Remy de Gourmont quotes:

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  • Aesthetic emotion puts man in a state favorable to the reception of erotic emotion. Art is the accomplice of love. Take love away and there is no longer art.

  • Man associates ideas not according to logic or verifiable exactitude, but according to his pleasure and interests. It is for this reason that most truths are nothing but prejudices.

  • In order to understand life it is not only necessary not to be indifferent to men, but not to be indifferent to flocks, to trees. One should be indifferent to nothing.

  • The terrible thing about the quest for truth is that you find it.

  • Simple ideas lie within the reach only of complex minds.

  • Industry has operated against the artisan in favor of the idler, and also in favor of capital and against labor. Any mechanical invention whatsoever has been more harmful to humanity than a century of war.

  • Very simple ideas lie within the reach only of complex minds.

  • Art includes everything that stimulates the desire to live.

  • If the secret of being a bore is to tell all, the secret of pleasing is to say just enough to be - not understood, but divined.

  • Art is the accomplice of love.

  • The human mind is so complex and things are so tangled up with each other that, to explain a blade of straw, one would have to take to pieces an entire universe. A definition is a sack of flour compressed into a thimble.

  • Women still remember the first kiss after men have forgotten the last.

  • Two elements are needed to form a truth - a fact and an abstraction.

  • Man has made use of his intelligence, he invented stupidity.

  • Thinking is hard work. One can't bear burdens and ideas at the same time.

  • Everything, indeed, in a work of art should be unedited,--and even the words, by the manner of grouping them, of shaping them to new meanings,--and one often regrets having an alphabet familiar to too many half-lettered persons.

  • Of all the sexual aberrations, perhaps the most peculiar is chastity.

  • Nothing is better for "spiritual advancement" & the detachment of the flesh than a close reading of the "Erotic Dictionary.

  • The greater part of a men who speak ill of women are speaking of a certain woman.

  • Art is the accomplice of love. Take love away and there is no longer art.

  • Life is a series of sensations connected to different states of consciousness

  • And there is neither beginning nor end, nor past nor future; there is only a present, at the same time static and ephemeral, multiple and absolute. It is the vital ocean in which we all share, according to our strength, our needs or our desires.

  • The woman who loves always smells good.

  • Nothing exists except by virtue of a disequilibrium, an injustice. All existence is a theft paid for by other existences; no life flowers except on a cemetery.

  • A definition is a sack of flour compressed into a thimble

  • Art is the flower of life and, as seed, it gives back life.

  • Women are the simple, and poets the superior, artisans of language... the intervention of grammarians is almost always bad.

  • Man, in spite of his tendency towards mendacity, has a great respect for what he calls the truth. Truth is his staff in his voyage through life; commonplaces are the bread in his bag and the wine in his jug.

  • The man of genius may dwell unknown, but one always may recognize the path he has followed into the forest. It was a giant who passed that way. The branches are broken at a height that other men cannot reach.

  • Each man must grant himself the emotions that he needs and the morality that suits him.

  • We live less and less, and we learn more and more. Sensibility is surrendering to intelligence.

  • How many contradictions! Eh! If I loaded my wagon all on the same side, I'd tumble it over.

  • Autumn is as joyful and sweet as an untimely end.

  • Try to put well in practice what you already know. In so doing, you will, in good time, discover the hidden things you now inquire about.

  • Man is the inventor of stupidity.

  • An imbecile is never bored: he contemplates himself.

  • Art includes everything that stimulates the desire to live

  • Art includes everything that stimulates the desire to live; science, everything that sharpens the desire to know. Art, even the most disinterested, the most disembodied, is the auxiliary of life.

  • Born of the sensibility, art sows and creates life in its turn.

  • Cliche refers to words, commonplace to ideas. Cliche describes the form or the letter, commonplace the substance or spirit. To confuse them is to confuse the thought with the expression of the thought. The cliche is immediately perceivable; the commonplace very often escapes notice if decked out in original dress. There are few examples, in any literature, of new ideas expressed in original form. The most critical mind must often be content with one or the other of these pleasures, only too happy when it is not deprived of both at once, which is not too rarely the case.

  • Demons are like obedient dogs; they come when they are called.

  • Extraordinarily excessive sensuality it may be .. but it all comes down to the same thing in the end, and one means is surely as good as another, since the end obtained is always the same. In any case the exceptional, endlessly repeated, is no different than the banal; and unceasing recapitulation can add nothing, in the end, to the sum of experience. I am weary and hopeless three times the dupe. Why have you trained me in the shame of abominable sins?

  • For two thousand years Christianity has been telling us: life is death, death is life; it is high time to consult the dictionary.

  • God is not all that exists. God is all that does not exist.

  • Good books are irrefutable, and bad books refute themselves.

  • Intelligence, that sublimation of the sensibility, that organ of the need to know, is sterilized sensibility.

  • It is well-nigh obvious that those who are in favor of the death penalty have more affinities with murderers than those who oppose it.

  • Knowledge has its end in itself, apart from any idea of life and propagation of the species.

  • Man begins by loving love and ends by loving a woman. Woman begins by loving a man and ends by loving love.

  • Man has made use of his intelligence; he invented stupidity.

  • Modesty is the delicate form of hypocrisy.

  • Money is the sign of liberty. To curse money is to curse liberty- to curse life, which is nothing, if it be not free.

  • Most men who rail against women are railing at one woman only.

  • Science is the only truth and it is the great lie. It knows nothing, and people think it knows everything. It is misrepresented. People think that science is electricity, automobilism, and dirigible balloons. It is something very different. It is life devouring itself. It is the sensibility transformed into intelligence. It is the need to know stifling the need to live. It is the genius of knowledge vivisecting the vital genius.

  • Since art is the expression of beauty and beauty can be understood only in the form of the material elements of the true idea it contains, art has become almost uniquely feminine. Beauty is woman, and also art is woman.

  • The ever-present phenomenon ceases to exist for our senses. It was a city dweller, or a prisoner, or a blind man suddenly given his sight, who first noted natural beauty.

  • The pleasure of being a scoundrel can be adequately savored in silence.

  • Thinking is hard work. One can't bear burdens and ideas at the same time

  • To know what everyone knows is to know nothing.

  • To write well, to have style ... is to paint. The master faculty of style is therefore the visual memory. If a writer does not see what he describes-countrysides and figures, movements and gestures-how could he have a style, that is originality?

  • Two elements are needed to form a truth - a fact and an abstraction

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