“To make pleasures pleasant, shorten them.”
Source: Notes of Thought (1883), p. 122
A Voice from the Attic (1960)
Context: Complementary to his is Thurber's remark that "humour is a kind of emotional chaos, told about quietly and calmly in retrospect". Emotional chaos is not pleasant; distillation of that chaos afterward may perhaps be pleasant in some of its aspects, and undoubtedly gives pleasure to others.
“To make pleasures pleasant, shorten them.”
Source: Notes of Thought (1883), p. 122
“Humor is emotional chaos remembered in tranquility.”
Quoted in New York Post (29 February 1960)
Letters and interviews
Source: You Shall Know Our Velocity!
Source: Sayings of Sri Ramakrishna (1960), p. 548
“I give an idea to Sam. "Destroy time, and chaos may be ordered," I say to him.”
Source: The Man Who Studied Yoga (1956), Ch. 5
Context: I give an idea to Sam. "Destroy time, and chaos may be ordered," I say to him.
"Destroy time, and chaos may be ordered," he repeats after me, and in desperation to seek his coma, mutters back, "I do not feel my nose, my nose is numb, my eyes are heavy, my eyes are heavy."
So Sam enters the universe of sleep, a man who seeks to live in such a way as to avoid pain, and succeeds merely in avoiding pleasure. What a dreary compromise is life!