LIFE QUOTES XI

quotations about life

The only remedy against the malady of life is life itself. The bane is its own antidote.

WILLIAM JOHN LOCKE

The Glory of Clementina


What is our life but a succession of preludes to that unknown song whose first solemn note is sounded by death?

ALPHONSE DE LAMARTINE

Méditations Poétiques

Tags: Alphonse de Lamartine


If life is not a continual denial of the past, then it is nothing.

ARNOLD BENNETT

The Reasonable Life

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A man's life from birth to death was a series of transition rites which brought him nearer and nearer to his ancestors.

CHINUA ACHEBE

Things Fall Apart

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When life is cheap death is rich.

EDWARD ABBEY

One Life at a Time, Please

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Life is a journey we are always travelling; but, unlike most others, seldom care we to reach the end.

EDWARD COUNSEL

Maxims


[A] carefully constructed life is a meticulous diversion from living.

J.R. KINNARD

"'Completely Unknown' Deals in Ambiguity and Subtle Charms", PopMatters, September 1, 2016


How is it that one day life is orderly and you are content, a little cynical perhaps but on the whole just so, and then without warning you find the solid floor is a trapdoor and you are now in another place whose geography is uncertain and whose customs are strange?

JEANETTE WINTERSON

The Passion

Tags: Jeanette Winterson


Life is like underwear, should be changed twice a day.

RAY BRADBURY

A Graveyard for Lunatics

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For life, with all it yields of joy and woe,
And hope and fear, -- believe the aged friend --
Is just a chance o' the prize of learning love.

ROBERT BROWNING

A Death in the Desert

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Life is half delicious yogurt, half crap, and your job is to keep the plastic spoon in the yogurt.

SCOTT ADAMS

Stick to Drawing Comics, Monkey Brain!

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We bring into the world a poor, needy, uncertain life, short at the best; all the imaginations of the wise have been busied to find out the ways how to revive it with pleasure, or relieve it with counsel; how to compose it with ease, and settle it with safety; to some of these ends have been employed the instructions of Lawgivers, the reasonings of Philosophers, the inventions of Poets, the pains of labouring, and the extravagancies of the Voluptuous; all the world is at work perpetually about nothing else, but only that our poor mortal lives should pass the easier and the happier that little time we possess them; or else end the better when we lose them.

WELLINS CALCOTT

Thoughts Moral and Divine


Life in itself Is nothing,
An empty cup,
a flight of uncarpeted stairs.

EDNA ST. VINCENT MILLAY

"Spring"


Life is the wave's deep whisper on the shore
Of a great sea beyond.

HENRY ABBEY

"The Roman Sentinel"

Tags: Henry Abbey


Life is a muddle. It seems a brilliant muddle, if you are an optimist; a dull one, if you aren't; but in neither case can you deny that it is the muddlers who keep it going.

MAX BEERBOHM

The Prince of Minor Writers: The Selected Essays of Max Beerbohm

Tags: Max Beerbohm


The only certainty in life is uncertainty, and I who did not choose to be born and you dear reader, who did not choose that either, have been given the most precious present: the life, without even asking for it. And yet we squander it too many times every day: when we complain over the things we cannot change such as weather or other people; or when we worry about the future instead of setting out with determination that we will give our 100% best and that we will leave the rest to Fortune.

MILENA MILICEVIC

"How I Overcame My Biggest Mistake in Life so Far", Huffington Post, June 14, 2016


A good life keeps off wrinkles.

SPANISH PROVERB


Life is like our game of whist ... I don't enjoy the game much, but I like to play my cards well, and see what will be the end of it.

GEORGE ELIOT

Felix Holt


Life is always uncertain, and common prudence dictates to every man the necessity of settling his temporal concerns, while it is in his power, and while the mind is calm and undisturbed.

GEORGE WASHINGTON

letter to Mrs. Martha Washington, Jun. 18, 1775

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If we look at life in its various stages, has it been worth living at each period? It is rarely doubted as regards the youth. Life is to them a joyous thing--all is fresh and new; and life to their minds seems plastic and pliable; they have the experiment of living their life before them. Putting aside the fact that men do not start in the world with the desire for, or properly trained to make the "best of this life," we will consider if "life lived as it is" by the majority, life as realized in ordinary life, is worth living. And the reply must be, "Yes." Man has a body fitted and adapted for the purposes of life; and although, because of his own disobedience or the faults of his predecessors, he may not enjoy good health, yet the majority have a bodily structure that, if carefully attended to, will enable them successfully to do their work and feel it is a privilege to live, and be able to earn sufficient to live upon; and I think it must be admitted that to the majority, by the use of their brains, by industry, and by thrift, there is the possibility of securing sufficient to supply all with the ways and means of life. Wealth, no doubt, is power; it gives great influence, secures its possessor from many annoyances, gives facilities for attempting and effecting what others might dream of in vain; but it is a mistake to think that "life is more worth living" to the rich man than to the poor. Wealth can only belong to the few, and it would be impossible to imagine that the Creator had done His work so badly that only the "idle rich" were able to enjoy this life. The morning can find you without anxiety; the day may find you equal to the fulfilment of your duties; you may do your work willingly and cheerfully; you may retain the bright cloudlessness of your early days--"the child's heart within the man's"--and, day by day, enjoy life, and retire to rest without its bringing to you sleeplessness or morbid terrors, if you be a machanic, perhaps more so than if you were a Rothschild. Each and every condition of life has its duties and anxieties, its troubles and drawbacks, as well as its pleasures. I have implicit faith in the Creator's law of compensation. My belief is, that God wills, and has so arranged that in all ranks of life, let the difference of condition or capability be what it may, each one has it within him to make his life beautiful and happy. To every living being life is preferable to death; life to each and every one of us "is worth living."

JAMES PLATT

"Is Life Worth Living?", Platt's Essays