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Solitude Quotes

Quotes tagged as "solitude" Showing 61-90 of 2,157
Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley
“Solitude was my only consolation - deep, dark, deathlike solitude.”
Mary W. Shelley

Karl Lagerfeld
“People who do a job that claims to be creative have to be alone to recharge their batteries. You can’t live 24 hours a day in the spotlight and remain creative. For people like me, solitude is a victory.”
Karl Lagerfeld

Rupi Kaur
“fall
in love
with your solitude”
Rupi Kaur, milk and honey

Paul Tillich
“Our language has wisely sensed these two sides of man’s being alone. It has created the word “lonelinessâ€� to express the pain of being alone. And it has created the word “solitudeâ€� to express the glory of being alone.”
Paul Tillich, The Eternal Now

Colette Gauthier-Villars
“There are days when solitude is a heady wine that intoxicates you with freedom, others when it is a bitter tonic, and still others when it is a poison that makes you beat your head against the wall.”
Sidonie-Gabrielle Colette, Œuvres complètes

Molière
“Betrayed and wronged in everything,
I’ll flee this bitter world where vice is king,
And seek some spot unpeopled and apart
Where I’ll be free to have an honest heart.”
²Ñ´Ç±ô¾±Ã¨°ù±ð, The Misanthrope

Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
“The soul that sees beauty may sometimes walk alone.”
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe

George MacDonald
“Certainly work is not always required of a man. There is such a thing as a sacred idleness, the cultivation of which is now fearfully neglected.”
George Mac Donald, Wilfrid Cumbermede

Criss Jami
“The writer's curse is that even in solitude, no matter its duration, he never grows lonely or bored.”
Criss Jami, Killosophy

Søren Kierkegaard
“I have just now come from a party where I was its life and soul; witticisms streamed from my lips, everyone laughed and admired me, but I went away â€� yes, the dash should be as long as the radius of the earth's orbit ——————————â€� and wanted to shoot myself.”
Søren Kierkegaard

Iris Murdoch
“I hate solitude, but I'm afraid of intimacy. The substance of my life is a private conversation with myself which to turn into a dialogue would be equivalent to self-destruction. The company which I need is the company which a pub or a cafe will provide. I have never wanted a communion of souls. It's already hard enough to tell the truth to oneself.”
Iris Murdoch, Under the Net

Alison Weir
“I prefer to be left alone with my books.”
Alison Weir, Innocent Traitor

Emily Brontë
“I am now quite cured of seeking pleasure in society, be it country or town. A sensible man ought to find sufficient company in himself.”
Emily Bronte, Wuthering Heights

Rudyard Kipling
“I am the Cat who walks by himself, and all places are alike to me.”
Rudyard Kipling, The Cat That Walked by Himself: And Other Stories

Rainer Maria Rilke
“At bottom, and just in the deepest and most important things, we are unutterably alone, and for one person to be able to advise or even help another, a lot must happen, a lot must go well, a whole constellation of things must come right in order once to succeed.”
Rainer Marie Rilke, Letters to a Young Poet

Rainer Maria Rilke
“I love the dark hours of my being.
My mind deepens into them.
There I can find, as in old letters,
the days of my life, already lived,
and held like a legend, and understood.”
Rainer Maria Rilke, Rilke's Book of Hours: Love Poems to God

D.W. Winnicott
“It is a joy to be hidden, and disaster not to be found.”
D.W. Winnicott

Sylvia Plath
“So, now I shall talk every night. To myself. To the moon. I shall walk, as I did tonight, jealous of my loneliness, in the blue-silver of the cold moon, shining brilliantly on the drifts of fresh-fallen snow, with the myriad sparkles. I talk to myself and look at the dark trees, blessedly neutral. So much easier than facing people, than having to look happy, invulnerable, clever. With masks down, I walk, talking to the moon, to the neutral impersonal force that does not hear, but merely accepts my being. And does not smite me down.”
Sylvia Plath, The Journals of Sylvia Plath

Bohumil Hrabal
“I can be by myself because I'm never lonely; I'm simply alone, living in my heavily populated solitude, a harum-scarum of infinity and eternity, and Infinity and Eternity seem to take a liking to the likes of me.”
Bohumil Hrabal, Too Loud a Solitude

Guy de Maupassant
“Solitude is indeed dangerous for a working intelligence. We need to have around us people who think and speak. When we are alone for a long time we people the void with phantoms”
Guy de Maupassant, Le Horla et autres contes fantastiques

Lord Byron
“Then stirs the feeling infinite, so felt
In solitude, where we are least alone.”
George Gordon Byron, Childe Harold's Pilgrimage

Charlotte Eriksson
“You read and write and sing and experience, thinking that one day these things will build the character you admire to live as. You love and lose and bleed best you can, to the extreme, hoping that one day the world will read you like the poem you want to be.”
Charlotte Eriksson

Aldous Huxley
“In spite of language, in spite of intelligence and intuition and sympathy, one can never really communicate anything to anybody. The essential substance of every thought and feeling remains incommunicable, locked up in the impenetrable strong-room of the individual soul and body. Our life is a sentence of perpetual solitary confinement.”
Aldous Huxley

Dan    Brown
“Believe me, I know what it's like to feel all alone...the worst kind of loneliness in the world is the isolation that comes from being misunderstood, It can make people lose their grasp on reality.”
Dan Brown, Inferno

Ralph Waldo Emerson
“What I must do, is all that concerns me, not what the people think. This rule, equally arduous in actual and in intellectual life, may serve for the whole distinction between greatness and meanness. It is the harder, because you will always find those who think they know what is your duty better than you know it. It is easy in the world to live after the world's opinion; it is easy in solitude to live after our own; but the great man is he who in the midst of the crowd keeps with perfect sweetness the independence of solitude.”
Ralph Waldo Emerson, Self-Reliance: An Excerpt from Collected Essays, First Series

Henri J.M. Nouwen
“As soon as we are alone,...inner chaos opens up in us. This chaos can be so disturbing and so confusing that we can hardly wait to get busy again. Entering a private room and shutting the door, therefore, does not mean that we immediatel;y shut ou all our iner doubts, anxieities, fears, bad memories, unresolved conflicts, angry feelings and impulsive desires. On the contrary, when we have removed our outer distraction, we often find that our inner distraction manifest themselves to us in full force. We often use the outer distractions to shield ourselves from the interior noises. This makes the discipline of solitude all the more important.”
Henri J.M. Nouwen, Making All Things New and Other Classics

Thomas Merton
“But there is greater comfort in the substance of silence than in the answer to a question.”
Thomas Merton

J. Krishnamurti
“We carry about us the burden of what thousands of people have said and the memories of all our misfortunes. To abandon all that is to be alone, and the mind that is alone is not only innocent but young -- not in time or age, but young, innocent, alive at whatever age -- and only such a mind can see that which is truth and that which is not measurable by words.”
J. Krishnamurti

Thomas Mann
“Solitude produces originality, bold and astonishing beauty, poetry. But solitude also produces perverseness, the disproportianate, the absurd and the forbidden.”
Thomas Mann, Death in Venice and Other Tales