Noah > Noah's Quotes

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  • #1
    Matti Friedman
    “The stadium was quiet. Cohen raised his hands and parted his fingers. He switched from English to Hebrew—not the new Hebrew of the Tel Aviv streets but the archaic language of the synagogue and the Diaspora, of the old men at the Gate of Heaven, the language of the priests, fifteen words. He blessed the people, and left the stage.”
    Matti Friedman, Who by Fire: Leonard Cohen in the Sinai

  • #2
    Matti Friedman
    “Michael wasn't just happy to see his son again, he was relieved. He said something that Isaac never forgot, and which he repeated to me in a little kibbutz house a few hundred yards away from where this moment had happened forty-seven years before. He'd repeated the sentence, turning it over in his head, many times. His father said, "I'm so happy you came to the war."

    Isaac loved his father until his death. He keeps a large photograph of him, one he took himself, on the wall. But he never forgot those words—the way his father was willing to sacrifice him, the idea that there were things more important than his only living son. It's an unsettling story, one of our oldest, from Genesis. If this were a novel, the character of the boy would have to be named Isaac, but in a novel you wouldn't dare call him that. It would be too much.”
    Matti Friedman, Who by Fire: Leonard Cohen in the Sinai

  • #3
    Abraham Joshua Heschel
    “Who is a Jew? A person whose integrity decays when unmoved by the knowledge of wrong done to other people.”
    Abraham Joshua Heschel, Moral Grandeur and Spiritual Audacity

  • #4
    E.M. Forster
    “Did you ever dream you had a friend, Alec? Someone to last your whole life and you his. I suppose such a thing can’t really happen outside sleep.”
    E.M. Forster, Maurice

  • #5
    Abraham Joshua Heschel
    “Modern man may be characterized as a being who is callous to catastrophes. A victim of enforced brutalization, his sensibility is being increasingly reduced; his sense of honor is on the wane. The distinction between right and wrong is becoming blurred. All that is left to us is our being horrified at the loss of our sense of honor.”
    Abraham Joshua Heschel, God in Search of Man: A Philosophy of Judaism

  • #6
    Chaim Potok
    “A man is born into this world with only a tiny spark of goodness in him. The spark is God, it is the soul; the rest is ugliness and evil, a shell. The spark must be guarded like a treasure, it must be nurtured, it must be fanned into flame. It must learn to seek out other sparks, it must dominate the shell. Anything can be a shell, Reuven. Anything. Indifference, laziness, brutality, and genius. Yes, even a great mind can be a shell and choke the spark.”
    Chaim Potok, The Chosen

  • #7
    Andrew Sean Greer
    “He kisses—how do I explain it? Like someone in love. Like he has nothing to lose. Like someone who has just learned a foreign language and can use only the present tense and only the second person. Only now, only you. There are some men who have never been kissed like that. There are some men who discover, after Arthur Less, that they never will be again.”
    Andrew Sean Greer, Less

  • #8
    Chaim Potok
    “I learned a long time ago, Reuven, that a blink of an eye in itself is nothing. But the eye that blinks, that is something. A span of life is nothing. But the man who lives that span, he is something. He can fill that tiny span with meaning, so its quality is immeasurable though its quantity may be insignificant. Do you understand what I am saying? A man must fill his life with meaning, meaning is not automatically given to life.”
    Chaim Potok, The Chosen

  • #9
    Andrew Sean Greer
    “Name a day, name an hour, in which Arthur Less was not afraid. Of ordering a cocktail, taking a taxi, teaching a class, writing a book. Afraid of these and almost everything else in the world. Strange, though; because he is afraid of everything, nothing is harder than anything else. Taking a trip around the world is no more terrifying than buying a stick of gum. The daily dose of courage.”
    Andrew Sean Greer, Less

  • #10
    Abraham Joshua Heschel
    “All we own is a passing intention, but what comes about will outlive and surpass our power.”
    Abraham Joshua Heschel, God in Search of Man: A Philosophy of Judaism

  • #11
    Abraham Joshua Heschel
    “The meaning of awe is to realize that life takes place under wide horizons, horizons that range beyond the span of an individual life or even the life of a nation, a generation, or an era. Awe enables us to perceive in the world intimations of the divine, to sense in small things the beginning of infinite significance, to sense the ultimate in the common and the simple; to feel in the rush of the passing the stillness of the eternal.”
    Abraham Joshua Heschel, God in Search of Man: A Philosophy of Judaism

  • #12
    Antoine de Saint-Exupéry
    “Tu n’es encore pour moi qu’un petit garçon tout semblable à cent mille petits garcons. Et je n’ai pas besoin de toi. Et tu n’as pas besoin de moi non plus. Je ne suis pour toi qu’un renard semblable à cent mille renards. Mais, si tu m’apprivoises, nous aurons besoin l’un de l’autre. Tu seras pour moi unique au monde. Je serai pour toi unique au monde.”
    Antoine de Saint-Exupéry, Le Petit Prince

  • #13
    Abraham Joshua Heschel
    “It is customary to blame secular science and anti-religious philosophy for the eclipse of religion in modern society. It would be more honest to blame religion for its own defeats. Religion declined not because it was refuted, but because it became irrelevant, dull, oppressive, insipid. When faith is completely replaced by creed, worship by discipline, love by habit; when the crisis of today is ignored because of the splendor of the past; when faith becomes an heirloom rather than a living fountain; when religion speaks only in the name of authority rather than with the voice of compassion--its message becomes meaningless.”
    Abraham Joshua Heschel, God in Search of Man: A Philosophy of Judaism

  • #14
    Abraham Joshua Heschel
    “This is one of the goals of the Jewish way of living: to experience commonplace deeds as spiritual adventures, to feel the hidden love and wisdom in all things.”
    Abraham Joshua Heschel, God in Search of Man: A Philosophy of Judaism

  • #15
    Abraham Joshua Heschel
    “Wonder or radical amazement is the chief characteristic of the religious man's attitude toward history and nature.”
    Abraham Joshua Heschel, God in Search of Man: A Philosophy of Judaism

  • #16
    Abraham Joshua Heschel
    “There is a passion and drive for cruel deeds which only the awe and fear of God can soothe; there is a suffocating selfishness in man which only holiness can ventilate.”
    Abraham Joshua Heschel, God in Search of Man: A Philosophy of Judaism

  • #17
    Abraham Joshua Heschel
    “Mankind will not perish for want of information; but only for want of appreciation. The beginning of our happiness lies in the understanding that life without wonder is not worth living . What we lack is not a will to believe but a will to wonder.”
    Abraham Joshua Heschel, God in Search of Man: A Philosophy of Judaism

  • #18
    Abraham Joshua Heschel
    “The surest way of misunderstanding revelation is to take it literally, to imagine that God spoke to the prophet on a long-distance telephone. Yet most of us succumb to such fancy, forgetting that the cardinal sin in thinking about ultimate issues is literal-mindedness.”
    Abraham Joshua Heschel, God in Search of Man: A Philosophy of Judaism

  • #19
    Abraham Joshua Heschel
    “To gain control of the world of space is certainly one of our tasks. The danger begins when in gaining power in the realm of space we forfeit all aspirations in the realm of time. There is a realm of time where the goal is not to have but to be, not to own but to give, not to control but to share, not to subdue but to be in accord. Life goes wrong when the control of space, the acquisition of things of space, becomes our sole concern.”
    Abraham Joshua Heschel, The Sabbath

  • #20
    Chaim Potok
    “And then I was crying too, crying with Danny, silently, for his pain and for the years of his suffering, knowing that I loved him, and not knowing whether I hated or loved the long, anguished years of his life.”
    Chaim Potok, The Chosen

  • #21
    Richard Brautigan
    “Your Catfish Friend

    If I were to live my life
    in catfish forms
    in scaffolds of skin and whiskers
    at the bottom of a pond
    and you were to come by
    one evening
    when the moon was shining
    down into my dark home
    and stand there at the edge
    of my affection
    and think, “It's beautiful
    here by this pond. I wish
    somebody loved me,”
    I'd love you and be your catfish
    friend and drive such lonely
    thoughts from your mind
    and suddenly you would be
    at peace,
    and ask yourself, “I wonder
    if there are any catfish
    in this pond? It seems like
    a perfect place for them.”
    Richard Brautigan, The Pill vs. the Springhill Mine Disaster

  • #22
    Victor Hugo
    “Aimer ou avoir aimée, cela suffit. Ne demandez rien ensuite. On n'a pas d'autre perle à trouver dans les plis ténébreux de la vie. Aimer est un accomplissement.”
    Victor Hugo, Les Misérables: Marius
    tags: love

  • #23
    E.M. Forster
    “You care for me a little bit, I do think," he admitted, "but I can't hang all my life on a little bit. You don't. You hang yours on Anne. You don't worry whether your relation with her is platonic or not, you only know it's big enough to hang a life on.”
    E.M. Forster, Maurice

  • #24
    E.M. Forster
    “You confuse what's important with what's impressive.”
    E.M. Forster, Maurice

  • #25
    Hanya Yanagihara
    “Oh god, I thought, can nothing in this jungle behave as it ought? Must fruits move and trees breathe and freshwater rivers taste of the ocean? Why must nothing obey the laws of nature? Why must everything point so heavily toward the existence of enchantment?”
    Hanya Yanagihara, The People in the Trees

  • #26
    Hanya Yanagihara
    “For years afterward, I had dreams in which my mother appeared in strange forms, her features sewn onto other beings in combinations that seemed both grotesque and profound: as a slippery white fish at the end of my hook, with a trout’s gaping, sorrowful mouth and her dark, shuttered eyes; as the elm tree at the edge of our property, its ragged clumps of tarnished gold leaves replaced by knotted skeins of her black hair; as the lame gray dog that lived on the Mueller’s property, whose mouth, her mouth, opened and closed in yearning and who never made a sound. As I grew older, I came to realize that death had been easy for my mother; to fear death, you must first have something to tether you to life. But she had not. It was as if she had been preparing for her death the entire time I knew her. One day she was alive; the next, not.

    And as Sybil said, she was lucky. For what more could we presume to ask from death — but kindness?”
    Hanya Yanagihara, The People in the Trees

  • #27
    Hanya Yanagihara
    “Sometimes I would have to take my glasses off simply so the world would smudge and recede for a moment and cease to seem so relentlessly present tense.”
    Hanya Yanagihara, The People in the Trees

  • #28
    Hanya Yanagihara
    “There is really no satisfying or new way to describe beauty, and besides, I find it embarrassing to do so. So I will say only that he was beautiful, and that I found myself suddenly shy, unsure even of how to address him”
    Hanya Yanagihara, The People in the Trees
    tags: beauty

  • #29
    Hanya Yanagihara
    “But time, I have come to realize, is not for us to fill in such great, blank slabs. We speak of managing time, but it is the opposite. Our lives are filled with businesses because those thin chinks of time are all we can truly master.”
    Hanya Yanagihara, The People in the Trees
    tags: life, time

  • #30
    Andrew Sean Greer
    “Twenty years of joy and support and friendship, that’s a success. Twenty years of anything with another person is a success. If a band stays together twenty years, it’s a miracle. If a comedy duo stays together twenty years, they’re a triumph. Is this night a failure because it will end in an hour? Is the sun a failure because it’s going to end in a billion years? No, it’s the fucking sun. Why does a marriage not count? It isn’t in us, it isn’t in human beings, to be tied to one person forever.”
    Andrew Sean Greer, Less



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