TA > TA's Quotes

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  • #1
    David  Mitchell
    “Power is lost or won, never created or destroyed. Power is a visitor to, not a possession of, those it empowers.”
    David Mitchell, The Bone Clocks

  • #2
    C.S. Lewis
    “This world is a great sculptor’s shop. We are the statues and there’s a rumor going around the shop that some of us are someday going to come to life.”
    C.S. Lewis, Mere Christianity

  • #3
    Aldous Huxley
    “I want God, I want poetry, I want danger, I want freedom, I want sin.”
    Aldous Huxley, Brave New World

  • #4
    Philip K. Dick
    “We are all insects. Groping towards something terrible or divine.”
    Philip K. Dick, The Man in the High Castle

  • #5
    Alfred Tennyson
    “There lives more faith in honest doubt, believe me, than in half the creeds.”
    Alfred, Lord Tennyson

  • #6
    Oscar Wilde
    “The evolution of man is slow. The injustice of men is great.”
    Oscar Wilde, The Soul of Man Under Socialism

  • #7
    Oscar Wilde
    “Pain is not the ultimate mode of perfection. It is merely provisional and a protest. It has reference to wrong, unhealthy, unjust surroundings. When the wrong, and the disease, and the injustice are removed, it will have no further place. It will have done its work. It was a great work, but it is almost over. Its sphere lessens every day.”
    Oscar Wilde, The Soul of Man Under Socialism

  • #8
    John  Williams
    “Dispassionately, reasonably, he contemplated the failure that his life must appear to be. He had wanted friendship and the closeness of friendship that might hold him in the race of mankind; he had had two friends, one of whom had died senselessly before he was known, the other of whom had now withdrawn so distantly into the ranks of the living that...

    He had wanted the singleness and the still connective passion of marriage; he had had that, too, and he had not known what to do with it, and it had died. He had wanted love; and he had had love, and had relinquished it, had let it go into the chaos of potentiality. Katherine, he thought. "Katherine."

    And he had wanted to be a teacher, and he had become one; yet he knew, he had always known, that for most of his life he had been an indifferent one. He had dreamed of a kind of integrity, of a kind of purity that was entire; he had found compromise and the assaulting diversion of triviality. He had conceived wisdom, and at the end of the long years he had found ignorance. And what else? he thought. What else?

    What did you expect? he asked himself.”
    John Williams, Stoner
    tags: life

  • #9
    Søren Kierkegaard
    “With every increase in the degree of consciousness, and in proportion to that increase, the intensity of despair increases: the more consciousness the more intense the despair”
    Søren Kierkegaard, The Sickness Unto Death: A Christian Psychological Exposition for Upbuilding and Awakening

  • #10
    F. Scott Fitzgerald
    “Reserving judgements is a matter of infinite hope.”
    F. Scott Fitzgerald, The Great Gatsby

  • #11
    Philip Pullman
    “We are all subject to the fates. But we must act as if we are not, or die of despair.”
    Philip Pullman, The Golden Compass

  • #12
    W.H. Auden
    “We must love one another or die”
    W.H. Auden

  • #13
    W.H. Auden
    “You shall love your crooked neighbour, with your crooked heart.”
    Wystan Hugh Auden

  • #14
    Oscar Wilde
    “Every little action of the common day makes or unmakes character.”
    Oscar Wilde

  • #15
    Dietrich Bonhoeffer
    “We must learn to regard people less in the light of what they do or omit to do, and more in the light of what they suffer.”
    Dietrich Bonhoeffer, Letters and Papers from Prison

  • #16
    Audre Lorde
    “Black and Third World people are expected to educate white people as to our humanity. Women are expected to educate men. Lesbians and gay men are expected to educate the heterosexual world. The oppressors maintain their position and evade their responsibility for their own actions. There is a constant drain of energy which might be better used in redefining ourselves and devising realistic scenarios for altering the present and constructing the future.”
    Audre Lorde, Sister Outsider: Essays and Speeches

  • #17
    Viktor E. Frankl
    “What is to give light must endure burning.”
    Victor Frankl

  • #18
    Dietrich Bonhoeffer
    “The ultimate test of a moral society is the kind of world that it leaves to its children.”
    Dietrich Bonhoeffer

  • #19
    Fernando Pessoa
    “I see life as a roadside inn where I have to stay until the coach from the abyss pulls up. I don't know where it will take me, because I don't know anything. I could see this inn as a prison, for I'm compelled to wait in it; I could see it as a social center, for it's here that I meet others. But I'm neither impatient nor common. I leave who will to stay shut up in their rooms, sprawled out on beds where they sleeplessly wait, and I leave who will to chat in the parlors, from where their songs and voices conveniently drift out here to me. I'm sitting at the door, feasting my eyes and ears on the colors and sounds of the landscape, and I softly sing - for myself alone - wispy songs I compose while waiting.

    Night will fall on us all and the coach will pull up. I enjoy the breeze I'm given and the soul I'm given to enjoy it with, and I no longer question or seek. If what I write in the book of travellers can, when read by others at some future date, also entertain them on their journey, then fine. If they don't read it, or are not entertained, that's fine too.”
    Fernando Pessoa, The Book of Disquiet

  • #20
    Leon Trotsky
    “A slave-owner who through cunning and violence shackles a slave in chains, and a slave who through cunning or violence breaks the chains – let not the contemptible eunuchs tell us that they are equals before a court of morality!”
    Leon Trotsky, Their Morals and Ours: The Class Foundations of Moral Practice

  • #21
    Dietrich Bonhoeffer
    “We are not to simply bandage the wounds of victims beneath the wheels of injustice, we are to drive a spoke into the wheel itself.”
    Dietrich Bonhoeffer

  • #22
    George MacDonald
    “If we will but let our God and Father work His will with us, there can be no limit to His enlargement of our existence”
    George MacDonald, Unspoken Sermons: Series I, II, III

  • #23
    George MacDonald
    “A man is as free as he chooses to make himself, never an atom freer.”
    George MacDonald, Lilith



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