A True Revelation
Stephany Bagnall
A true revelation, it seems to me, will only emerge from stubborn concentration on a solitary problem.
I am not in league with inventors or adventurers, nor with travelers to exotic destinations.
The surest–also quickest–way to awake the sense of wonder in ourselves is to look intently, undeterred, at a single object. Suddenly, miraculously, it will reveal itself as something we have never seen before.
– Cesare Pavese, Dialoghi con Leuco, 1947
A true revelation, it seems to me, will only emerge from stubborn concentration on a solitary problem.
I am not in league with inventors or adventurers, nor with travelers to exotic destinations.
The surest –also quickest– way to awake the sense of wonder in ourselves is to look intently, undeterred, at a single object.
Suddenly, miraculously it will reveal itself as something we have never seen before. – Cesare Pavese, Dialoghi con Leuco, 1947
A true revelation, it seems to me, will only solitary problem. I am not in league with destinations. The surest–also quickest–way is to look intently, undeterred, at a single something we have never seen before.
emerge from stubborn concentration on a inventors or adventurers, nor with travelers to exotic to awake the the sense of wonder in ourselves object. Suddenly, miraculously, it will reveal itself as – Cesare Pavese, Dialoghi con Leuco, 1947
A true revelation, it seems to me, will only emerge from stubborn concentration on a solitary problem. I am not in league with inventors or adventurers, nor with travelers to exotic destinations. The surest –also quickest– way to awake the sense of wonder in ourselves is to look intently, undeterred, at a single object. Suddenly, miraculously, it will reveal itself as something we have never seen before.
– Cesare Pavese, Dialoghi con Leuco, 1947
A true revelation, it seems to me, will only emerge from stubborn concentration on a solitary problem. I am not in league with inventors or adventurers, nor with travelers to exotic destinations.
The surest –also quickest– way to awake
the sense of wonder in ourselves is to look
intently, undeterred, at a single object.
Suddenly, miraculously, it will reveal itself as something we have never seen before. – Cesare Pavese, Dialoghi con Leuco, 1947
A true revelation, it seems to me, will only A true revelation, it seems to me, will only
emerge from stubborn concentration on emerge from stubborn concentration on
a solitary problem. I am not in league a solitary problem. I am not in league
with inventors or adventurers, nor with with inventors or adventurers, nor with
travelers to exotic destinations. The travelers to exotic destinations. The
surest–also quickest–way to awake the surest–also quickest–way to awake the
sense of wonder in ourselves is to look intently, sense of wonder in ourselves is to look intently,
undeterred, at a single object. Suddenly, undeterred, at a single object. Suddenly,
miraculously, it will reveal itself as something we miraculously, it will reveal itself as something we
have never seen before. have never seen before.
– Cesare Pavese, Dialoghi con Leuco, 1947 – Cesare Pavese, Dialoghi con Leuco, 1947
A true revelation, it seems to me, will only emerge from stubborn concentration on a solitary problem.
I am not in league with inventors or adventurers, nor with travelers to exotic destinations.
The surest –also quickest–way to awake the sense of wonder in ourselves is to look intently, undeterred, at a single object.
Suddenly, miraculously, it will reveal itself as something we have never seen before.
– Cesare Pavese, Dialoghi con Leuco, 1947
A true revelation,
it seems to me,
will only emerge from stubborn concentration
on a solitary problem. I am not in league with
inventors or adventurers, nor with travelers to exotic The surest
–also quickest–
way to awake
the sense of wonder in ourselves is to look intently, undeterred, at a single object.
Suddenly,
miraculously, it will reveal itself as something we have never seen before.
destinations.
– Cesare Pavese, Dialoghi con Leuco, 1947
– Cesare Pavese, Dialoghi con Leuco, 1947
A true revelation,
it seems to me,
will only emerge from stubborn concentration on a solitary problem. I am not in league with inventors or adventurers, nor with travelers to exotic destinations.
The surest
–also quickest–
way to awake the sense of wonder in ourselves is to look intently, undeterred, at a single object. Suddenly, miraculously, it will reveal itself as something we have never seen before.
– Cesare Pavese, Dialoghi con Leuco, 1947