“And there are my cats, engaged in a ritual that goes back thousands of years, tranquilly licking themselves after the meal. Practical animals, they prefer to have others provide the food ... some of them do. There must have been a split between the cats who accepted domestication and those who did not.”
William S. Burroughs“Abandon all nations, the planet drifts to random insect doom.”
William S. Burroughs“Desperation is the raw material of drastic change. Only those who can leave behind everything they have ever believed in can hope to escape. ”
William S. Burroughs“The simplest questions are the most difficult.”
William S. Burroughs, With William Burroughs: A Report From The Bunker“To my way of thinking the function of the poet is to make us aware of what we know and don't know we know.”
William S. Burroughs, With William Burroughs: A Report From The Bunker“If you are asking me what the individual can do right now, in a political sense, I'd have to say he can't do all that much. Speaking for myself, I am more concerned with the transformation of the individual, which to me is much more important than the so-called political revolution.”
William S. Burroughs, With William Burroughs: A Report From The Bunker“Silence is only frightening to people who are compulsively verbalizing.”
William S. Burroughs, The Job: Interviews with William S. Burroughs“I feel that the change, the mutation in consciousness, will occur spontaneously once certain pressures now in operation are removed. I feel that the principal instrument of monopoly and control that prevents expansion of consciousness is the word lines controlling thought, feeling and apparent sensory impressions of the human host.”
William S. Burroughs, The Job: Interviews with William S. Burroughs“Nothing exists until or unless it is observed. An artist is making something exist by observing it. And his hope for other people is that they will also make it exist by observing it. I call it 'creative observation.' Creative viewing.”
William S. Burroughs, Ports of Entry: William S. Burroughs and the Arts