He Quotes (page 702)
...What pleases us in those who are rising is less pleasing in those who are falling. We do not admire the combat when there is no danger; and in any case, the combatants of the first hour alone have the right to be the exterminators in the last. He who has not been a determined accuser during prosperity should hold his peace in adversity. He alone who denounces the success has a right to proclaim the justice of the downfall.
Victor Hugo
Everything we do means something, Ender realized. Them laughing. Me not laughing. He toyed with the idea of trying to be like the other boys. But he couldn’t think of any jokes, and none of theirs seemed funny. Wherever their laughter came from, Ender couldn’t find such a place in himself.
Orson Scott Card
![Jane Austen quote: "A man does not recover from such devotion of the heart to such..."](/pic/236895/600x316/quotation-jane-austen-a-man-does-not-recover-from-such-devotion-of-the.jpg)
![Paulo Coelho quote: "Whenever he saw the sea, or a fire, he fell silent, impressed..."](/pic/236872/600x316/quotation-paulo-coelho-whenever-he-saw-the-sea-or-a-fire-he-fell.jpg)
Everything he had ever done that had been better left undone. Every lie he had told? told to himself, or told to others. Every little hurt, and all the great hurts. Each one was pulled out of him, detail by detail, inch by inch. The demon stripped away the cover of forgetfulness, stripped everything down to truth, and it hurt more than anything.
Neil Gaiman
;now that one was mature then, said Peter, one could watch, one could understand, and one did not lose the power of feeling, he said. No, that is true, said Sally. She felt more deeply, more passionately, every year. It increased, he said, alas, perhaps, but one should be glad of it-- it went on increasing in his experience.
Virginia Woolf
![Loren Eiseley quote: "Perhaps he knew, there in the grass by the waters, that he had..."](/pic/236663/600x316/quotation-loren-eiseley-perhaps-he-knew-there-in-the-grass-by-the.jpg)
The real trouble is that 'kindness' is a quality fatally easy to attribute to ourselves on quite inadequate grounds. Everyone feels benevolent if nothing happens to be annoying him at the moment. Thus a man easily comes to console himself for all his other vices by a conviction that 'his heart's in the right place' and 'he wouldn't hurt a fly,' though in fact he has never made the slightest sacrifice for a fellow creature. We think we are kind when we are only happy: it is not so easy, on the...
C. S. Lewis