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I love the majesty of human suffering.
Alfred de Vigny
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Alfred de Vigny
Age: 66 †
Born: 1797
Born: March 27
Died: 1863
Died: September 17
Diarist
Novelist
Playwright
Poet
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Writer
Alfred Victor de Vigny
Alfred Victor
comte de Vigny
Majesty
Suffering
Human
Humans
Love
More quotes by Alfred de Vigny
The true God, the mighty God, is the God of ideas.
Alfred de Vigny
Doubt is the freedom of thought. Any claim to truth can be doubted.
Alfred de Vigny
Fainthearted animals move about in herds. The lion walks alone in the desert. Let the poet always walk thus.
Alfred de Vigny
Perform your long and heavy task with energy, treading the path to which Fate has been pleased to call you.
Alfred de Vigny
Hope is the biggest of our foolish things.
Alfred de Vigny
Art ought never to be considered except in its relations with its ideal beauty.
Alfred de Vigny
The study of social progress is to-day not less needed in literature than is the analysis of the human heart.
Alfred de Vigny
Do you not see with your own eyes the chrysalis fact assume by degrees the wings of fiction?
Alfred de Vigny
What is a great life if not a youthful idea executed by a man of mature years.
Alfred de Vigny
One might almost reckon mathematically that, having undergone the double composition of public opinion and of the author, their history reaches us at third hand and is thus separated by two stages from the original fact.
Alfred de Vigny
History is a novel for which the people is the author.
Alfred de Vigny
Of what use is the memory of facts, if not to serve as an example of good or of evil?
Alfred de Vigny
The loveliest Muse in the world does not feed her owner these girls make fine mistresses but terrible wives
Alfred de Vigny
I think, then, that man, after having satisfied his first longing for facts, wanted something fuller - some grouping, some adaptation to his capacity and experience, of the links of this vast chain of events which his sight could not take in.
Alfred de Vigny
From this, without doubt, sprang the fable. Man created it thus, because it was not given him to see more than himself and nature, which surrounds him but he created it true with a truth all its own.
Alfred de Vigny
Honour is manly decency. The shame of being found wanting in it means everything to us. Is this, then, the indefinable, the sacred thing?
Alfred de Vigny
On the day when man told the story of his life to man, history was born.
Alfred de Vigny
What is the use of theorizing as to wherein lies the charm that moves us?
Alfred de Vigny
France, for example, loves at the same time history and the drama, because the one explores the vast destinies of humanity, and the other the individual lot of man.
Alfred de Vigny
The acts of the human race on the world's stage have doubtless a coherent unity, but the meaning of the vast tragedy enacted will be visible only to the eye of God, until the end, which will reveal it perhaps to the last man.
Alfred de Vigny