“More than mother and son, they were accomplices in solitude.”
Gabriel García Márquez book One Hundred Years of Solitude
Source: One Hundred Years of Solitude
Maxim 222
Sentences, The Moral Sayings of Publius Syrus, a Roman Slave
“More than mother and son, they were accomplices in solitude.”
Gabriel García Márquez book One Hundred Years of Solitude
Source: One Hundred Years of Solitude
“In my solitude I sing to myself a sweet lullaby, as sweet as my mother used to sing to me.”
Albert Cohen (1895–1981) Swiss writer
Le livre de ma mère [The Book of My Mother] (1954)
John of the Cross (1542–1591) Spanish mystic and Roman Catholic saint
Spiritual Canticle of The Soul and The Bridegroom
“O Solitude! You are my home, Solitude!”
Friedrich Nietzsche book Thus Spoke Zarathustra
Thus Spoke Zarathustra
“Overt anxiety… that part of anxiety of which the individual is aware and ready to speak.”
Raymond Cattell (1905–1998) British-American psychologist
Source: The Scientific Analysis of Personality, 1965, p. 372
George Müller (1805–1898) German-English clergyman
Muller is often attributed with a version of this saying, and the quote (with attribution to Muller) appears as early as 1897 in The Churchman https://books.google.com/books?id=cpdOAQAAMAAJ&pg=RA25-PA45&lpg=RA25-PA45&dq=The+beginning+of+anxiety+is+the+end+of+faith,+and+the+beginning+of+true+faith+is+the+end+of+anxiety+%2B+the+churchman&source=bl&ots=3x_wtX82mF&sig=gGHZUKxXWa5BfvRfzeY_F8zA9dM&hl=; however, no source written by Muller can be found to confirm him as having said this.