"Everything that seems imperishable tends to extinguishment.

... the idea that 'Life' contains situations more interesting and more romantic than all the romances ever written.
~ Marcel Proust ~












... the idea that 'Life' contains situations more interesting and more romantic than all the romance...
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More Marcel Proust quotes
"There can be no peace of mind in love since the advantage one has secured is never anything by a fresh starting-point for further desires.
"... it had arrested for all eternity the moment which it had been trying to make pass more quickly.
"It has since struck me as one of the most touching aspects of the part played in life by these idle, painstaking women that they devote all their gene...
"look you, there are only two classes of men, the magnanimous, and the rest; and I have reached an age when one has to take sides, to decide once and f...
"In his younger days a man dreams of possessing the heart of the woman he loves; later, the feeling that he possesses the heart of a woman may be enoug...
"The facts of life do not penetrate to the sphere in which our beliefs are cherished; as it was not they that engendered those beliefs, so they are pow...
"And my grandmother had bought them in preference to other books, just as she would have preferred to take a house that had a gothic dovecot, or some o...
"Even when she had to make some one a present of the kind called 'useful,' when she had to give an armchair or some table-silver or a walking-stick, sh...
"... since I was still, and must for long remain, in that period of life when one has not yet separated the fact of this sensual pleasure from the vari...
"... they imagine that the life they are obliged to lead is not that for which they are really fitted, and they bring to their regular occupations eith...
"And if she had appeared, would I have dared to speak to her?
"... I should have been struck down by the despair a young lover feels who has sworn lifelong fidelity, when a friend speaks to him of the other mistre...
"And in myself, too, many things have perished which, I imagined, would last for ever, and new structures have arisen, giving birth to new sorrows and ...
"So what I had believed to be nothing to me was simply my entire life. How ignorant one is of oneself.