“When, musing on companions gone,
We doubly feel ourselves alone.”
Canto II, introduction.
Marmion (1808)
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Walter Scott 151
Scottish historical novelist, playwright, and poet 1771–1832Related quotes

“We can recognize the dawn and the decline of love by the uneasiness we feel when alone together.”
Le commencement et le déclin de l'amour se font sentir par l'embarras où l'on est de se trouver seuls.
Aphorism 33
Les Caractères (1688), Du Coeur

Source: You Get So Alone at Times That it Just Makes Sense

Source: The Moral Judgment of the Child (1932), Ch. 1 : The Rules of the Game <!-- p. 62 -->
Context: When the child imitates the rules practiced by his older companions he feels that he is submitting to an unalterable law, due, therefore, to his parents themselves. Thus the pressure exercised by older on younger children is assimilated here, as so often, to adult pressure. This action of the older children is still constraint, for cooperation can only arise between equals. Nor does the submission of the younger children to the rules of the older ones lead to any sort of cooperation in action; it simply produces a sort of mysticism, a diffused feeling of collective participation, which, as in the case of many mystics, fits in perfectly well with egocentrism. For we shall see eventually that cooperation between equals not only brings about a gradual change in the child's practical attitude, but that it also does away with the mystical feeling towards authority.
Source: Abba's Child: The Cry of the Heart for Intimate Belonging

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