“Yes, I know, we are merely empty forms of matter, but we are indeed sublime in having invented God and our soul.”
Letter to Henri Cazalis (April 1866), published in Selected Letters of Stéphane Mallarmé (1988), p. 60.
Observations
Context: Yes, I know, we are merely empty forms of matter, but we are indeed sublime in having invented God and our soul. So sublime, my friend, that I want to gaze upon matter, fully conscious that it exists, and yet launching itself madly into Dream, despite its knowl edge that Dream has no existence, extolling the Soul and all the divine impressions of that kind which have collected within us from the beginning of time and proclaiming, in the face of the Void which is truth, these glorious lies!
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Stéphane Mallarmé36
French Symbolist poet 1842–1898Related quotes
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“We may never come to full knowing of God till we know first clearly our own Soul.”
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Variant: We can never come to full knowing of God till we know first clearly our own Soul.
Olaf Stapledon book Sirius
Sirius (1944)
“Here we are reaching out for aliens
Looking for our salvation.
Pity our emptiness
Save our souls.”
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Wendell Phillips (1811–1884) American abolitionist, advocate for Native Americans, orator and lawyer
Lecture: The Lost Arts, reported in Bartlett's Familiar Quotations, 10th ed. (1919)
Julian of Norwich (1342–1416) English theologian and anchoress
And high understanding it is, inwardly to see and know that God, which is our Maker, dwelleth in our soul; and an higher understanding it is, inwardly to see and to know that our soul, that is made, dwelleth in God’s Substance: of which Substance, God, we are that we are.
And I saw no difference between God and our Substance: but as it were all God; and yet mine understanding took that our Substance is in God: that is to say, that God is God, and our Substance is a creature in God.
Summations, Chapter 54