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Cesare Pavese


  • A man is never completely alone in this world. At the worst, he has the company of a boy, a youth, and by and by a grown man --the one he used to be.

  • All sins have their origin in a sense of inferiority otherwise called ambition.

  • At great periods you have always felt, deep within you, the temptation to commit suicide. You gave yourself to it, breached your own defenses. You were a child. The idea of suicide was a protest against life; by dying, you would escape this longing for death.

  • Every luxury must be paid for, and everything is a luxury, starting with being in the world.

  • Give me the ready hand rather than the ready tongue.

  • Hate is always a clash between our spirit and someone else's body.

  • If it were possible to have a life absolutely free from every feeling of sin, what a terrifying vacuum it would be!

  • It is not that the child lives in a world of imagination, but that the child within us survives and starts into life only at rare moments of recollection, which makes us believe, and it is not true, that, as children, we were imaginative?

  • Life is pain and the enjoyment of love is an anesthetic.

  • Literature is a defense against the attacks of life. It says to life: You can't deceive me. I know your habits, foresee and enjoy watching all your reactions, and steal your secret by involving you in cunning obstructions that halt your normal flow.

  • Living is like working out a long addition sum, and if you make a mistake in the first two totals you will never find the right answer. It means involving oneself in a complicated chain of circumstances.

  • Love is the cheapest of religions.

  • No one ever lacks a good reason for suicide.

  • No woman marries for money: they are all clever enough, before marrying a millionaire, to fall in love with him first.

  • One does not kill oneself for love of a woman, but because love -- any love -- reveals us in our nakedness, our misery, our vulnerability, our nothingness.

  • One must look for one thing only, to find many.

  • One stops being a child when one realizes that telling one's trouble does not make it better.

  • Perfect behavior is born of complete indifference.

  • Reality is a prison, where one vegetates and always will. All the rest --thought, action --is just a pastime, mental or physical. What counts then, is to come to grips with reality. The rest can go.

  • Suffering is by no means a privilege, a sign of nobility, a reminder of God. Suffering is a fierce, bestial thing, commonplace, uncalled for, natural as air. It is intangible; no one can grasp it or fight against it; it dwells in time -- is the same thing as time; if it comes in fits and starts, that is only so as to leave the sufferer more defenseless during the moments that follow, those long moments when one relives the last bout of torture and waits for the next.

  • The closing years of life are like the end of a masquerade party, when the masks are dropped.

  • The man who cannot live with charity, sharing other men's pain, is punished by feeling his own with intolerable anguish.

  • The only joy in the world is to begin.

  • The richness in life lies in memories we have forgotten.

  • To choose a hardship for ourselves is our only defense against that hardship. This is what is meant by accepting suffering. Those who, by their very nature, can suffer completely, utterly, have an advantage. That is how we can disarm the power of suffering, make it our own creation, our own choice; submit to it. A justification for suicide.

  • We do not remember days, we remember moments.

  • We do not remember days, we remember moments. The richness of life lies in memories we have forgotten.

  • When writing poetry, it is not that produces a bright idea, but the bright idea that kindles the fire of.

  • Will power is only the tensile strength of one's own disposition. One cannot increase it by a single ounce.

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