You write to become immortal, or because the piano happens to be open, or you've looked into a pair of beautiful eyes.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
To become truly immortal, a work of art must escape all human limits: logic and common sense will only interfere. But once these barriers are broken, it will enter the realms of childhood visions and dreams.
What we have as artists is the immortalization opportunity that others don't have, because our work is lasting; it's there forever to view.
Without the piano, my life would be a disaster - nobody would hold me in any regard. It's the thing that saved me.
If I stopped writing and being at my piano, I wouldn't know how to live. It's your best friend.
If I went for too long without writing, I would start to feel like something inside me was dying.
When I'm writing the poem, I feel like I have to close my eyes. I don't mean literally, but you invite a kind of blindness, and that's the birth of the poem.
I sound like a crazy person... but I feel when a piano is happy, and I feel when they find that moment to be alive. I want them to remember me.
If I lose the light of the sun, I will write by candlelight, moonlight, no light, If I lose paper and ink, I will write in blood on forgotten walls. I will write always. I will capture nights all over the world and bring them to you.
I don't think anything you've written is immortal as yet.
No writer, no matter how gifted, immortalizes himself unless he has crystallized into expressive and original phrase the eternal sentiments and yearnings of the human heart.