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I dream of a language whose words, like fists, would fracture jaws.
Emile M. Cioran
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Emile M. Cioran
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More quotes by Emile M. Cioran
What surrounds us we endure better for giving it a name - and moving on.
Emile M. Cioran
When you have understood that nothing is, that things do not even deserve the status of appearances, you no longer need to be saved, you are saved, and miserable forever.
Emile M. Cioran
Criticism is a misconception: we must read not to understand others but to understand ourselves.
Emile M. Cioran
The more one has suffered, the less one demands. To protest is a sign one has traversed no hell.
Emile M. Cioran
Our first intuitions are the true ones.
Emile M. Cioran
Does our ferocity not derive from the fact that our instincts are all too interested in other people? If we attended more to ourselves and became the center, the object of our murderous inclinations, the sum of our intolerances would diminish.
Emile M. Cioran
Tyranny destroys or strengthens the individual freedom enervates him, until he becomes no more than a puppet. Man has more chances of saving himself by hell than by paradise.
Emile M. Cioran
I have always lived with the awareness of the impossibility of living. And what has made existence endurable to me is my curiosity as to how I would get from one minute, one day, one year to the next.
Emile M. Cioran
What do you do from morning to night? I endure myself.
Emile M. Cioran
Shame on the man who goes to his grave escorted by the miserable hopes that have kept him alive.
Emile M. Cioran
On Creating — What we crave, what we want to see in others eyes, is that servile expression, an unconcealed infatuation with our gestures.
Emile M. Cioran
A people represents not so much an aggregate of ideas and theories as of obsessions.
Emile M. Cioran
I do nothing, granted. But I see the hours pass - which is better than trying to fill them.
Emile M. Cioran
The wise man, the sage, is hostile to the new. Disabused, he abdicates: that is his form of protest.
Emile M. Cioran
Nothing is so wearing as the possession or abuse of liberty.
Emile M. Cioran
Do I look like someone who has something to do here on earth?' —That's what I'd like to answer the busybodies who inquire into my activities.
Emile M. Cioran
There is only one thing worse than boredom, and that is the fear of boredom.
Emile M. Cioran
I never met one interesting mind that was not richly endowed with inadmissible deficiencies.
Emile M. Cioran
If we manage to last in spite of everything, it is because our infirmities are so many and so contradictory that they cancel each other out.
Emile M. Cioran
We define only out of despair, we must have a formula... to give a facade tot he void.
Emile M. Cioran