
“Love? What is it? Most natural painkiller what there is. LOVE.”
Last Words: The Final Journals of William S. Burroughs (2000)
You may become curious, though, about what happened to that painkiller should depression take hold and expose your love—whatever its object—as just one of the many intoxicants that muddled your consciousness of the human tragedy. You may also want to take a second look at whatever struck you as a person, place, or thing of “beauty,” a quality that lives only in the neurotransmitters of the beholder. (Aesthetics? What is it? A matter for those not depressed enough to care nothing about anything, that is, those who determine almost everything that is supposed to matter to us. Protest as you like, neither art nor an aesthetic view of life are distractions granted to everyone.) In depression, all that once seemed beautiful, or even startling and dreadful, is nothing to you. The image of a cloud-crossed moon is not in itself a purveyor of anything mysterious or mystical; it is only an ensemble of objects represented to us by our optical apparatus and perhaps processed as a memory.
The Conspiracy Against the Human Race: A Contrivance of Horror (2010)
“Love? What is it? Most natural painkiller what there is. LOVE.”
Last Words: The Final Journals of William S. Burroughs (2000)
“For what the most neglects, most curious prove,
So Beauty's helped by Nature, Heaven, and Love.”
Canto II, stanza 18 (tr. Fairfax)
Gerusalemme Liberata (1581)
L’amour est le plus joli larcin que la Société ait su faire à la Nature; mais la maternité, n’est-ce pas la Nature dans sa joie? Un sourire a séché mes larmes.
Part I, ch. XXVIII.
Letters of Two Brides (1841-1842)
“Everybody's afraid of love, because love is what hurts the most.”
Source: Archangel
“He who has thought most deeply loves what is most alive.”
Wer das Tiefste gedacht, liebt das Lebendigste.
“Sokrates und Alcibiades”
When Things Fall Apart: Heart Advice for Difficult Times (1997)