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  1. Quotes
  2. Autores
  3. André Gide
Voltar

It is better to be hated for what you are than to be loved for what you are not.

em Autumn Leaves
life love

The true hypocrite is the one who ceases to perceive his deception, the one who lies with sincerity.

life

Man cannot discover new oceans unless he has the courage to lose sight of the shore.

inspirational courage discovery daring exploration

I do not love men: I love what devours them.

em Prometheus Illbound
life mankind writers horror

You can never cross the ocean until you have the courage to lose sight of the shore

inspirational

Yet I'm sure there's something more to be read in a man. People dare not -- they dare not turn the page. The laws of mimicry -- I call them the laws of fear. People are afraid to find themselves alone, and don't find themselves at all. I hate this moral agoraphobia -- it's the worst kind of cowardice. You can't create something without being alone. But who's trying to create here? What seems different in yourself: that's the one rare thing you possess, the one thing which gives each of us his worth; and that's just what we try to suppress. We imitate. And we claim to love life.

em The Immoralist
life philosophy

Believe those who are seeking the truth. Doubt those who find it.

truth

The color of truth is grey.

truth

God depends on us. It is through us that God is achieved.

god

What would a narrative of happiness be like? All that can be described is what prepares it, and then what destroys it.

em The Immoralist
happiness

But I think there comes a point in love, a unique moment which later on the soul seeks in vain to surpass, and that the effort to revive such happiness depletes it; that nothing thwarts happiness so much as the memory of happiness.

em The Immoralist
love happiness

Those who have eyes…do not know their happiness.

em La symphonie pastorale
happiness seeing

Only those things are beautiful which are inspired by madness and written by reason.

writing

Do not do what someone else could do as well as you. Do not say, do not write what someone else could say, could write as well as you. Care for nothing in yourself but what you feel exists nowhere else. And, out of yourself create, impatiently or patiently, the most irreplaceable of beings.

writing

Most often people seek in life occasions for persisting in their opinions rather than for educating themselves.

em Pretexts;: Reflections on literature and morality
honesty learning growth change education opinions prejudices

He who wants a rose must respect her thorn.

relationships women respect rose

No encounter occured that day, and I was glad of it; I took out of my pocket a little Homer I had not opened since leaving Marseilles, reread three lines of the Odyssey, learned them by heart; then, finding sufficient sustenance in their rhythm and reveling in them at leisure, I closed the book and remained, trembling, more alive than I had thought possible, my mind numb with happiness.

em The Immoralist
books reading words literature

Fear of ridicule begets the worst cowardice.

fear cowardice ridicule

There's no better cure for the fear of taking after one's father, than not to know who he is.

em The Counterfeiters
fear parents father fathers cure

I have always thought that great artists were those who dared to confer the right of beauty on things so natural that people say on seeing them, "Why did I never realize before that that was beautiful too?

em The Immoralist
art beauty

This is my thesis: Do you know what is needful to turn an honest man into a rogue! A change of scene--a moment's forgetfulness suffice.

em Lafcadio's Adventures
honesty change rogue honest-man

Do you know why our poetry today and especially our philosophy are such dead issues? Because they've cut themselves off from life. Now, Greece idealized on life's own level: an artist's life was already a poetic achievement; a philosopher's life was an enactment of his philosophy; and when they were a part of life that way, instead of ignoring each other, philosophy could nourish poetry, poetry express philosophy, and together achieve an admirable persuasiveness. Today beauty no longer acts; and action no longer bothers about being beautiful; and wisdom operates on the sidelines.

em The Immoralist
philosophy poetry wisdom beauty being

One does not discover new lands without consenting to lose sight of the shore for a very long time.

courage adventure journey

Know that joy is rarer, more difficult, and more beautiful than sadness. Once you make this all-important discovery, you must embrace joy as a moral obligation.

joy

Most people believe it is only by constraint they can get any good out of themselves, and so they live in a state of psychological distortion. It is his own self that each of them is most afraid of resembling. Each of them sets up a pattern and imitates it; he doesn't even choose the pattern he imitates: he accepts a pattern that has been chosen for him. And yet I verily believe there are other things to be read in man. But people don't dare to - they don't dare to turn the page. Laws of imitation! Laws of fear, I call them. The fear of finding oneself alone - that is what they suffer from - and so they don't find themselves at all. I detest such moral agoraphobia - the most odious cowardice I call it. Why, one always has to be alone to invent anything - but they don't want to invent anything. The part in each of us that we feel is different from other people is just the part that is rare, the part that makes our special value - and that is the very thing people try to suppress. They go on imitating. And yet they think they love life.

em The Immoralist
individuality self self-awareness psychology creativity

I intend to bring you strength, joy, courage, perspicacity, defiance.

courage strength joy defiance andre-gide

I do not want to recollect. I should be afraid of preventing the future and of allowing the past to encroach on me. It is out of the utter forgetfulness of yesterday that I create every new hour's freshness. It is never enough for me to have been happy. I do not believe in dead things and cannot distinguish between being no more and never having been.

happiness memory future past

What would be the description of happines? Nothing, except what prepares and then what destroys it, can be told.

happiness literature quotes andre-gide

To tell the truth, my dear count, I must own that of all nauseating human emanations, literature is one of those which disgust me most. I can see nothing in it but compromise and flattery. And I go so far as to doubt whether it can be anything else.

literature

Rather than recount his life as he has lived it, he must live his life as he will recount it.

em The Immoralist
life-and-living

Nothing thwarts happiness so much as the memory of happiness.

em The Immoralist
happiness memory

Nothing can make a face more impenetrable than the mask of kindliness.

em Isabelle
kindness hiding-emotions

In other people's company I felt I was dull, gloomy, unwelcome, at once bored and boring...

loneliness introversion social-anxiety misfits loners

The secret seemed to me much more mysterious than that; it was the secret, I thought, of one who had known death; for I moved a stranger among ordinary people, like a man who has risen from the grave, and at first I merely felt rather painfully out of my element; but soon I became aware of a very different feeling.Was it pride now? Perhaps; but at any rate there was no trace of vanity mixed with it. It was rather, for the first time, the consciousness of my own worth. What separated me - distinguished me - from other people was crucial; what no one said, what no one could say but myself, that was my task to say.

death self

We prefer to go deformed and distorted all our lives rather than not resemble the portrait of ourselves which we ourselves have first drawn. It’s absurd. We run the risk of warping what’s best in us

em Strait is the Gate and The Vatican Cellars
self personality

Be faithful to that which exists within yourself.

self-esteem integrity moral-courage

I hoped at first to find a rather more direct comprehension of life in one or two novelists and poets; but if they really had such a comprehension, it must be confessed they did not show it; most of them, I thought, did not really live - contented themselves with appearing to live, and were on the verge of considering life merely as a vexatious hindrance to writing.

life writing writers

In a world in which everyone cheats, it's the honest man who passes for a charlatan.

em The Counterfeiters
honesty

She already loved me too much to see me as I was.

love identity

When I was younger, I used to make resolutions, which I imagined were virtuous. I was less anxious to be what I was, than to become what I wished to be. Now, I am not far from thinking that in irresolution lies the secret of not going old.

em The Counterfeiters
youth resolution old-age

The most important things to say are those which often I did not think necessary for me to say — because they were too obvious.

em Journals, 1889-1949
communication assumptions assuming saying-the-right-thing

Because it was natural, could he not see that it was marvelous? Poor creature!

worship natural-revelation

I say, "it seemed to me," for from the depths of my past childhood, there now awoke in me the glimmerings of a thousand lost sensations. The fact that I was once more aware of my senses enabled me to give them a half fearful recognition. Yes; my reawakened senses now remembered a whole ancient history of their own— recomposed for themselves a vanished past. They were alive! Alive! They had never ceased to live; they discovered that even during those early studious years they had been living their own latent, cunning life.

em The Immoralist
life love enlightenment senses

Poverty makes a slave out of men. In order to eat he will accept work that gives no pleasure.

em The Immoralist
philosophical slavery

Those who complimented me were those who understood me the least.

philosophical

There is a germ of revolt lying in the spirit of inquiry and critical curiosity.

em Isabelle
curiosity

He let Julius go. There was beginning to rise in him a feeling of profound disgust--a kind of hatred almost, of himself, of Julius, of everything.

em Lafcadio's Adventures
hatred disgust

One can always find hands for a work of destruction.

em The Counterfeiters
destruction

Will it be here that we shall find a place which will not elude us, or which if it remains does not exert on us a culpable attraction? Or must we, leaning over the deck and watching the shores glide by, move forever onward?

em Urien’s Voyage
longing attraction searching

I wished for nothing beyond her smile, and to walk with her thus, hand in hand, along a sun warmed, flower bordered path.

love innocence naivety

To read a writer is for me not merely to get an idea of what he says, but to go off with him and travel in his company.

writing-from-the-heart writing-inspiration writing-craft writers-quotes

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