“His fables so brutally imposed, sweated by heart. Their morality is a prison which I don't want to penetrate anymore.”
Paul Éluard on La Fontaine
Attributed by: Ivry, Benjamin (1996). Francis Poulenc, p. 125, 20th-Century Composers series. Phaidon Press Limited. ISBN 071483503X.
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Paul Éluard 4
French poet 1895–1952Related quotes

In an interview by Henry Geldzahler, 'Art International 1.', February 1964, p. 48
1950 - 1968

Source: The Notebook, The Proof, The Third Lie: Three Novels

“I wouldn't kill an abortionist myself, but I wouldn't want to impose my moral values on others.”
"49 Million to Five" (3 June 2009).
2009
Context: I wouldn't kill an abortionist myself, but I wouldn't want to impose my moral values on others. No one is for shooting abortionists. But how will criminalizing men making difficult, often tragic, decisions be an effective means of achieving the goal of reducing the shootings of abortionists?

“The moral of all fables: Man is an animal.”
Moraleja de todas las fábulas: el hombre es un animal.
Falsificaciones (1977)

“If you don't want to do something, don't impose on others”

Source: Moral Man and Immoral Society (1932), pp. 8-9
Context: The inevitable hypocrisy, which is associated with the all the collective activities of the human race, springs chiefly from this source: that individuals have a moral code which makes the actions of collective man an outrage to their conscience. They therefore invent romantic and moral interpretations of the real facts, preferring to obscure rather than reveal the true character of their collective behavior. Sometimes they are as anxious to offer moral justifications for the brutalities from which they suffer as for those which they commit. The fact that the hypocrisy of man's group behavior... expresses itself not only in terms of self-justification but in terms of moral justification of human behavior in general, symbolizes one of the tragedies of the human spirit: its inability to conform its collective life to its individual ideals. As individuals, men believe they ought to love and serve each other and establish justice between each other. As racial, economic and national groups they take for themselves, whatever their power can command.