Azzeddine Tajjiou > Azzeddine's Quotes

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  • #1
    Socrates
    “To fear death, gentlemen, is no other than to think oneself wise when one is not, to think one knows what one does not know. No one knows whether death may not be the greatest of all blessings for a man, yet men fear it as if they knew that it is the greatest of evils.”
    Socrates

  • #2
    August Strindberg
    “There are poisons that blind you, and poisons that open your eyes.”
    August Strindberg, The ghost sonata

  • #3
    “When you are filled with self-hate your mind is reversed. Meaning you will love the things that destroy you, and you will hate the things that advance your growth.”
    Amos N. Wilson

  • #4
    Pedro Calderón de la Barca
    “Here am bound, the scorn of fate; 'Twas a dream that once a state I enjoyed of light and gladness. What is life? 'Tis but a madness. What is life? A thing that seems, A mirage that falsely gleams, Phantom joy, delusive rest, Since is life a dream at best, And even dreams themselves are dreams.”
    Pedro Calderón de la Barca, Life Is a Dream

  • #5
    Epictetus
    “If anyone tells you that a certain person speaks ill of you, do not make excuses about what is said of you but answer, "He was ignorant of my other faults, else he would not have mentioned these alone.”
    Epictetus

  • #6
    Samuel Beckett
    “To find a form that accommodates the mess, that is the task of the artist now.”
    Samuel Beckett

  • #7
    Samuel Beckett
    “Yes it sometimes happens and will sometimes happen again that I forget who I am and strut before my eyes, like a stranger. Then I see the sky different from what it is and the earth too takes on false colours. It looks like rest, it is not, I vanish happy in that alien light, which must have once been mine, I am willing to believe it, then the anguish of return, I won’t say where, I can’t, to absence perhaps, you must return, that’s all I know, it’s misery to stay, misery to go.”
    Samuel Beckett, Molloy / Malone Dies / The Unnamable

  • #8
    Max Weber
    “specialists without spirit, sensualists without heart; this nullity imagines that it has attained a level of civilization never before achieved.”
    Weber Max, The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism

  • #9
    Ayi Kwei Armah
    “others devoted to life will surely find that between the creation of life and the destruction of the destroyers there is no difference but a necessary, indispensable connection; that nothing good can be created that does not of its very nature push forward the destruction of the destroyers.”
    Ayi Kwei Armah

  • #10
    Ayi Kwei Armah
    “...there is indeed a great force in the world, a force spiritual and able to shape the physical universe, but that force is not something cut off, not something separate from ourselves. It is the energy in us, the strongest in our working, breathing, thinking together as one people; weakest when we are scattered, confused, broken into individual, unconnected fragments.”
    Ayi Kwei Armah

  • #11
    Jorge Luis Borges
    “The gods weave misfortunes for men, so that the generations to come will have something to sing about.” Mallarmé repeats, less beautifully, what Homer said; “tout aboutit en un livre,” everything ends up in a book. The Greeks speak of generations that will sing; Mallarmé speaks of an object, of a thing among things, a book. But the idea is the same; the idea that we are made for art, we are made for memory, we are made for poetry, or perhaps we are made for oblivion. But something remains, and that something is history or poetry, which are not essentially different.”
    Jorge Luis Borges, Seven Nights



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