Luigi Pirandello quotes:

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  • Every true man, sir, who is a little above the level of the beasts and plants does not live for the sake of living, without knowing how to live; but he lives so as to give a meaning and a value of his own to life.

  • Nature uses human imagination to lift her work of creation to even higher levels.

  • Anyone can be heroic from time to time, but a gentleman is something you have to be all the time.

  • In bed my real love has always been the sleep that rescued me by allowing me to dream.

  • Whoever has the luck to be born a character can laugh even at death. Because a character will never die! A man will die, a writer, the instrument of creation: but what he has created will never die!

  • The history of mankind is the history of ideas.

  • Each of us, face to face with other men, is clothed with some sort of dignity, but we know only too well all the unspeakable things that go on in the heart.

  • It is misery, you know, unspeakable misery for the man who lives alone and who detests sordid, casual affairs; not old enough to do without women, but not young enough to be able to go and look for one without shame!

  • Our spirits have their own private way of understanding each other, of becoming intimate, while our external persons are still trapped in the commerce of ordinary words, in the slavery of social rules. Souls have their own needs and their own ambitions, which the body ignores when it sees that it's impossible to satisfy them or achieve them.

  • Drama is action, sir, action and not confounded philosophy.

  • We ride through life on the beast within us. Beat the animal, but you can't make it think.

  • It is the hardest thing to close the open hand of someone you love.

  • Logic is one thing, the human animal another. You can quite easily propose a logical solution to something and at the same time hope in your heart of hearts it won't work out.

  • I would love to spend all my time writing to you; I'd love to share with you all that goes through my mind, all that weighs on my heart, all that gives air to my soul; phantoms of art, dreams that would be so beautiful if they could come true.

  • Not one of us can lie or pretend. We're all fixed in good faith in a certain concept of ourselves.

  • Woman - for example, look at her case! She turns tantalizing inviting glances on you. You seize her. No sooner does she feel herself in your grasp than she closes her eyes. It is a sign of her mission, the sign by which she says to man: "Blind yourself, for I am blind."

  • Blind yourself, for I am blind.

  • A fact is like a sack - it won't stand up if it's empty. To make it stand up, first you have to put in it all the reasons and feelings that caused it in the first place.

  • Man never reasons so much and becomes so introspective as when he suffers; since he is anxious to get at the cause of his sufferings, to learn who has produced them, and whether it is just or unjust that he should have to bear them.

  • If you shut yourself up disdainfully in your ivory tower and insist that you have your own conscience and are satisfied with its approval, it is because you know that everybody is criticizing you, condemning you, or laughing at you.

  • I present myself to you in a form suitable to the relationship I wish to achieve with you.

  • Whatever is a reality today, whatever you touch and believe in and that seems real for you today, is going to be - like the reality of yesterday - an illusion tomorrow.

  • A fact is like a sack which won't stand up if it's empty. In order that it may stand up, one has to put into it the reason and sentiment which caused it to exist.

  • Buffoons, buffoons! One can play any tune on them!

  • Do you believe you can know yourselves if you don't somehow con- struct yourselves? Or that I can know you if I don't construct you in my way? And can you know me if I don't construct you in my way? We can know only what we succeed in giving form to.

  • Each of us when he appears before his fellows is clothed in a certain dignity. But every man knows what unconfessable things pass within the secrecy of his own heart.

  • I am an "unrealized" character, dramatically speaking...

  • I hate symbolic art in which the presentation loses all spontaneous movement in order to become a machine, an allegory -- a vain and misconceived effort because the very fact of giving an allegorical sense to a presentation clearly shows that we have to do with a fable which by itself has no truth either fantastic or direct; it was made for the demonstration of some moral truth.

  • If only we could see in advance all the harm that can come from the good we think we are doing.

  • Inevitably we construct ourselves. Let me explain. I enter this house and immediately I become what I have to become, what I can become: I construct myself. That is, I present myself to you in a form suitable to the relationship I wish to achieve with you. And, of course, you do the same with me.

  • It is much easier to be a hero than a gentleman.

  • It is so.When YOU think so

  • Life is a very sad piece of buffoonery, because we have .. the need to fool ourselves continuously by the spontaneous creation of a reality .. which, from time to time, reveals itself to be vain and illusory.

  • Life is full of strange absurdities, which, strangely enough, do not even need to appear plausible, since they are true.

  • Life is little more than a loan shark: It exacts a very high rate of interest for the few pleasures it concedes

  • My opinion is a view I hold until... well, until I find something that changes it.

  • None of us can estimate what we do when we do it from instinct.

  • One cannot choose what he writes - one can only choose to face it.

  • Personally, I don't give a rap for documents; for the truth in my eyes is not in them but in the mind.

  • Phantoms in general are nothing more than trifling disorders of the spirit; images we cannot contain within the bounds of sleep.

  • Pretending is a virtue. If you cant pretend, you can't be king.

  • Refusing to have an opinion is a way of having one, isn't it?

  • Shake yourself free from the manikin you create out of a false interpretation of what you do and what you feel, and you'll at once see that the manikin you make yourself is nothing at all like what you really are or what you really can be!

  • Six Characters in Search of an Author.

  • The facts are to blame, my friend. We are all imprisoned by facts: I was born, I exist.

  • THE FATHER: But don't you see that the whole trouble lies here? In words, words. Each one of us has within him a whole world of things, each man of us his own special world. And how can we ever come to an understanding if I put in the words I utter the sense and value of things as I see them; while you who listen to me must inevitably translate them according to the conception of things each one of you has within himself. We think we understand each other, but we never really do.

  • The man, the writer, the instrument of the creation will die, but his creation does not die.

  • The more arms and legs [children] we have, the richer we are.

  • The secret of living is to find a pivot, the pivot of a concept on which you can make your stand.

  • There is someone who is living my life. And I know nothing about him.

  • Those who understood, in fact, say: 'I mustn't do this, I mustn't do that,' so as not to commit some stupidity or other! Splendid! But at a certain point we realize that all life is stupidity; so tell me yourself what it means never to have done anything foolish. At the very least it means you have never lived.

  • We all have a world of things inside ourselves and each one of us has his own private world. How can we understand each other if the words I use have the sense and the value that I expect them to have, but whoever is listening to me inevitably thinks that those same words have a different sense and value, because of the private world he has inside himself, too.

  • We think we understand each other, but we never really do.

  • We're like so many puppets hung on the wall, waiting for someone to come and move us or make us talk.

  • When [man] is happy he takes his happiness as it comes and doesn't analyze it, just as if happiness were his right.

  • When a character is born, he acquires at once such an independence, even of his own author, that he can be imagined by everybody even in many other situations where the author never dreamed of placing him; and so he acquires for himself a meaning which the author never thought of giving him.

  • When the characters are really alive before their author, the latter does nothing but follow them in their action, in their words, in the situations which they suggest to him.

  • When you say you are in love with humanity, you are well satisfied with yourself.

  • Woe to him who doesn't know how to wear his mask, be he king or pope!

  • Women are like dreams, they are never the way you would like to have them.

  • You should show some respect for what other people see and feel, even though it be the exact opposite of what you see and feel.

  • You too must not count too much on your reality as you feel it today, since like yesterday, it may prove an illusion for you tomorrow.

  • As soon as one is born, one starts dying.

  • Here is a piece of earth. If you stand staring at it and doing nothing, what does the earth yield? Nothing. Just like a woman.

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