Charles Augustin Sainte-Beuve quotes:

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  • The nearest approach to the infallible in literary judgment is represented in the colossal work of the teacher of all these three [Edmund Gosse, Edward Dowden and George Saintsbury], the greatest critic that ever lived - not an Englishman, but a Frenchman, the wonderful Sainte-Beuve.

  • The greatest of all French critics, and possibly the greatest European critic since Aristotle .

  • A philosophical thought has probably not attained all its sharpness and all its illumination until it is expressed in French

  • Nature wants us to enjoy life to the full and die without giving it a second thought; Christianity wants the opposite.

  • If you want to succeed, limit yourself.

  • With everyone born human, a poet - an artist - is born, who dies young and who is survived by an adult.

  • Despair itself if it goes on long enough, can become a kind of sanctuary in which one settles down and feels at ease.

  • Nothing is more painful to me than the disdain with which people treat second-rate authors, as if there were room only for the first-raters.

  • If I had a device, it would be the true, the true only, leaving the beautiful and the good to settle matters afterwards as best they could.

  • Since it is necessary to have enemies, let us endeavour to have those who do us honour.

  • There are people whose clocks stop at a certain point in their lives.

  • I have always thought that if we began for one moment to say what we thought, society would collapse.

  • In most men there exists a poet who died young, whom the man survived.

  • Most celebrated men live in a condition of prostitution.

  • What signifies the ladder, provided one rise and attain the end?

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