“Life will bring you pain all by itself. Your responsibility is to create joy.”
Milton H. Erickson (1901–1980) American psychiatrist
A Short History of Decay (1949)
“Life will bring you pain all by itself. Your responsibility is to create joy.”
Milton H. Erickson (1901–1980) American psychiatrist
Benjamin Fish Austin (1850–1933) Nineteenth-century Canadian educator/Methodist Minister/Spiritualist
On Women (1890)
“In real life, my sweet poet,” the duke said as the swordsmen circled, “words can never be undone.”
Ellen Kushner book The Privilege of the Sword
Part I, Chapter IX (p. 99)
The Privilege of the Sword (2006)
Antonio Negri book Multitude: War and Democracy in the Age of Empire
146
Multitude: War and Democracy in the Age of Empire
Antonin Artaud (1896–1948) French-Occitanian poet, playwright, actor and theatre director
Van Gogh, the Man Suicided by Society (1947)
Lin Yutang book The Importance of Living
Source: As quoted in Pearls of Wisdom: A Harvest of Quotations From All Ages (1987) by Jerome Agel and Walter D. Glanze, p. 46. From The Importance of Living: "besides the noble art of getting things done, there is a nobler art of leaving things undone" (p. 162), "the wisdom of life consists in the elimination of non-essentials" (p. 10).
Thomas Mann (1875–1955) German novelist, and 1929 Nobel Prize laureate
Speech at the Prussian Academy of Art in Berlin (22 January 1929); also in Essays of Three Decades (1942)
Zora Neale Hurston book Their Eyes Were Watching God
C. 2, p. 10.
Source: Their Eyes Were Watching God (1937)