Stephen Fry and Hugh Laurie in ‘A Bit of Fry and Laurie’ (x)

slowly-tongued-by-stephen-fry:
“It was not that big of a deal. But it was as parents say to their children: “It’s the fact you lied.” So, Hugh was furious. But it had an upside because, it was a letter when I got back saying, and it said because, ”It’s as if you don’t realize how much I love you,’”
I think Eros should be dirty. In Greek legend, as I’m sure you are aware, he fell in love with the minor deity Psyche. It was the Greek way of saying that, in spite of what it may believe, Love pursues the Soul, not the body; the Erotic desires the Psychic. If Love was clean and wholesome he wouldn’t lust after Psyche.
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| — | Adrian Healey, The Liar (via thisainttherapy) |
Almost everything I am I owe to libraries…I suppose libraries still for me have this extraordinary charge. When I get in one I feel this buzz. It’s almost sexual. There is something about the fact that behind all these bound copies there are voices, there are people murmuring, seducing you, dragging you into their world. These are wonderful magical places and I suppose that if I have a campaign that I am really behind it is that of saving our libraries. Because everyone surely has the right to access the voices of the past.
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| — | Stephen Fry (via hannahmaxima) |
There are young men and women up and down the land who happily (or unhappily) tell anyone who will listen that they don’t have an academic turn of mind, or that they aren’t lucky enough to have been blessed with a good memory, and yet can recite hundreds of pop lyrics and reel off any amount of information about footballers. Why? Because they are interested in those things. They are curious. If you are hungry for food, you are prepared to hunt high and low for it. If you are hungry for information it is the same. Information is all around us, now more than ever before in human history. You barely have to stir or incommode yourself to find things out. The only reason people do not know much is because they do not care to know. They are incurious. Incuriosity is the oddest and most foolish failing there is.
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| — | Stephen Fry, The Fry Chronicles (via whypamperlifescomplexities) |
I am incandescent with rage at the idea of horoscopes and of crystals and of the nonsense of ‘New Age’, or indeed even more pseudo-scientific things: self-help, and the whole culture of ‘searching for answers’, when for me, as someone brought up in the unashamed Western tradition of music and poetry and philosophy, all the answers are there in the work that has been done by humanity before us, in literature, in art, in science, in all the marvels that have created this moment now, instead of people looking away. The image to me … is gold does exist, and for ‘gold’ say ‘truth’, say ‘the answer’, say ‘love’, say ‘justice’, say anything: it does exist. But the only way in this world you can achieve gold is to be incredibly intelligent about geology, to learn what mankind has learnt, to learn where it might lie, and then break your fingers and blister your skin in digging for it, and then sweat and sweat in a forge, and smelt it. And you will have gold, but you will never have it by closing your eyes and wishing for it. No angel will lean out of the bar of heaven and drop down sheets of gold for you. And we live in a society in which people believe they will. But the real answer, that there is gold, and that all you have to do is try and understand the world enough to get down into the muck of it, and you will have it, you will have truth, you will have justice, you will have understanding, but not by wishing for it.
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| — | Stephen Fry (via meiringens) |
He wasn’t sure what the thing was that he yearned for, but one thing he did know. It was less acceptable to love, to ache for eternal companionship, than it was to bounce and slurp and gasp behind the fives courts. Love was Adrian’s guilty secret, sex his public pride.
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| — | The Liar (via fuckyeahstephenfry) |



