Quote from a speech of Ferdinand Hodler: 'The artist's mission' (held in Freibourg in 1897), first published in 1923 in Zurich; as cited by Paul Westheim in Confessions of Artists - Letters, Memoirs and Observations of Contemporary Artists, Propyläen Publishing House, Berlin, 1925
“Man tells his aspiration in his God; but in his demon he shows his depth of experience; and casts light into the cavern through which he worked his cause up to the cheerful day.”
As quoted in Margaret Fuller Ossoli (1898) by Thomas Wentworth Higginson, p. 289-91.
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Margaret Fuller 116
American feminist, poet, author, and activist 1810–1850Related quotes
Job 11:7
Source: Catholicism (1938), Ch. XI. "Person and Society", p. 186
Misattributed to Chateaubriand on the internet and even some recently published books, this statement actually originated with L. P. Jacks in Education through Recreation (1932)
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Knowing Yourself: The True in the False (1996)
Context: You think: you become that thought. And consciousness, or the state of pure awareness, is lost. The highest knowledge man can possess is that which is true in his own experience. If his experience is limited, so is his knowledge and he behaves accordingly.
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Laus Veneris.
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Source: The King Must Die (1958)