Death in Venice and Seven Other Stories Quotes
Death in Venice and Seven Other Stories
by
Thomas Mann2,935 ratings, 3.88 average rating, 239 reviews
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Death in Venice and Seven Other Stories Quotes
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“There is only one real misfortune: to forfeit one's own good opinion of oneself. To have lost one's self-respect: that is what unhappiness is. Oh, I have always known that so well! Everything else is part of the game, an enrichment of one's life; in every other form of suffering one can feel such extraordinary self-satisfaction, one can cut such a fine figure. Only when one has fallen out with oneself and no longer suffers with a good conscience, only in the throes of stricken vanity - only then does one become a pitiful and repulsive spectacle.”
― Death in Venice and Seven Other Stories
― Death in Venice and Seven Other Stories
“Men do not know why they award fame to one work of art rather than another. Without being in the faintest connoisseurs, they think to justify the warmth of their commendations by discovering it in a hundred virtues, whereas the real ground of their applause is inexplicable--it is sumpathy.”
― Death in Venice and Seven Other Stories
― Death in Venice and Seven Other Stories
