Quotes From "Mrs Poe" By Lynn Cullen

1
First you must believe there is a soul.... If by a soul one means the creature who lives within each of us, a creature born loving, born joyful, but who with each worldly blow shrinks more deeply into its shell until at last, the poor desiccated thing is unrecognizable even to its own self, yes. I do. Lynn Cullen
2
It is my belief that marriage is made holy by two souls in communion, not by the order of the law. Lynn Cullen
3
Greed and our food supply. It is greed that compels dairymen to skim every bit of goodness from milk to make other products and then to fill the swill left with chalk and sell it at profit. Greed tempts butchers to grind up the meat of sick cows with well ones and mix it into sausage along with offal and dung to extend the amount of 'meat' that they can sell. Greed motivates bakers to use flour devoid of the wheat germ and the nutritious outer husk and to add alum and chlorine to make bread look whiter and to cook faster. Americans are being poisoned, all in the name of profit, producing a weak-minded race of people who are given to lust and desire. Lynn Cullen
4
Whenever you see this much wealth, assume that someone dirtied his hands. Fortunes don't come to saints. Lynn Cullen
5
Desire inspires us to be our very best. Lynn Cullen
6
Pay attention to fate.... It will always have the last word. Lynn Cullen
7
I find that the thoughts spoken between the lines are the most important parts of a poem or story. Lynn Cullen
8
I had come to realize that you must do what you must for your children, even it if called for the sacrifice of your very soul. Lynn Cullen
9
To say that he 'nailed a subject's soul to the canvas' makes the assumption that we persons, as well as artists, can see one another's souls. Maybe we do. Maybe we all have the ability to perceive another's soul, and do so every day, only we take it for granted, and don't even know it when we're doing it. We call it knowing someone's 'character' or 'personality. Lynn Cullen
10
There is no more prideful creature than a man born poor. Lynn Cullen