestial hand.”
“Metaphors have a way of holding the most truth in the least space.”
“Just because something is a metaphor doesn't mean it can't be real.”