“His long struggle with physical passion was almost over, and, as with many other great sensualists, its place had been taken by an obsession with death.”
Referring to Michelangelo
Source: The Nude: A Study in Ideal Form (1951), Ch. VI: Pathos
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Kenneth Clark 47
Art historian, broadcaster and museum director 1903–1983Related quotes

“Passion satisfied has its innocence, almost as fragile as any other.”
La passion comblée a son innocence, presque aussi fragile que toute autre.
Source: Memoirs of Hadrian (1951), p. 156

Creation seminars (2003-2005), The Garden of Eden
The Wheel of Fortune (1984), Part 1: Robert

Speech to the thirtieth anniversary of the Junior Imperial League in Kingsway Hall (19 June 1926), quoted in Our Inheritance (London: Hodder and Stoughton, 1938), p. 19.
1926

Source: I Am Legend (1954), Ch. 16
Context: All these years, he thought, dreaming about a companion. Now I meet one and the first thing I do is distrust her, treat her crudely and impatiently.
And yet there was really nothing else he could do. He had accepted too long the proposition that he was the only normal person left. It didn’t matter that she looked normal. He’d seen too many of them lying in their coma that looked as healthy as she. They weren’t, though, and he knew it. The simple fact that she had been walking in the sunlight wasn’t enough to tip the scales on the side of trusting acceptance. He had doubted too long. His concept of the society had become ironbound. It was almost impossible for him to believe that there were others like him. And, after the first shock had diminished, all the dogma of his long years alone had asserted itself.