Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers in Swing Time (George Stevens, 1936)
Noah Kahan

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Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers in Swing Time (George Stevens, 1936)
the part of the movie when Person A begs Person B to take Person A back and forgive them and stuff and Person B totally takes Person A back and they live happily ever after and they are not at all haunted by their prior mistakes and extremely evident faults
Thought provoking.
Charles Dickens, Great Expectations
Elizabeth Banks and Leonardo DiCaprio in Catch Me If You Can.
“That particular scene got cut. I got to have sex with Leonardo DiCaprio, and no one knows about it because it’s not in the movie.”
All the hardest, coldest people you meet were once as soft as water. And that’s the tragedy of living.
Iain Thomas, I Wrote This For You (via caffeinated-butterfly)
He looked at her the way all women wanted to be looked at by a man
F. Scott Fitzgerald The Great Gatsby (via daringomez)
The only darkness we should allow into our lives is the night, and even then, we have the moon.
Warsan Shire, from “What We Have,” in Poetry Review (v. 102, no. 4, 2012)
"The trick is in what one emphasizes. We either make ourselves miserable, or we make ourselves happy. The amount of work is the same."
Carlos Castaneda
At fifteen you had the radiance of early morning, at twenty you will begin to have the melancholy brilliance of the moon.
F. Scott Fitzgerald, This Side of Paradise (1920)
Love yourself. Then forget it. Then, love the world.
Mary Oliver, from “To Begin With, the Sweet Grass” in Evidence (via litverve)
The words ‘far, far away’ had always a strange charm.
Alfred, Lord Tennyson (via somebody-else)