Variant: ... I am incapable of telling you not to feel. Feel, feel, I say - feel for all you're worth, and even if it half kills you, for that is the only way to live...
Quotes about killing
page 8
Source: Letters to a Young Conservative
"Terror Over Tripoli" http://www.thirdworldtraveler.com/Zinn/Tripoli_ZR.html (1993), from The Zinn Reader (1997)
As quoted in If Ignorance Is Bliss, Why Aren't There More Happy People? (2009) by John Mitchinson, p. 87
“You're basically killing each other to see who's got the better imaginary friend.”
“Self respect is something that can't be killed. The worst thing is to kill a man's pretense at it.”
Source: The Fountainhead
“Touch has a memory. O say, love, say,
What can I do to kill it and be free?”
Translated by Judith Hemschemeyer from Complete Poems of Anna Akhmatova (1989)
Requiem; 1935-1940 (1963; 1987), The Sentence
Context: Today I have so much to do:
I must kill memory once and for all,
I must turn my soul to stone,
I must learn to live again—
Unless... Summer's ardent rustling
Is like a festival outside my window.
“It is the things you cannot see coming that are strong enough to kill you.”
Source: My Sister's Keeper
“There should be some kind of rule against needing to kill anything more than once.”
Source: Grave Peril
“The world changes, we do not, therein lies the irony that kills us.”
Source: Interview with the Vampire
“Nobody's perfect. Well, there was this one guy, but we killed him….”
Source: Lamb: The Gospel According to Biff, Christ's Childhood Pal
“I'm too much of a coward to kill myself. And too much of a coward to live”
Source: The Pact
“Trauma is survivable, but often not much more. It kills you while allowing you to still live.”
Source: The Final Testament of the Holy Bible
“Hope was an instinct only the reasoning human mind could kill. An animal never knew despair.”
Source: The Power and the Glory
“A learned man is an idler who kills time by study.”
Source: Belgarath the Sorcerer
“Roland had sworn off children—they kept trying to kill him.”
Source: Magic Bleeds
“I have been too unhappy, I thought, it cannot last, being so unhappy, it would kill you”
Source: Wide Sargasso Sea
Source: Darkness Visible (1990), III
Context: This general unawareness of what depression is really like was apparent most recently in the matter of Primo Levi, the remarkable Italian writer and survivor of Auschwitz who, at the age of sixty-seven, hurled himself down a stairwell in Turin in 1987. Since my own involvement with the illness, I had been more than ordinarily interested in Levi’s death, and so, late in 1988, when I read an account in The New York Times about a symposium on the writer and his work held at New York University, I was fascinated but, finally, appalled. For, according to the article, many of the participants, worldly writers and scholars, seemed mystified by Levi’s suicide, mystified and disappointed. It was as if this man whom they had all so greatly admired, and who had endured so much at the hands of the Nazis — a man of exemplary resilience and courage — had by his suicide demonstrated a frailty, a crumbling of character they were loath to accept. In the face of a terrible absolute — self-destruction — their reaction was helplessness and (the reader could not avoid it) a touch of shame.
My annoyance over all this was so intense that I was prompted to write a short piece for the op-ed page of the Times. The argument I put forth was fairly straightforward: the pain of severe depression is quite unimaginable to those who have not suffered it, and it kills in many instances because its anguish can no longer be borne. The prevention of many suicides will continue to be hindered until there is a general awareness of the nature of this pain. Through the healing process of time — and through medical intervention or hospitalization in many cases — most people survive depression, which may be its only blessing; but to the tragic legion who are compelled to destroy themselves there should be no more reproof attached than to the victims of terminal cancer.
“What doesn't kill us makes us funnier.”
Source: The Other Side of the Story
“In wars, boy, fools kill other fools for foolish causes.”
Thom Merrilin
(15 January 1990)
Source: To the Blight
“You cannot kill a breeze, a wind, a fragrance; you cannot kill a dream or an ambition.”
“The thing that you know to be true is the lie that will kill you.”
Source: Soldiers Live (2000), Chapter 5, “An Abode of Ravens: Headquarters” (p. 384)
“… have a smile for everyone you meet and a plan to kill them.”
Source: The Apostle
“I wanted to kill her and make her eat her fringe. And her knickers.”
Source: Away Laughing on a Fast Camel
“The more you move, the stronger you'll grow, not like a tree that can be killed if you uproot it.”
“There are no bargains between lion and men. I will kill you and eat you raw.”
Source: The Song of Achilles
“No, Michael was all good. Killed, dismembered, buried, reborn…yeah, just another day in the life.”
Source: The Dead Girls' Dance
“There are worse things you can do to people you love than kill them.”
Source: Lullaby
Quoted in Roberto Suro, "Hearts and Minds", New York Times Magazine (29 December 1991).
“Oleander time, she said. Lovers who kill each other now will blame it on the wind.”
Source: White Oleander
Luke Garroway, Clary Fray, and Jocelyn Fray, pg. 221-222
Source: The Mortal Instruments, City of Heavenly Fire (2014)
Context: Clary looked down at herself. She was wearing a pair of flannel pajamas, too short in the leg and tight in the chest, with fire trucks on them.
Luke raised an eyebrow. 'I think those were mine when I was a kid.'
'You can't seriously tell me there wasn't anything else you could have put me in.'
'If you insist on trying to get yourself killed, I insist on being the one who chooses what you wear while you recover,' Jocelyn said with a tiny smirk.
'The pajamas of vengeance,' Clary muttered.
“I'm killing time and it's dying hard.”
Variant: Mostly I just kill time," he said, "and it dies hard.
Source: The Long Goodbye
Source: Glimmerglass
Source: Magic Breaks
Source: Assata: An Autobiography