Eyeless in Gaza Quotes
Eyeless in Gaza
by
Aldous Huxley3,343 ratings, 3.88 average rating, 268 reviews
Eyeless in Gaza Quotes
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“Chastity—the most unnatural of all the sexual perversions, he added parenthetically, out of Remy de Gourmont.”
― Eyeless in Gaza
― Eyeless in Gaza
“Hell is the incapacity to be other than the creature one finds oneself ordinarily behaving as.”
― Eyeless in Gaza
― Eyeless in Gaza
“I used to think I had no will to power. Now I perceive that I vented it on thoughts, rather than people. Conquering an unknown province of knowledge. Getting the better of a problem. Forcing ideas to associate or come apart. Bullying recalcitrant words to assume a certain pattern. All the fun of being a dictator without any risks and responsibilities.”
― Eyeless in Gaza
― Eyeless in Gaza
“But if one doesn't really exist, one wonders why..." she hesitated.
"Why one makes such a fuss about things," Anthony suggested. "All that howling and hurrahing and gnashing of teeth. About the adventures of a self that isn't really a self—just the result of a lot of accidents. And of course," he went on, "once you start wondering, you see at once that there is no reason for making such a fuss. And then you don't make a fuss—that is, if you're sensible. Like me," he added, smiling.”
― Eyeless in Gaza
"Why one makes such a fuss about things," Anthony suggested. "All that howling and hurrahing and gnashing of teeth. About the adventures of a self that isn't really a self—just the result of a lot of accidents. And of course," he went on, "once you start wondering, you see at once that there is no reason for making such a fuss. And then you don't make a fuss—that is, if you're sensible. Like me," he added, smiling.”
― Eyeless in Gaza
“That was the chief difference between literature and life. In books, the proportion of exceptional to commonplace people is high; in reality, very low.”
― Eyeless in Gaza
― Eyeless in Gaza
“Life was so short, and books so countlessly many.”
― Eyeless in Gaza
― Eyeless in Gaza
“That which besets me is indifference. I can't be bothered about people. Or rather, won't. For I avoid, carefully, all occasions for being bothered... Indifference is a form of sloth, and sloth in its turn is one of the symptoms of loveless-ness. One isn't lazy about what one loves. The problem is: how to love?”
― Eyeless in Gaza
― Eyeless in Gaza
“Leaving you defenceless against the full consciousness of the fact that you can't do without your fellow humans, and that, when you're with them, they make you sick.”
― Eyeless in Gaza
― Eyeless in Gaza
“As though you could use violent, unjust means and achieve peace and justice! Means determine ends; and must be like the ends proposed. Means intrinsically different from the ends proposed achieve ends like themselves, not like those they were meant to achieve.”
― Eyeless in Gaza
― Eyeless in Gaza
“Certain memories, certain trains of thought are like the aching tooth one must always be touching just to make sure it still hurts.”
― Eyeless in Gaza
― Eyeless in Gaza
“Those who defend war have invented a pleasant sounding vocabulary of abstractions in which to describe the process of mass murder.”
― Eyeless in Gaza
― Eyeless in Gaza
“Indifference is a form of sloth. For one can work hard, as I've always done, and yet wallow in sloth; be industrious about one's job, but scandalously lazy about all that isn't the job. Because, of course, the job is fun. Whereas the non-job---personal relations, in my case---is disagreeable and laborious.”
― Eyeless in Gaza
― Eyeless in Gaza
“For now there is only the darkness expanding and deepening, deepening into light; there is only this final peace, this consciousness of being no more separate, this illumination . . .”
― Eyeless in Gaza
― Eyeless in Gaza
“The world was their love, and their love the world; and the world was significant, charged with depth beyond depth of mysterious meaning. The proof of God's goodness floated in those clouds, crept in those grazing sheep, shone from every burning bush of incandescent blossom – and, in himself and Joan, walked hand in hand across the grass and was manifest in their happiness. His love, it seemed to him, in that apocalyptic moment, was more than merely his; it was in some mysterious way the equivalent of this wind and sunshine, these white gleams against the green and blue of spring. His feeling for Joan was somehow implicit in the world, had a divine and universal significance. He loved her infinitely, and for that reason was able to love everything in the world as much as he loved her.”
― Eyeless in Gaza
― Eyeless in Gaza
“There's nothing like a re-creation of the event. Which is lucky. Think if one could fully remember perfume or kisses! How wearisome the reality of them would be!”
― Eyeless in Gaza
― Eyeless in Gaza
“He acted as if he could detect in her face nothing but its external beauties of form and texture. Whereas, of course, flesh is never wholly opaque; the soul shows through the walls of its receptacle.”
― Eyeless in Gaza
― Eyeless in Gaza
“I put the question to Miller: what will be the influence of the spread of knowledge such as this? Knowledge of a world incomparably more improbable and more beautiful than the imaginings of any myth-maker. A world, only a few years ago, completely unknown to all but a handful of people. What the effects of its general discovery by all? Miller laughed. 'It will have exactly as much or as little effect as people want it to have. Those who prefer to think about sex and money will go on thinking about sex and money. However loudly the movies proclaim the glory of God.' Persistence of the ingenuous notion that the response to favourable circumstances is inevitably and automatically good. Raw material, once again, to be worked up. One goes on believing in automatic progress, because one wants to cherish this stupidity: it's so consoling. Consoling, because it puts the whole responsibility for everything you do or fail to do on somebody or something other than yourself.”
― Eyeless in Gaza
― Eyeless in Gaza
“But man now behaves like the Pharisees and insists that he is made for all the things—science, industry, nation, money, religion, schools—which were really made for him. Why? Because he is so little aware of his own interests as a human being that he feels irresistibly tempted to sacrifice himself to these idols. There is no remedy except to become aware of one's interests as a human being, and, having become aware, to learn to act on that awareness. Which means learning to use the self and learning to direct the mind. It's almost wearisome, the way one always comes back to the same point. Wouldn't it be nice, for a change, if there were another way out of our difficulties! A short cut. A method requiring no greater personal effort than recording a vote or ordering some 'enemy of society' to be shot. A salvation from outside, like a dose of calomel.”
― Eyeless in Gaza
― Eyeless in Gaza
“He loved her infinitely, and for that reason was able to love everything in the world as much as he loved her.”
― Eyeless in Gaza
― Eyeless in Gaza
“I, real I? But where, but how, but at what price?”
― Eyeless in Gaza
― Eyeless in Gaza
“Atat lumea in care traim,cat si noi,cei care vietuim in aceasta lume,suntem creatiile stupiditatii si ale miopiei.”
― Eyeless in Gaza
― Eyeless in Gaza
“Iadul este incapacitatea de a fi altul decat fiinta pe care o descoperi actionand zilnic in numele tau.”
― Eyeless in Gaza
― Eyeless in Gaza
“Query: how to combine the belief that the world is a to a great extent illusory with belief that it is none the less essential to improve the illusion? How to be simultaneously dispassionate and not indifferent, serene like an old man and active like a young one?”
― Eyeless in Gaza
― Eyeless in Gaza
“Reflect that we all have our Poonas, bolt-holes from unpleasant reality. The danger, as Miller is always insisting, of meditation becoming such a bolt-hole. Quietism can be mere self-indulgence. Charismata like masturbations. Masturbations, however, that are dignified, by the amateur mystics who practise them, with all the most sacred names of religion and philosophy. 'The contemplative life.' It can be made a kind of high-brow substitute for Marlene Dietrich: a subject for erotic musings in the twilight. Meditation - valuable, not as a pleasurable end; only as a means for effecting desirable changes in the personality and mode of existence. To live contemplatively is not to live in some deliciously voluptuous or flattering Poona; it is to live in London, but to live there in a non-cockney style.”
― Eyeless in Gaza
― Eyeless in Gaza
“He himself, Anthony went on to think, he himself had chosen to regard the whole process as either pointless or a practical joke. Yes, chosen. For it had been an act of the will. If it were all nonsense or a joke, then he was at liberty to read his books and exercise his talents for sarcastic comment; there was no reason why he shouldn't sleep with any presentable woman who was ready to sleep with him. If it weren't nonsense, if there was some significance, then he could no longer live irresponsibly. There were duties towards himself and others and the nature of things. Duties with whose fulfilment the sleeping and the indiscriminate reading and the habit of detached irony would interfere. He had chosen to think it nonsense, and nonsense for more than twenty years the thing had seemed to be – nonsense, in spite of occasional uncomfortable intimations that there might be a point, and that the point was precisely in what he had chosen to regard as the pointlessness, the practical joke.”
― Eyeless in Gaza
― Eyeless in Gaza
“Avem intotdeauna tendinta sa atribuim propriile noastre defecte si celorlalti.”
― Eyeless in Gaza
― Eyeless in Gaza
“Viata e insa atat de banala,incat literatura trebuie sa se ocupe de lucrurile care ies din comun.”
― Eyeless in Gaza
― Eyeless in Gaza
“True freedom!’ Anthony repeated in the parody of a clerical voice. ‘I always love that kind of argument. The contrary of a thing isn’t the contrary; oh, dear me, no! It’s the thing itself, but as it truly is. Ask a diehard what conservatism is; he’ll tell you it’s true socialism. And the brewers’ trade papers; they’re full of articles about the beauty of True Temperance. Ordinary temperance is just a gross refusal to drink; but true temperance, true temperance is something much more refined. True temperance is a bottle of claret with each meal and three double whiskies after dinner. Personally, I’m all for true temperance, because I hate temperance. But I like being free. So I won’t have anything to do with true freedom.”
― Eyeless in Gaza
― Eyeless in Gaza
“Începe" răspunse Anthony, "prin a încerca să pui în practică dificila artă de a îndrăgi oamenii."
"Dar majoritatea sunt detestabili."
"Sunt detestabili fiindcă îi detestăm. Dacă i-am privi cu ochi buni, ar înceta să mai fie."
"Crezi că ceea ce spui e adevărat?"
"Sunt sigur că e adevărat"
"Şi ce faci după asta?"
"Nu există după asta", răspunse Anthony. "Fiindcă e o treabă care durează o viaţă întreagă. Orice proces de transformare durează o viaţă întreagă. De câte ori ajungi pe o culme, în faţa ochilor ţi se iveşte o nouă culme, o culme pe care nu o puteai vedea când te aflai mai jos. Să ne gândim de pildă la mecanismul alcătuit din spirit-trup. Începi prin a învăţa să-l utilizezi mai bine; faci câţiva paşi înainte: din această poziţie avansată descoperi că-l poţi utiliza şi mai bine. Şi aşa mai departe, la infinit. Scopul ideal se îndepărtează pe măsură ce te apropii de el; ţi se pare mereu că e altul, mai important decât cel întrevăzut în momentul când porniseşi la drum. Se întâmplă acelaşi lucru când începi să schimbi relaţiile pe care le ai cu oamenii. Fiecare pas înainte dă la iveală necesitatea de a face alţi paşi înainte - paşi pe care nu-i bănuiai anterior - pe o cale care te duce la o destinaţie necunoscută în momentul plecării. Da, durează o viaţă întreagă" repetă. "Nu poate exista "după". Poate exista numai o tentativă, făcută de-a lungul drumului, de a proiecta ceea ce ai descoperit la nivelul individual, pe plan politic şi economic. Una din primele descoperiri" adăugă, "una din primele descoperiri pe care le faci, este că ura organizată şi violenţa nu sunt cele mai bune mijloace pentru a asigura justiţia şi pacea. Toţi oamenii sunt în stare să iubească pe toţi ceilalţi oameni. Dar, în mod artificial, s-a pus stavilă dragostei de care eram în stare, ridicând bariere convenţionale de ură şi de violenţă şi zăgăzuind dragostea în limitele familiilor şi ale clanurilor, în limitele claselor şi ale naţiunilor. Unii doresc să dărâme aceste bariere, folosind mai multă ură, şi mai multă violenţă - cu alte cuvinte, folosind exact aceleaşi mijloace care au fost cauzele originare ale barierelor”
― Eyeless in Gaza
"Dar majoritatea sunt detestabili."
"Sunt detestabili fiindcă îi detestăm. Dacă i-am privi cu ochi buni, ar înceta să mai fie."
"Crezi că ceea ce spui e adevărat?"
"Sunt sigur că e adevărat"
"Şi ce faci după asta?"
"Nu există după asta", răspunse Anthony. "Fiindcă e o treabă care durează o viaţă întreagă. Orice proces de transformare durează o viaţă întreagă. De câte ori ajungi pe o culme, în faţa ochilor ţi se iveşte o nouă culme, o culme pe care nu o puteai vedea când te aflai mai jos. Să ne gândim de pildă la mecanismul alcătuit din spirit-trup. Începi prin a învăţa să-l utilizezi mai bine; faci câţiva paşi înainte: din această poziţie avansată descoperi că-l poţi utiliza şi mai bine. Şi aşa mai departe, la infinit. Scopul ideal se îndepărtează pe măsură ce te apropii de el; ţi se pare mereu că e altul, mai important decât cel întrevăzut în momentul când porniseşi la drum. Se întâmplă acelaşi lucru când începi să schimbi relaţiile pe care le ai cu oamenii. Fiecare pas înainte dă la iveală necesitatea de a face alţi paşi înainte - paşi pe care nu-i bănuiai anterior - pe o cale care te duce la o destinaţie necunoscută în momentul plecării. Da, durează o viaţă întreagă" repetă. "Nu poate exista "după". Poate exista numai o tentativă, făcută de-a lungul drumului, de a proiecta ceea ce ai descoperit la nivelul individual, pe plan politic şi economic. Una din primele descoperiri" adăugă, "una din primele descoperiri pe care le faci, este că ura organizată şi violenţa nu sunt cele mai bune mijloace pentru a asigura justiţia şi pacea. Toţi oamenii sunt în stare să iubească pe toţi ceilalţi oameni. Dar, în mod artificial, s-a pus stavilă dragostei de care eram în stare, ridicând bariere convenţionale de ură şi de violenţă şi zăgăzuind dragostea în limitele familiilor şi ale clanurilor, în limitele claselor şi ale naţiunilor. Unii doresc să dărâme aceste bariere, folosind mai multă ură, şi mai multă violenţă - cu alte cuvinte, folosind exact aceleaşi mijloace care au fost cauzele originare ale barierelor”
― Eyeless in Gaza
“Naţiunile nu-şi vor schimba politica până ce oamenii nu vor modifica raporturile pe care le au unii cu altii. Toate guvernele sunt reprezentative. Comportamentul naţional actual - o proiecţie pe scară largă a comportamentului individual de azi. Sau, mai precis, o proiecţie pe scară largă a intenţiilor şi dorinţelor nutrite în ascuns de către indivizi. Căci am dori cu toţii să ne comportăm mult mai rău decât ne îngăduie conştiinţa noastră şi respectul faţă de opinia publică. Una dintre marile atracţii ale patriotismului este aceea de a permite îndeplinirea dorinţelor noastre cele mai greu de mărturisit. Prin mijlocirea acelei persoane numită naţiune ni se permite să bruftuim pe alţii şi să-i înşelăm. Mai mult încă, putem proceda astfel, având conştiinţa pe deplin împăcată. Cât de agreabil şi de frumos este să asasinezi, să minţi, să torturezi de dragul patriei mume!”
― Eyeless in Gaza
― Eyeless in Gaza
