Source: The Gospel of Sri Ramakrishna (1942), p. 319
Context: The body was born and it will die. But for the soul there is no death. It is like the betel-nut. When the nut is ripe it does not stick to the shell. But when it is green it is difficult to separate it from the shell. After realizing God, one does not identify oneself any more with the body. Then one knows that body and soul are two different things.
“Does one ever know oneself why one laughs?”
The Expelled (1946)
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Samuel Beckett 122
Irish novelist, playwright, and poet 1906–1989Related quotes
“To my mind one does not put oneself in place of the past, one only adds a new link.”
Quote of 1906 from a letter; cited in Paul Cézanne, Letters ed. John Rewald, New York, Da Capro Press, 1995, p. 313
Quotes of Paul Cezanne, after 1900
“One does not meet oneself until one catches the reflection from an eye other than human.”
“No one in the world has (ever) laughed,
the least bit without weeping at the same time.”
A Manual of Classical Persian Prosody: Couplet no. 297, p. 299
Poetry
Quoted in Bistrup, Anne, 'Margrethe', JP/Politikens Forlaghus (2005).
Possiblity of Abdication
“Why, one wonders, does lightning strike in one place rather than another?”
P 86
The Search Warrant (2000)