They stood brow to brow, brown to white, black to black, he supporting her elbows, she playing her limp light fingers over his collarbone, and how he "ladored,"he said, the dark aroma of her hair blending with crushed lily stalks, Turkish cigarettes and the lassitude that comes from "lass." "No, no, don't," she said, I must wash, quick-quick, Ada must wash; but for yet another immortal moment they stood embraced in the hushed avenue, enjoying as they had never enjoyed before, the "happy-forever" feeling at the end of never-ending fairy tales.
Vladimir MayakovskyOn Iโll pass, dragging my huge love behind me. On what feverish night, deliria-ridden, by what Goliaths was I begot โ I, so big and by no one needed?
Vladimir MayakovskyFormerly I believed books were made like this: a poet came, lightly opened his lips, and the inspired fool burst into song โ if you please! But it seems, before they can launch a song, poets must tramp for days with callused feet, and the sluggish fish of the imagination flounders softly in the slush of the heart. And while, with twittering rhymes, they boil a broth of loves and nightingales, the tongueless street merely writhes for lack of something to shout or say
Vladimir MayakovskyA line is a fuse that's lit. The line smolders, the rhyme explodesโ and by a stanza a city is blown to bits.
Vladimir Mayakovsky