Mertcan Bulak

To your fate I offer nothing! In vengeance for what has been done to you, I offer everything.
Reklam
Our souls might as well be trapped inside a haunted keep. Sure, we built it – each of us – with our own hands, but we've forgotten half the rooms, we get lost in the corridors. We stumble into rooms of raging heat, then stagger back, away, lest our own emotions roast us alive. Other places are cold as ice – as cold as this frozen land around us. Still others remain for ever dark – no lantern will work, every candle dies as if starved of air, and we grope around, collide with unseen furniture, with walls. We look out through the high windows, but distrust all that we see.
Is it any wonder none of you know happiness? You are all twisted branches from the same sick tree.

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One day uncertainty will come to your door, will clamber down your throat, and it will be a race to see which arrives first, humility or death.
Mertcan Bulak
@MBulak·Started reading a book
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Don Juan
Don JuanLord Byron
8.3/10 · 189 reads
The loftiest minds outrun their tardy ages.
Great Galileo was debarred the sun, Because he fixed it, and to stop his talking How earth could round the solar orbit run, Found his own legs embargoed from mere walking. The man was well nigh dead, ere men begun To think his skull had not some need of caulking, But now it seems he’s right, his notion just, No doubt a consolation to his dust.
How little do we know that which we are! How less what we may be! The eternal surge Of time and tide rolls on and bears afar Our bubbles. As the old burst, new emerge, Lashed from the foam of ages; while the graves Of empires heave but like some passing waves.
He who doubts all things nothing can deny.
Reklam
Were things but only called by their right name, Caesar himself would be ashamed of fame.
’Tis strange, but true, for truth is always strange, Stranger than fiction. If it could be told, How much would novels gain by the exchange! How differently the world would men behold! How oft would vice and virtue places change! The new world would be nothing to the old.
She loved her lord or thought so, but that love  Cost her an effort, which is a sad toil, The stone of Sisyphus, if once we move Our feelings ‘gainst the nature of the soil.
There is a flower called ‘Move in idleness’, For which see Shakespeare’s ever blooming garden. I will not make his great description less And beg his British godship’s humble pardon, If in my extremity of rhyme’s distress, I touch a single leaf where he is warden.
Oh Time, why dost not pause? Thy scythe, so dirty With rust, should surely cease to hack and hew. Reset it, shave more smoothly, also slower, If but to keep thy credit as a mower.
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