“sleep is the most innocent creature there is and a sleepless man
the most guilty.”
Franz Kafka book Letters to Milena
Source: Letters to Milena
Source: High-Rise (1975), Ch. 13
Context: The untruth of the accusation, which they all knew well, only served to reinforce it... By the logic of the high-rise those most innocent of any offence became the most guilty.
“sleep is the most innocent creature there is and a sleepless man
the most guilty.”
Franz Kafka book Letters to Milena
Source: Letters to Milena
Warren Farrell book The Myth of Male Power
Source: The Myth of Male Power (1993), Part III: Government as substitute husband, p. 255.
George Bernard Shaw (1856–1950) Irish playwright
The Two Pioneers
1890s, Quintessence Of Ibsenism (1891; 1913)
Octavio Paz (1914–1998) Mexican writer laureated with the 1990 Nobel Prize for Literature
The Clerk's Vision (1949)
Context: The world stretches out before me, the vast world of the big, the little, and the medium. Universe of kings and presidents and jailors, of mandarins and pariahs and liberators and liberated, of judges and witnesses and the condemned: stars of the first, second, third and nth magnitudes, planets, comets, bodies errant and eccentric or routine and domesticated by the laws of gravity, the subtle laws of falling, all keeping step, all turning slowly or rapidly around a void. Where they claim the central sun lies, the solar being, the hot beam made out of every human gaze, there is nothing but a hole and less than a hole: the eye of a dead fish, the giddy cavity of the eye that falls into itself and looks at itself without seeing. There is nothing with which to fill the hollow center of the whirlwind. The springs are smashed, the foundations collapsed, the visible or invisible bonds that joined one star to another, one body to another, one man to another, are nothing but a tangle of wires and thorns, a jungle of claws and teeth that twist us and chew us and spit us out and chew us again. No one hangs himself by the rope of a physical law. The equations fall tirelessly into themselves.
And in regard to the present matter, if the present matters: I do not belong to the masters. I don't wash my hands of it, but I am not a judge, nor a witness for the prosecution, nor an executioner. I do not torture, interrogate, or suffer interrogation. I do not loudly plead for leniency, nor wish to save myself or anyone else. And for all that I don't do and for all that they do to us, I neither ask forgiveness nor forgive. Their piety is as abject as their justice. Am I innocent? I'm guilty. Am I guilty? I'm innocent. (I'm innocent when I'm guilty, guilty when I'm innocent. I'm guilty when … but that is another song. Another song? It's all the same song.) Guilty innocent, innocent guilty, the fact is I quit.
“Pity for the guilty is treason to the innocent.”
Terry Goodkind Faith of the Fallen
The Romantic Manifesto (1969)
Source: Faith of the Fallen
“Mercy to the guilty is cruelty to the innocent.”
Adam Smith book The Theory of Moral Sentiments
Section II, Chap. III.
The Theory of Moral Sentiments (1759), Part II
“To spare the guilty is to injure the innocent.”
Publilio Siro Latin writer
Maxim 113
Sentences, The Moral Sayings of Publius Syrus, a Roman Slave
“Pity for the guilty is treason to the innocent.”
Ayn Rand book The Romantic Manifesto
The Romantic Manifesto (1969)