Friday, April 26, 2024 Text is available under the CC BY-SA 3.0 licence.

Andre Gide

« All quotes from this author
 

The sole art that suits me is that which, rising from unrest, tends toward serenity.
--
Entry for November 23, 1940

 
Andre Gide

» Andre Gide - all quotes »



Tags: Andre Gide Quotes, Art Quotes, Authors starting by G


Similar quotes

 

[President Coolidge's] active inactivity suits the mood and certain of the needs of the country admirably. It suits all the business interests which want to be let alone… And it suits all those who have become convinced that government in this country has become dangerously complicated and top-heavy…

 
Calvin Coolidge
 

Thanks to science, the under-privileged are coming to believe that no one need be underfed or chronically diseased, or deprived of the benefits of its technical and practical applications.
The world's unrest is largely due to this new belief. People are determined not to put up with a subnormal standard of physical health and material living now that science has revealed the possibility of raising it. The unrest will produce some unpleasant consequences before it is dissipated; but it is in essence a beneficent unrest, a dynamic force which will not be stilled until it has laid the physiological foundations of human destiny.

 
Julian Huxley
 

One sole God;
One sole ruler,—his Law;
One sole interpreter of that law—Humanity.

 
Giuseppe Mazzini
 

Whilst the last members were signing it Doctor Franklin looking towards the President's Chair, at the back of which a rising sun happened to be painted, observed to a few members near him, that Painters had found it difficult to distinguish in their art a rising from a setting sun. “I have,” said he, “often and often in the course of the Session, and the vicissitudes of my hopes and fears as to its issue, looked at that behind the President without being able to tell whether it was rising or setting: But now at length I have the happiness to know that it is a rising and not a setting Sun.”

 
Benjamin Franklin
 

I don't have a sense of sanctuary. I don't have a place where I think I can go. I once went to the famous Kyoto temple with the Zen garden, the gravel, the little mounds and it's, you know, it's been pictured over and over and over again. And what they don't tell you is that this little acre or some acre of serenity is surrounded by millions of people taking pictures.
So it sounds like a storm of mosquitoes constantly. And it never stops. And there's no serenity. And so not even in Japan can I find sanctuary.

 
John Leonard
© 2009–2013Quotes Privacy Policy | Contact