A passage from the first volume of his Memoirs as quoted in Political Realism in American Thought (1977) by John W. Coffey, p. 26 
Context: I lived, particularly in childhood but with lessening intensity right on to middle age, in a world that was peculiarly and intimately my own, scarcely to be shared with others or even made plausible to them. I habitually read special meanings into things, scenes and places — qualities of wonder, beauty, promise, or horror — for which there was no external evidence visible or plausible to others. My world was peopled with mysteries, seductive hints, vague menaces, "intimations of immortality."
                                    
George F. Kennan: Other
George F. Kennan was American advisor, diplomat, political scientist and historian. Explore interesting quotes on other.In a 1993 letter to Thomas Naylor, on the idea of the secession of Maine, New Hampshire, and Vermont from the US, as quoted in "Most Likely to Secede" by Christopher Ketcham in Good magazine (10 January 2008) http://www.goodmagazine.com/section/Features/most_likely_to_secede
                                        
                                        Leningrad, September 1945 
The Kennan Diaries
                                    
Memoirs 1925 - 1950 (1967), Russia — Seven Years Later (September 1944)
"Foreword to 'The Pathology of Power'" by Norman Cousins (Norton, 1987), from At a Century's Ending: Reflections 1982-1995 (Norton, 1997, ISBN 0-393-31609-2), Part II: Cold War in Full Bloom, p. 118
From Russia and the West under Lenin by George Kennan (1960)
                                        
                                        October 17-21, 1949 
The Kennan Diaries
                                    
                                        
                                        VII. Far East 
Memo PPS23 (1948)
                                    
As quoted in "George Kennan Speaks Out About Iraq" at History News Network (26 September 2002) http://hnn.us/articles/997.html