
“It is man's duty to love and to fear God, even without hope of reward or fear of punishment.”
Source: Guide for the Perplexed (c. 1190), Part III, Ch.24
"The South"
Ficciones (1944)
Context: If Dahlmann was without hope, he was also without fear. As he crossed the threshold, he felt that to die in a knife fight, under the open sky, and going forward to the attack, would have been a liberation, a joy, and a festive occasion, on the first night in the sanitarium, when they stuck him with the needle. He felt that if he had been able to choose, then, or to dream his death, this would have been the death he would have chosen or dreamt. Firmly clutching his knife, which he perhaps would not know how to wield, Dahlmann went out into the plain.
“It is man's duty to love and to fear God, even without hope of reward or fear of punishment.”
Source: Guide for the Perplexed (c. 1190), Part III, Ch.24
Hope, Despair, and Memory (1986)
Glenn Beck
Television
Fox News
2010-07-20
2010s, 2010
Part i, canto ii.
Lucile (1860)
Source: Dictionary of Burning Words of Brilliant Writers (1895), P. 126.
Love, Hope and Beauty
The Improvisatrice (1824)
“He thought there was no hope for him. Me? I can't imagine a world without hope.”
Gilbert Keith Chesterton, as per Mackay's The Harvest of a Quiet Eye, A Selection of Scientific Quotations (1977), p. 34.
Misattributed