Michael > Michael's Quotes

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  • #1
    D.H. Lawrence
    “But you have there the myth of the essential white America. All the other stuff, the love, the democracy, the floundering into lust, is a sort of by-play. The essential American soul is hard, isolate, stoic, and a killer. It has never yet melted.”
    D.H. Lawrence, Studies in Classic American Literature

  • #2
    Edith Wharton
    “Half the trouble in life is caused by pretending there isn't any.”
    Edith Wharton, The House of Mirth

  • #3
    Edith Wharton
    “As the pain that can be told is but half a pain, so the pity that questions has little healing in its touch. What Lily craved was the darkness made by enfolding arms, the silence which is not solitude, but compassion holding its breath.”
    Edith Wharton, The House of Mirth

  • #4
    Edith Wharton
    “They belonged to that vast group of human automata who go through life without neglecting to perform a single one of the gestures executed by the surrounding puppets.”
    Edith Wharton, The House of Mirth

  • #5
    Edith Wharton
    “Most timidities have such secret compensations and Miss Bart was discerning enough to know that the inner vanity is generally in proportion to the outer self depreciation.”
    Edith Wharton, The House of Mirth

  • #6
    Edith Wharton
    “What she craved and really felt herself entitled to was a situation in which the noblest attitude should also be the easiest.”
    Edith Wharton, The House of Mirth

  • #7
    Edith Wharton
    “She hardly knew what she had been seeking, or why the failure to find it had so blotted the light from her sky: she was only aware of a vague sense of failure, of an inner isolation deeper than the loneliness about her.”
    Edith Wharton, The House of Mirth

  • #8
    Voltaire
    “I have wanted to kill myself a hundred times, but somehow I am still in love with life. This ridiculous weakness is perhaps one of our more stupid melancholy propensities, for is there anything more stupid than to be eager to go on carrying a burden which one would gladly throw away, to loathe one’s very being and yet to hold it fast, to fondle the snake that devours us until it has eaten our hearts away?”
    Voltaire, Candide, or, Optimism

  • #9
    Voltaire
    “I should like to know which is worse: to be ravished a hundred times by pirates, and have a buttock cut off, and run the gauntlet of the Bulgarians, and be flogged and hanged in an auto-da-fe, and be dissected, and have to row in a galley -- in short, to undergo all the miseries we have each of us suffered -- or simply to sit here and do nothing?'
    That is a hard question,' said Candide.”
    Voltaire, Candide

  • #10
    Voltaire
    “Martin in particular concluded that man was born to live either in the convulsions of misery, or in the lethargy of boredom.”
    Voltaire, Candide



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