“As well as the greatest optimist I see the lark soaring in the spring air, but I also see a young girl of about twenty, who might have been in good health, a victim to consumption, and who will perhaps drown herself before she dies of an illness. If one is always in respectable company among rather well-to-do bourgeois one does not notice this so much perhaps, but if one has dined for years on 'la vache enragee', as I did, one cannot deny that great misery is a fact that weighs down the scale.”

Quote in his letter to brother Theo, from Antwerp Belgium, Winter 1886; as quoted in Vincent van Gogh, edited by Alfred H. Barr; Museum of Modern Art, New York, 1935 https://www.moma.org/documents/moma_catalogue_1996_300061887.pdf, (letter 453), p. 38
1880s, 1886

Adopted from Wikiquote. Last update June 3, 2021. History

Help us to complete the source, original and additional information

Do you have more details about the quote "As well as the greatest optimist I see the lark soaring in the spring air, but I also see a young girl of about twenty,…" by Vincent Van Gogh?
Vincent Van Gogh photo
Vincent Van Gogh 238
Dutch post-Impressionist painter (1853-1890) 1853–1890

Related quotes

Ford Madox Ford photo
Pearl S.  Buck photo

“Ah well, perhaps one has to be very old before one learns how to be amused rather than shocked.”

Pearl S. Buck (1892–1973) American writer

China, Past and Present (1972) Ch. 6

Virginia Woolf photo

“One cannot think well, love well, sleep well, if one has not dined well.”

Source: A Room of One's Own (1929), Ch. 1, p. 18
Context: The human frame being what it is, heart, body and brain all mixed together, and not contained in separate compartments as they will be no doubt in another million years, a good dinner is of great importance to good talk. One cannot think well, love well, sleep well, if one has not dined well.

E.M. Forster photo
Chinua Achebe photo
Tim Burton photo
Sören Kierkegaard photo
Wallace Stevens photo

“One might have thought of sight, but who could think
Of what it sees, for all the ill it sees?”

Wallace Stevens (1879–1955) American poet

Esthétique du Mal (1944)
Context: One might have thought of sight, but who could think
Of what it sees, for all the ill it sees?
Speech found the ear, for all the evil sound,
But the dark italics it could not propound.
And out of what sees and hears and out
Of what one feels, who could have thought to make
So many selves, so many sensuous worlds,
As if the air, the mid-day air, was swarming
With the metaphysical changes that occur,
Merely in living as and where we live.

P.G. Wodehouse photo
Happy Rhodes photo

Related topics