Gordon Lo > Gordon's Quotes

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  • #1
    Samuel Johnson
    “The two most engaging powers of an author are to make new things familiar and familiar things new.”
    Samuel Johnson

  • #2
    William Shakespeare
    “We are such stuff as dreams are made on, and our little life is rounded with a sleep.”
    William Shakespeare, The Tempest

  • #3
    William Shakespeare
    “What's past is prologue.”
    William Shakespeare, The Tempest
    tags: past

  • #4
    Shion Miura
    “Reading the dictionary could awaken you to new meanings of commonly used words, meanings of surprising breadth and depth.”
    Shion Miura, The Great Passage

  • #5
    Marcel Proust
    “But sometimes illumination comes to our rescue at the very moment when all seems lost; we have knocked at every door and they open on nothing until, at last, we stumble unconsciously against the only one through which we can enter the kingdom we have sought in vain a hundred years - and it opens.”
    Marcel Proust, In Search of Lost Time

  • #6
    Frances Hodgson Burnett
    “One of the strange things about living in the world is that it is only now and then one is quite sure one is going to live forever and ever and ever. One knows it sometimes when one gets up at the tender solemn dawn-time and goes out and stands out and throws one's head far back and looks up and up and watches the pale sky slowly changing and flushing and marvelous unknown things happening until the East almost makes one cry out and one's heart stands still at the strange unchanging majesty of the rising of the sun--which has been happening every morning for thousands and thousands and thousands of years. One knows it then for a moment or so. And one knows it sometimes when one stands by oneself in a wood at sunset and the mysterious deep gold stillness slanting through and under the branches seems to be saying slowly again and again something one cannot quite hear, however much one tries. Then sometimes the immense quiet of the dark blue at night with the millions of stars waiting and watching makes one sure; and sometimes a sound of far-off music makes it true; and sometimes a look in someone's eyes.”
    Frances Hodgson Burnett, Secret Garden

  • #7
    Marcel Proust
    “Happiness is beneficial for the body, but it is grief that develops the powers of the mind.”
    Marcel Proust

  • #8
    Marcel Proust
    “People do not die for us immediately, but remain bathed in a sort of aura of life which bears no relation to true immortality but through which they continue to occupy our thoughts in the same way as when they were alive. It is as though they were traveling abroad.”
    Marcel Proust

  • #9
    Marcel Proust
    “Now there is one thing I can tell you: you will enjoy certain pleasures you would not fathom now. When you still had your mother you often thought of the days when you would have her no longer. Now you will often think of days past when you had her. When you are used to this horrible thing that they will forever be cast into the past, then you will gently feel her revive, returning to take her place, her entire place, beside you. At the present time, this is not yet possible. Let yourself be inert, wait till the incomprehensible power ... that has broken you restores you a little, I say a little, for henceforth you will always keep something broken about you. Tell yourself this, too, for it is a kind of pleasure to know that you will never love less, that you will never be consoled, that you will constantly remember more and more.”
    Marcel Proust

  • #10
    Plato
    “At the touch of love, everyone becomes a poet.”
    Plato
    tags: love

  • #11
    Marcel Proust
    “Every reader, as he reads, is actually the reader of himself. The writer's work is only a kind of optical instrument he provides the reader so he can discern what he might never have seen in himself without this book. The reader's recognition in himself of what the book says is the proof of the book's truth.”
    Marcel Proust, Time Regained

  • #12
    Marcel Proust
    “Always try to keep a patch of sky above your life.”
    Marcel Proust, Swann’s Way

  • #13
    Marcel Proust
    “The real voyage of discovery consists not in seeking new landscapes, but in having new eyes.”
    Marcel Proust

  • #14
    Kahlil Gibran
    “Ever has it been that love knows not its own depth until the hour of separation.”
    Kahlil Gibran

  • #15
    George Eliot
    “Only in the agony of parting do we look into the depths of love.”
    George Eliot

  • #16
    Sigmund Freud
    “Everyone owes nature a death.”
    Sigmund Freud



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