“It is as though we had buried Someone we thought dead, and now hear him calling in the night: Help me! Heaving and panting, he raises the gravestone of our soul and body higher and still higher, breathing more freely at every moment.
Every word, every deed, every thought is the heavy gravestone he is forever trying to lift. And my own body and all the visible world, all heaven and earth, are the gravestone which God is struggling to heave upward.”
The Saviors of God (1923)
Help us to complete the source, original and additional information
Nikos Kazantzakis 222
Greek writer 1883–1957Related quotes

“Sometimes he thought they were all forsaken, every soul on this earth.”
Source: Vampires, Scones, and Edmund Herondale
Source: The View of Life (1918), p. 1. Opening line of first essay "Life as Transcendence"

Bk. II, l. 785-790.
Aurora Leigh http://digital.library.upenn.edu/women/barrett/aurora/aurora.html (1857)
“These are the words I want on my gravestone: that I was a helper, and that I danced.”

"The God Called Poetry".
Country Sentiment (1920)

"Tarquin of Cheapside"
Quoted, Tales of the Jazz Age (1922)

Letter http://books.google.com/books?id=EsovAQAAMAAJ&q=%22God+is+sitting+here+looking+into+my+very+soul+to+see+if+I+think+right+thoughts+Yet+I+am+not+afraid+for+I+try+to+be+right+and%22&pg=PA39#v=onepage to Abiah Root http://www.emilydickinsonmuseum.org/abiah_root (29 January 1850)