Quoted in Alban Butler, Lives of the Saints, vol. II: April, May, June, Burns & Oates, 1956, p. 24.
“Here was irrefutable proof that he was using the Holocaust to speak of the extermination of animal life. Doomed creatures that could not speak for themselves were being given the voice of a most articulate people who had been similarly doomed. He was seeing the tragic fate of animals through the tragic fate of Jews. The Holocaust as allegory.”
Source: Beatrice & Virgil (2010), p. 173
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Yann Martel 108
Canadian author best known for the book Life of Pi 1963Related quotes
“Fate, and the dooming gods, are deaf to tears.”
Aeneis, Book VI, line 512.
The Works of Virgil (1697)
The Natural History of Intellect (1893) http://www.rwe.org/natural-history-of-intellect.html
“The clock of doom had struck as fated;
the poet, without a sound,
let fall his pistol on the ground.”
Source: Eugene Onegin (1823), Ch. 6, st. 30.
Quoted in Charles Patterson, Eternal Treblinka: Our Treatment of Animals and the Holocaust (New York: Lantern Books, 2002), p. 221.