Top Prose Quotes

  • Fire consumes, in Prose it cripples. You’ll mind the ashes that have no shoes – Goitsemang Mvula

    Fire consumes, in Prose it cripples. You’ll mind the ashes that have no shoes– Goitsemang Mvula

  • 3 P’s are my soulmates: Pain, Prose and Poetry. – Vinita Kinra

    3 P’s are my soulmates: Pain, Prose and Poetry.– Vinita Kinra

  • Time is not ours and we would not own it. It does not wound us to say so.from the prose poem INNOCENCE – Jay Woodman

    Time is not ours and we would not own it. It does not wound us to say so.from the prose poem INNOCENCE– Jay Woodman

  • Poetry creates the myth, the prose writer draws its portrait. – JeanPaul Sartre

    Poetry creates the myth, the prose writer draws its portrait.– JeanPaul Sartre

  • Forever encased in the amber of a writer’s prose. – Robert Galbraith

    Forever encased in the amber of a writer’s prose.– Robert Galbraith

  • Just because everybody uses language, that doesn’t mean that they can write even tolerable prose. – Stephen Jones

    Just because everybody uses language, that doesn’t mean that they can write even tolerable prose.– Stephen Jones

  • Prose fills a space, like a liquid poured in from the top, but poetry occupies it, arrays itself in formation, sets up camp and refuses to budge. – Simon Armitage

    Prose fills a space, like a liquid poured in from the top, but poetry occupies it, arrays itself in formation, sets up camp and refuses to budge.– Simon Armitage

  • Exercises are like prose, whereas yoga is the poetry of movements. – Amit Ray

    Exercises are like prose, whereas yoga is the poetry of movements.– Amit Ray

  • The Postmodernists’ tyranny wears people down by boredom and semi-literate prose. – Christopher Hitchens

    The Postmodernists’ tyranny wears people down by boredom and semi-literate prose.– Christopher Hitchens

  • A work of fiction should be, for its author, a journey into the unknown, and the prose should convey the difficulties of the journey. – Anthony Burgess

    A work of fiction should be, for its author, a journey into the unknown, and the prose should convey the difficulties of the journey.– Anthony Burgess