Source: The Greatest Salesman in the World (1968), Ch. 16 : The Scroll Marked IX, p. 95.
“I cannot walk a single step or make any movement or gesture, sit down, go out, look at the sky or ground, without feeling some reason for hope or despair, until at last, exasperated by the trammels put upon my actions by my thought, I defy all superstitions and just act as I want to act.”
Source: My Double Life (1907), Ch. 33 <!-- p. 362 -->
Context: I am so superstitious that if I had arrived when there was no sunshine I should have been wretched and most anxious until after my first performance. It is a perfect torture to be superstitious to this degree, and, unfortunately for me, I am ten times more so now than I was in those days, for besides the superstitions of my own country, I have, thanks to my travels, added to my stock all the superstitions of other countries. I know them all now, and in any critical moment of my life, they all rise up in armed legions for or against me. I cannot walk a single step or make any movement or gesture, sit down, go out, look at the sky or ground, without feeling some reason for hope or despair, until at last, exasperated by the trammels put upon my actions by my thought, I defy all superstitions and just act as I want to act.
Help us to complete the source, original and additional information
Sarah Bernhardt 11
French actress 1844–1923Related quotes

A History of the Lyre
The Venetian Bracelet (1829)

Part I, Chapter 21, 'Nirbal Ke Bala Rama'
1920s, An Autobiography (1927)

Recounting a "walk in the snow" at a news conference announcing his resignation (29 February 1984)[citation needed]

Source: Understanding Our Mind: 50 Verses on Buddhist Psychology

Letter from Berlin to Emil Boesen, May 25, 1843, Letter 82
1840s, The Journals of Søren Kierkegaard, 1840s