Steven > Steven's Quotes

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  • #1
    Vita Sackville-West
    “Damn you, spoilt creature; I shan’t make you love me any the more by giving myself away like this.”
    Vita Sackville-West, The Letters of Vita Sackville-West and Virginia Woolf

  • #2
    Herman Melville
    “It is better to fail in originality than to succeed in imitation.”
    Herman Melville

  • #3
    Henry Adams
    “Chaos often breeds life, when order breeds habit.”
    Henry Adams

  • #4
    T.S. Eliot
    “What is hell? Hell is oneself.
    Hell is alone, the other figures in it
    Merely projections. There is nothing to escape from
    And nothing to escape to. One is always alone.”
    T.S. Eliot

  • #5
    Albert Camus
    “Nothing, nothing mattered, and I knew why. So did he. Throughout the whole absurd life I'd lived, a dark wind had been rising toward me from somewhere deep in my future, across years that were still to come, and as it passed, this wind leveled whatever was offered to me at the time, in years no more real than the ones I was living. What did other people's deaths or a mother's love matter to me; what did his God or the lives people choose or the fate they think they elect matter to me when we're all elected by the same fate, me and billions of privileged people like him who also called themselves my brothers? Couldn't he see, couldn't he see that? Everybody was privileged. There were only privileged people. The others would all be condemned one day. And he would be condemned, too.”
    Albert Camus, The Stranger
    tags: life

  • #6
    Leonora Carrington
    “We went down into the silent garden. Dawn is the time when nothing breathes, the hour of silence. Everything is transfixed, only the light moves.”
    Leonora Carrington

  • #7
    Arthur Schopenhauer
    “Every miserable fool who has nothing at all of which he can be proud, adopts as a last resource pride in the nation to which he belongs; he is ready and happy to defend all its faults and follies tooth and nail, thus reimbursing himself for his own inferiority.”
    Arthur Schopenhauer, Essays and Aphorisms



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