,

Love And Lust Quotes

Quotes tagged as "love-and-lust" Showing 1-9 of 9
“LOVE is made up of a strong affection and patience whiles LUST is made up of a strong affection and impatience. Affection is common to them, but patience is not common.”
Israelmore Ayivor

Zadie Smith
“Desire is never final, desire is imprecise and impractical [...]”
Zadie Smith, NW

“Pleasure was a siren, luring her to experience more”
Linda Howard, Strangers in the Night

Deepak Ranjan
“Don’t have the power to make someone happy…?’ I
criticized.
‘I have the power, the desire… But No marriage, No girlfriend stuff… When I feel like doing something crazy, I can pay and get a girl in bed… No emotions, no argument, and no expectations, just I want to fuck and fulfil my desire, that’s it…! Darling, there is nothing like ‘LOVE’, everything revolves around the four lettered word – ‘FUCK’, understood…?’ he explained naughtily.”
Deepak Ranjan, Nights of the Velvet: A Conditional Dream

Carl Phillips
“It was then we found ourselves too many fields away from
where we'd meant to be, with regard to desire, to get there
ever, even if—though this was not the case—we'd been
told the way.”
Carl Phillips, Silverchest: Poems

Demelza Carlton
“My heart swelled in my chest, like a froth of bubbles begging to be released.”
Demelza Carlton, Water and Fire

P.S. Jagadeesh Kumar
“Love is the GOD, Lust is the TEMPLE”
Dr.P.S. Jagadeesh Kumar

“At the core of every man are two things driving them, love or lust. Love gives, and lust takes.”
Emmanuel Apetsi

Honoré de Balzac
“Many married women, faithful to family duty and their husbands, will at this point probably ask themselves why such strong men, so really good and kind, who are so vulnerable to women like Madame Marneffe, do not find the realization of their dreams and the fulfilment of their passions in their wives, especially when their wives are like Adeline Hulot.
The reason is linked with one of the most fundamental mysteries of human nature. Love, which awakens the mind to joy and delight, the virile, austere pleasure of the most noble faculties of the soul, and sex, the vulgar commodity sold in the market, are two aspects of the same thing. Women capable of satisfying the hunger for both are geniuses in their own kind, and no more numerous than the great writers, artists, and inventors of a nation. Men of all kinds, the distinguished man and the fool, the Hulots as much as the Crevels, desire both an ideal love and pleasure. They are all in quest of that mysterious hermaphrodite, that rare work, which most often turns out to be a work in two volumes.”
Honoré de Balzac, Cousin Bette