“Love has the faculty of making two lovers seem naked, not in each other's sight, but in their own.”
This Business of Living (1935-1950)
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Cesare Pavese137
Italian poet, novelist, literary critic, and translator 1908–1950Related quotes
Amy Bloom (1953) Fiction writer, screenwriter, social worker, psychotherapist
Wisława Szymborska (1923–2012) Polish writer
Openess
Poems New and Collected (1998), Calling Out to Yeti (1957)
“and the two of them loved each other for a long time in silence without making love again.”
Gabriel García Márquez book Love in the Time of Cholera
Source: Love in the Time of Cholera
Gerard Manley Hopkins (1844–1889) English poet
"On the Origin of Beauty: A Platonic Dialogue"
Letters, etc
Malcolm Azania book From the Notebooks of Dr. Brain
Source: From the Notebooks of Dr. Brain (2007), Chapter 9 “Paranoia: It Can Destroy Ya” (p. 283)
Adam Smith book The Theory of Moral Sentiments
Section I, Chap. III.
The Theory of Moral Sentiments (1759), Part I
“That’s love: Two lonely persons keep each other safe and touch each other and talk to each other.”
Rainer Maria Rilke (1875–1926) Austrian poet and writer
Felix Adler (1851–1933) German American professor of political and social ethics, rationalist, and lecturer
Section 5 : Love and Marriage
Founding Address (1876), Life and Destiny (1913)
Context: Love is the expansion of two natures in such fashion that each include the other, each is enriched by the other.
Love is an echo in the feelings of a unity subsisting between two persons which is founded both on likeness and on complementary differences. Without the likeness there would be no attraction; without the challenge of the complementary differences there could not be the closer interweaving and the inextinguishable mutual interest which is the characteristic of all deeper relationships.