Whatever causes night in our souls may leave stars. Cimourdain was full of virtues and truth, but they shine out of a dark background.
Victor HugoAbout author
- Author's profession: Author, Writer
- Nationality: french
- Born: February 26, 1802
- Died: May 22, 1885
Related Authors
Topics
Quotes currently Trending
![Thomas Jefferson quote: "The genuine and simple religion of Jesus will one day be..."](/pic/336464/600x316/quotation-thomas-jefferson-the-genuine-and-simple-religion-of-jesus-will.jpg)
![Gifford Pinchot quote: "The vast possibilities of our great future will become..."](/pic/171269/600x316/quotation-gifford-pinchot-the-vast-possibilities-of-our-great-future-will.jpg)
If Frau Rasch, in the last and fullest days of her husband’s power in Brno, had idly—during a party, say; a musical recital at the castle—gazed into the core of the diamond that had come to her from Oskar Schindler, she would have seen reflected there the worst incubus from her own dreams and her Fhrer’s. An armed Marxist Jew.
Thomas Keneally
![Jena Malone quote: "Belief is such a powerful thing - but because it is, it can..."](/pic/108316/600x316/quotation-jena-malone-belief-is-such-a-powerful-thing-but-because-it.jpg)
![Terry Goodkind quote: "The entire mass of people before the palace erupted in a..."](/pic/323680/600x316/quotation-terry-goodkind-the-entire-mass-of-people-before-the-palace.jpg)
[I]n nooks all over the earth sit men who are waiting, scarcely knowing in what way they are waiting, much less that they are waiting in vain. Occasionally the call that awakens– that accident which gives the “permission to act — comes too late, when the best youth and strength for action has already been used up by sitting still; and many have found to their horror when they ‘leaped up’ that their limbs had gone to sleep and their spirit had become to heavy. ‘It is too late,’ they said to...
Friedrich Nietzsche
He who knows only his own side of the case knows little of that. His reasons may be good, and no one may have been able to refute them. But if he is equally unable to refute the reasons on the opposite side, if he does not so much as know what they are, he has no ground for preferring either opinion... Nor is it enough that he should hear the opinions of adversaries from his own teachers, presented as they state them, and accompanied by what they offer as refutations. He must be able to hear...
John Stuart Mill