LIFE QUOTES VIII

quotations about life

life quote

Life has a value only when it has something valuable as its object.

GEORG WILHELM FRIEDRICH HEGEL

Lectures on the Philosophy of History

Tags: Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel


A man gathers a life around him like a hedgehog collecting leaves on its spines; what sticks to you defines you, and without them you're bare, defenseless, a yolk without a shell.

K. J. PARKER

Evil for Evil

Tags: K. J. Parker


Live to the point of tears.

ALBERT CAMUS

Notebooks

Tags: Albert Camus


I believe that this life is a journey home. Someone is calling us, someone we know as God, and whom others know by different names.

JAMES BEHRENS

Newton Citizen, May 19, 2016


Let us all so live as we shall wish we had lived when we come to die; for that only is well, that ends well.

BENJAMIN WHICHCOTE

Moral and Religious Aphorisms

Tags: Benjamin Whichcote


Let us pounce
upon this red prey,
let us tear life
that passes throbbing
and lift together
our wild flight.

PABLO NERUDA

"The Condor"

Tags: Pablo Neruda


The shock, the power of an ordinary life. It is a thing you could not invent with banks of computers in a dust-free room.

DON DELILLO

Underworld

Tags: Don DeLillo


We are meant to taste of life ... and drink the cup of it to the dregs, bitter and sweet alike.

JACQUELINE CAREY

Kushiel's Dart

Tags: Jacqueline Carey


Store well Life's sheaves, the grains of thought--
Your harvest will be good,
If sheaves are bound by ties of love,
And evil you've withstood.

ARDELIA COTTON BARTON

"Gathering of the Sheaves"

Tags: Ardelia Cotton Barton


Life is more sweet than I
Knew: the shifted scene
Less wavered, more trimmed with light,
Than the years before.
Look down. People pass over the ice
As a file of thin ghosts creep,
And fade beyond the hill.
You, and you, and you--
Small souls, shrinking away.

MARK TURBYFILL

"Journey"


Meeting each other and leaving each other. Leaving and meeting. That's what life is!

AUGUST STRINDBERG

A Dream Play

Tags: August Strindberg


Our life is in the loom; it rolls up and is hidden as fast as it is woven. It is to be taken out of the loom only when we leave this world; then only shall we see the pattern.

HENRY WARD BEECHER

Proverbs from Plymouth Pulpit


Into each life some rain must fall,
Some days must be dark and dreary.

HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW

"The Rainy Day"


What misery to live in this world! We are like men whose enemies are at the door, who must not lay aside their arms, even while sleeping or eating, and are always in dread lest the foe should enter the fortress by some breach in the walls. O my Lord and my all! How canst thou wish us to prize such a wretched existence?

TERESA OF AVILA

The Interior Castle

Tags: Teresa of Avila


Each new epoch in life seems an encounter. There is a tussle and a cloud of dust, and we come out of it triumphant or crest-fallen, according as we have borne ourselves.

HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW

Table-Talk


The great river-courses which have shaped the lives of men have hardly changed; and those other streams, the life-currents that ebb and flow in human hearts, pulsate to the same great needs, the same great loves and terrors. As our thought follows close in the slow wake of the dawn, we are impressed with the broad sameness of the human lot, which never alters in the main headings of its history--hunger and labour, seed-time and harvest, love and death.

GEORGE ELIOT

Romola

Tags: George Eliot


Life is merely a fracas on an unmapped terrain.

EMIL CIORAN

A Short History of Decay

Tags: Emile Cioran


To live is so startling, it leaves but little room for other occupations.

EMILY DICKINSON

letter to T. W. Higginson, winter 1871

Tags: Emily Dickinson


I suspect most of life takes place in the interstices of what's already been articulated.

SAMUEL R. DELANY

Rain Taxi, winter 2000/2001

Tags: Samuel R. Delany


So our lives glide on: the river ends we don't know where, and the sea begins, and then there is no more jumping ashore.

GEORGE ELIOT

Felix Holt