Andre > Andre's Quotes

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  • #1
    Albert Camus
    “Man stands face to face with the irrational. He feels within him his longing for happiness and for reason. The absurd is born of this confrontation between the human need and the unreasonable silence of the world.”
    Albert Camus, The Myth of Sisyphus and Other Essays

  • #2
    Sylvia Plath
    “And the danger is that in this move toward new horizons and far directions, that I may lose what I have now, and not find anything except loneliness.”
    Sylvia Plath, The Unabridged Journals of Sylvia Plath

  • #3
    Haruki Murakami
    “But even so, every now and then I would feel a violent stab of loneliness. The very water I drink, the very air I breathe, would feel like long, sharp needles. The pages of a book in my hands would take on the threatening metallic gleam of razor blades. I could hear the roots of loneliness creeping through me when the world was hushed at four o'clock in the morning.”
    Haruki Murakami, The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle

  • #4
    Tom Waits
    “This is about all the bad days in the world. I used to have some little bad days, and I kept them in a little box. And one day, I threw them out into the yard. "Oh, it's just a couple little innocent bad days." Well, we had a big rain. I don't know what it was growing in but I think we used to put eggshells out there and coffee grounds, too. Don't plant your bad days. They grow into weeks. The weeks grow into months. Before you know it you got yourself a bad year. Take it from me. Choke those little bad days. Choke 'em down to nothin'. They're your days. Choke 'em!”
    Tom Waits

  • #5
    Rainer Maria Rilke
    “The only sadnesses that are dangerous and unhealthy are the ones that we carry around in public in order to drown them out with the noise; like diseases that are treated superficially and foolishly, they just withdraw and after a short interval break out again all the more terribly; and gather inside us and are life, are life that is unlived, rejected, lost, life that we can die of.”
    Rainer Maria Rilke, Letters to a Young Poet

  • #6
    William Faulkner
    “You cannot swim for new horizons until you have courage to lose sight of the shore.”
    William Faulkner

  • #7
    Byung-Chul Han
    “The acceleration of contemporary life also plays a role in this lack of being. The society of laboring and achievement is not a free society. It generates new constraints. Ultimately, the dialectic of master and slave does not yield a society where everyone is free and capable of leisure, too. Rather, it leads to a society of work in which the master himself has become a laboring slave. In this society of compulsion, everyone carries a work camp inside. This labor camp is defined by the fact that one is simultaneously prisoner and guard, victim and perpetrator. One exploits oneself. It means that exploitation is possible even without domination.”
    Byung-Chul Han, The Burnout Society

  • #8
    Byung-Chul Han
    “The complaint of the depressive individual, “Nothing is possible,” can only occur in a society that thinks, “Nothing is impossible.”
    Byung-Chul Han, The Burnout Society

  • #9
    Democritus
    “By convention sweet and by convention bitter, by convention hot, by convention cold, by convention color; but in reality atoms and void.”
    Democritus

  • #10
    Socrates
    “The unexamined life is not worth living.”
    Socrates

  • #11
    Will Durant
    “Excellence is an art won by training and habituation: we do not act rightly because we have virtue or excellence, but we rather have these because we have acted rightly; "these virtues are formed in man by his doing the actions";[69] we are what we repeatedly do. Excellence, then, is not an act but a habit;”
    Will Durant, The Story of Philosophy

  • #12
    Albert Camus
    “In the depth of winter, I finally learned that within me there lay an invincible summer.”
    Albert Camus

  • #13
    Christopher Hitchens
    “To the dumb question "Why me?" the cosmos barely bothers to return the reply: why not?”
    Christopher Hitchens, Mortality
    tags: fate

  • #14
    Christopher Hitchens
    “The man who prays is the one who thinks that god has arranged matters all wrong, but who also thinks that he can instruct god how to put them right.”
    Christopher Hitchens, Mortality

  • #15
    José Saramago
    “Even death, faced with the option of death or life, she would choose life.”
    José Saramago, Death with Interruptions

  • #16
    José Saramago
    “One cannot be too careful with words, they change their minds just as people do.”
    José Saramago, Death with Interruptions

  • #17
    Italo Calvino
    “The inferno of the living is not something that will be; if there is one, it is what is already here, the inferno where we live every day, that we form by being together. There are two ways to escape suffering it. The first is easy for many: accept the inferno and become such a part of it that you can no longer see it. The second is risky and demands constant vigilance and apprehension: seek and learn to recognize who and what, in the midst of inferno, are not inferno, then make them endure, give them space.”
    Italo Calvino, Invisible Cities

  • #18
    Italo Calvino
    “You reach a moment in life when, among the people you have known, the dead outnumber the living. And the mind refuses to accept more faces, more expressions: on every new face you encounter, it prints the old forms, for each one it finds the most suitable mask.”
    Italo Calvino, Invisible Cities

  • #19
    John  Williams
    “Sometimes, immersed in his books, there would come to him the awareness of all that he did not know, of all that he had not read; and the serenity for which he labored was shattered as he realized the little time he had in life to read so much, to learn what he had to know.”
    John Williams, Stoner

  • #20
    John  Williams
    “In his forty-third year William Stoner learned what others, much younger, had learned before him: that the person one loves at first is not the person one loves at last, and that love is not an end but a process through which one person attempts to know another.”
    John Williams, Stoner

  • #21
    Joe Abercrombie
    “Once you've got a task to do, it's better to do it than live with the fear of it.”
    Joe Abercrombie, The Blade Itself

  • #22
    Brandon Sanderson
    “Somebody has to start. Somebody has to step forward and do what is right, because it is right.”
    Brandon Sanderson, The Way of Kings

  • #23
    Brandon Sanderson
    “Somebody has to start, son. Somebody has to step forward and do what is right, because it is right. If nobody starts, then others cannot follow.”
    Brandon Sanderson, The Way of Kings



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