“Beauty can pierce one like pain.”
Thomas Mann (1875–1955) German novelist, and 1929 Nobel Prize laureate
Buddenbrooks [Buddenbrooks: Verfall einer Familie, Roman], Pt 11, Ch. 2
Source: Murder in the Cathedral
“Beauty can pierce one like pain.”
Thomas Mann (1875–1955) German novelist, and 1929 Nobel Prize laureate
Buddenbrooks [Buddenbrooks: Verfall einer Familie, Roman], Pt 11, Ch. 2
Fyodor Dostoyevsky book The Dream of a Ridiculous Man
Source: The Dream of a Ridiculous Man (1877), IV
Context: They had no temples, but they had a real living and uninterrupted sense of oneness with the whole of the universe; they had no creed, but they had a certain knowledge that when their earthly joy had reached the limits of earthly nature, then there would come for them, for the living and for the dead, a still greater fullness of contact with the whole of the universe. They looked forward to that moment with joy, but without haste, not pining for it, but seeming to have a foretaste of it in their hearts, of which they talked to one another.
Ann Brashares book Girls in Pants: The Third Summer of the Sisterhood
Variant: Live, laugh, love.
When you can feel someone else's pain and joy as if it's your own, thats when you know you really love them - Tina Lowell
Source: Girls in Pants: The Third Summer of the Sisterhood
“You shall have joy, or you shall have power, said God; you shall not have both.”
Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803–1882) American philosopher, essayist, and poet
October 1842
1820s, Journals (1822–1863)