“Words that warmed women, wooed and won them, snipped the final thread of inhibition and gratified the male egos of ungrateful lovers; […] for which they were eternally in his debt, for which they may eternally hate him.”
Frank Sinatra Has a Cold (Esquire, April 1966)
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Gay Talese 20
American writer 1932Related quotes

Power of the Master Mind
Source: Think & Grow Rich, January 1963, p. 152.

Letter to Thomas Jefferson Hogg (3 January 1811)

Book the First, 24:72
1800s, Milton (c. 1809)

Source: Dictionary of Burning Words of Brilliant Writers (1895), P. 210.

“How my soul hates This language,
Which makes life itself a lie,
Flattering dust with eternity.”
Act I, scene 2.
Sardanapalus (1821)

The Tragic Sense of Life (1913), X : Religion, the Mythology of the Beyond and the Apocatastasis
Context: May not the absolute and perfect eternal happiness be an eternal hope, which would die if it were realized? Is it possible to be happy without hope? And there is no place for hope once possession has been realized, for hope, desire, is killed by possession. May it not be, I say, that all souls grow without ceasing, some in a greater measure than others, but all having to pass some time through the same degree of growth, whatever that degree may be, and yet without ever arriving at the infinite, at God, to whom they continually approach? Is not eternal happiness an eternal hope, with its eternal nucleus of sorrow in order that happiness shall not be swallowed up in nothingness?