
“A sensitive person gets burned, like a delicate moth.”
Der Sensible muß verbrennen, dieser zarte Nachtfalter.
P 71
The Piano Teacher (1988)
The Way Some People Die (1951)
“A sensitive person gets burned, like a delicate moth.”
Der Sensible muß verbrennen, dieser zarte Nachtfalter.
P 71
The Piano Teacher (1988)
"The Gazelles", line 13; from The Centaur's Booty (London: Duckworth, 1903) p. ix.
Source: Bishop Selvanayagam tells his story https://cj.my/74779/bishop-selvanayagam-tells-his-story/ (14 August 2012)
“The very nature of intelligence is sensitivity, and this sensitivity is love.”
Vol. I, p. 113 <!-- 90? intellectual cleverness that remains merely cynical and confined to the personal or partisan contrasted with wise compassionate awareness which transcends such bounds and abides with the eternal and universal qualities and vital resolutions beyond all mortal aims. -->
1980s, Letters to the Schools (1981, 1985)
Context: The very nature of intelligence is sensitivity, and this sensitivity is love. Without this intelligence there can be no compassion. Compassion is not the doing of charitable acts or social reform; it is free from sentiment, romanticism and emotional enthusiasm. It is as strong as death. It is like a great rock, immovable in the midst of confusion, misery and anxiety. Without this compassion no new culture or society can come into being. Compassion and intelligence walk together; they are not separate. Compassion acts through intelligence. It can never act through the intellect. Compassion is the essence of the wholeness of life.
“Alan Alda is loved not because he's sensitive, but because he's successful and sensitive.”
Source: Why Men Are the Way They Are (1988), p. 134.
“We cannot be more sensitive to pleasure without being more sensitive to pain.”
Source: The Wisdom of Insecurity: A Message for an Age of Anxiety
as quoted in Futurism, ed. Didier Ottinger; Centre Pompidou / 5 Continents Editions, Milan, 2008, p. 154.
1914 - 1916