Victor Hugo
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(574 votes) God created the flirt as soon as he made the fool.
Victor Hugo
Victor Hugo
1802-1885, French Poet, Dramatist, Novelist
(376 votes) From the oyster to the eagle, from the swine to the tiger, all animals are to be found in men and each of them exists in some man, sometimes several at the time. Animals are nothing but the portrayal of our virtues and vices made manifest to our eyes, the visible reflections of our souls. God displays them to us to give us food for thought.
Victor Hugo
Victor Hugo
1802-1885, French Poet, Dramatist, Novelist
(374 votes) Separated lovers cheat absence by a thousand fancies which have their own reality. They are prevented from seeing one another and they cannot write; nevertheless they find countless mysterious ways of corresponding, by sending each other the song of birds, the scent of flowers, the laughter of children, the light of the sun, the sighing of the wind, and the gleam of the stars --all the beauties of creation.
Victor Hugo
Victor Hugo
1802-1885, French Poet, Dramatist, Novelist
(353 votes) At the shrine of friendship never say die, let the wine of friendship never run dry - Les Miserables
Victor Hugo
Victor Hugo
(326 votes) To love another person is to see the face of God. [Les Miserables]
Victor Hugo
Victor Hugo
1802-1885, French Poet, Dramatist, Novelist
(309 votes) The convent, which belongs to the West as it does to the East, to antiquity as it does to the present time, to Buddhism and Muhammadanism as it does to Christianity, is one of the optical devices whereby man gains a glimpse of infinity.
Victor Hugo
Victor Hugo
1802-1885, French Poet, Dramatist, Novelist
(308 votes) In each age men of genius undertake the ascent. From below, the world follows them with their eyes. These men go up the mountain, enter the clouds, disappear, reappear, People watch them, mark them. They walk by the side of precipices. They daringly pursue their road. See them aloft, see them in the distance; they are but black specks. On they go. The road is uneven, its difficulties constant. At each step a wall, at each step a trap. As they rise the cold increases. They must make their ladder, cut the ice and walk on it., hewing the steps in haste. A storm is raging. Nevertheless they go forward in their madness. The air becomes difficult to breath. The abyss yawns below them. Some fall. Others stop and retrace their steps; there is a sad weariness. The bold ones continue. They are eyed by the eagles; the lightning plays about them: the hurricane is furious. No matter, they persevere.
Victor Hugo
Victor Hugo
1802-1885, French Poet, Dramatist, Novelist
(306 votes) In this world, which is so plainly the antechamber of another, there are no happy men. The true division of humanity is between those who live in light and those who live in darkness. Our aim must be to diminish the number of the latter and increase the number of the former. That is why we demand education and knowledge.
Victor Hugo
Victor Hugo
1802-1885, French Poet, Dramatist, Novelist
(294 votes) Despots play their part in the works of thinkers. Fettered words are terrible words. The writer doubles and trebles the power of his writing when a ruler imposes silence on the people. Something emerges from that enforced silence, a mysterious fullness which filters through and becomes steely in the thought. Repression in history leads to conciseness in the historian, and the rocklike hardness of much celebrated prose is due to the tempering of the tyrant.
Victor Hugo
Victor Hugo
1802-1885, French Poet, Dramatist, Novelist
(291 votes) England has two books, one which she has made and one which has made her: Shakespeare and the Bible.
Victor Hugo
Victor Hugo
1802-1885, French Poet, Dramatist, Novelist
(290 votes) Whenever we encounter the Infinite in man, however imperfectly understood, we treat it with respect. Whether in the synagogue, the mosque, the pagoda, or the wigwam, there is a hideous aspect which we execrate and a sublime aspect which we venerate. So great a subject for spiritual contemplation, such measureless dreaming -- the echo of God on the human wall!
Victor Hugo
Victor Hugo
1802-1885, French Poet, Dramatist, Novelist
(286 votes) There is no more sovereign eloquence than the truth in indignation.
Victor Hugo
Victor Hugo
1802-1885, French Poet, Dramatist, Novelist
(283 votes) There exists, at the bottom of all abasement and misfortune, a last extreme which rebels and joins battle with the forces of law and respectability in a desperate struggle, waged partly by cunning and partly by violence, at once sick and ferocious, in which it attacks the prevailing social order with the pin-pricks of vice and the hammer-blows of crime.
Victor Hugo
Victor Hugo
1802-1885, French Poet, Dramatist, Novelist
(281 votes) To rescue from oblivion even a fragment of a language which men have used and which is in danger of being lost --that is to say, one of the elements, whether good or bad, which have shaped and complicated civilization --is to extend the scope of social observation and to serve civilization.
Victor Hugo
Victor Hugo
1802-1885, French Poet, Dramatist, Novelist
(272 votes) No man is more unhappy than the one who is never in adversity; the greatest affliction of life is never to be afflicted.
Victor Hugo
Victor Hugo
(256 votes) The book which the reader now holds in his hands, from one end to the other, as a whole and in its details, whatever gaps, exceptions, or weaknesses it may contain, treats of the advance from evil to good, from injustice to justice, from falsity to truth, from darkness to daylight, from blind appetite to conscience, from decay to life, from bestiality to duty, from Hell to Heaven, from limbo to God. Matter itself is the starting-point, and the point of arrival is the soul. Hydra at the beginning, an angel at the end.
Victor Hugo
Victor Hugo
1802-1885, French Poet, Dramatist, Novelist
(250 votes) It is the essence of truth that it is never excessive. Why should it exaggerate? There is that which should be destroyed and that which should be simply illuminated and studied. How great is the force of benevolent and searching examination! We must not resort to the flame where only light is required.
Victor Hugo
Victor Hugo
1802-1885, French Poet, Dramatist, Novelist
(249 votes) A saint addicted to excessive self-abnegation is a dangerous associate; he may infect you with poverty, and a stiffening of those joints which are needed for advancement -- in a word, with more renunciation than you care for -- and so you flee the contagion.
Victor Hugo
Victor Hugo
1802-1885, French Poet, Dramatist, Novelist
(249 votes) We may remark in passing that to be blind and beloved may, in this world where nothing is perfect, be among the most strangely exquisite forms of happiness. The supreme happiness in life is the assurance of being loved; of being loved for oneself, even in spite of oneself; and this assurance the blind man possesses. In his affliction, to be served is to be caressed. Does he lack anything? no. Possessing love he is not deprived of light. A love, moreover, that is wholly pure. There can be no blindness where there is this certainty.
Victor Hugo
Victor Hugo
1802-1885, French Poet, Dramatist, Novelist
(245 votes) He does not weep who does not see.
Victor Hugo
Victor Hugo
1802-1885, French Poet, Dramatist, Novelist
(243 votes) Superstition, bigotry and prejudice, ghosts though they are, cling tenaciously to life; they are shades armed with tooth and claw. They must be grappled with unceasingly, for it is a fateful part of human destiny that it is condemned to wage perpetual war against ghosts. A shade is not easily taken by the throat and destroyed.
Victor Hugo
Victor Hugo
1802-1885, French Poet, Dramatist, Novelist
(222 votes) Nothing can be more depressing than to expose, naked to the light of thought, the hideous growth of argot. Indeed it is like a sort of repellent animal intended to dwell in darkness which has been dragged out of its cloaca. One seems to see a horned and living creature viciously struggling to be restored to the place where it belongs. One word is like a claw, another like a sightless and bleeding eye; and there are phrases which clutch like the pincers of a crab. And all of it is alive with the hideous vitality of things that have organized themselves amid disorganization.
Victor Hugo
Victor Hugo
1802-1885, French Poet, Dramatist, Novelist
(219 votes) Popularity? It's glory's small change.
Victor Hugo
Victor Hugo
1802-1885, French Poet, Dramatist, Novelist
(211 votes) The greatest blunders, like the thickest ropes, are often compounded of a multitude of strands. Take the rope apart, separate it into the small threads that compose it, and you can break them one by one. You think, ''That is all there was!'' But twist them all together and you have something tremendous.
Victor Hugo
Victor Hugo
1802-1885, French Poet, Dramatist, Novelist
(205 votes) Such is the remorseless progression of human society, shedding lives and souls as it goes on its way. It is an ocean into which men sink who have been cast out by the law and consigned, with help most cruelly withheld, to moral death. The sea is the pitiless social darkness into which the penal system casts those it has condemned, an unfathomable waste of misery. The human soul, lost in those depths, may become a corpse. Who shall revive it?
Victor Hugo
Victor Hugo
1802-1885, French Poet, Dramatist, Novelist
(200 votes) We are on the side of religion as opposed to religions, and we are among those who believe in the wretched inadequacy of sermons and the sublimity of prayer.
Victor Hugo
Victor Hugo
1802-1885, French Poet, Dramatist, Novelist
(199 votes) Most commonly revolt is born of material circumstances; but insurrection is always a moral phenomenon. Revolt is Masaniello, who led the Neapolitan insurgents in 1647; but insurrection is Spartacus. Insurrection is a thing of the spirit, revolt is a thing of the stomach.
Victor Hugo
Victor Hugo
1802-1885, French Poet, Dramatist, Novelist
(197 votes) For prying into any human affairs, non are equal to those whom it does not concern.
Victor Hugo
Victor Hugo
1802-1885, French Poet, Dramatist, Novelist
(194 votes) Where the telescope ends, the microscope begins. Which of the two has the grander view?
Victor Hugo
Victor Hugo
1802-1885, French Poet, Dramatist, Novelist
(185 votes) Do not ask the name of the person who seeks a bed for the night. He who is reluctant to give his name is the one who most needs shelter.
Victor Hugo
Victor Hugo
1802-1885, French Poet, Dramatist, Novelist
(171 votes) It is not enough for us to prostrate ourselves under the tree which is Creation, and to contemplate its tremendous branches filled with stars. We have a duty to perform, to work upon the human soul, to defend the mystery against the miracle, to worship the incomprehensible while rejecting the absurd; to accept, in the inexplicable, only what is necessary; to dispel the superstitions that surround religion --to rid God of His Maggots.
Victor Hugo
Victor Hugo
1802-1885, French Poet, Dramatist, Novelist
(161 votes) The soul has illusions as the bird has wings: it is supported by them.
Victor Hugo
Victor Hugo
French, Author Quotes
(155 votes) A man is not idle because he is absorbed in thought. There is a visible labor and there is an invisible labor.
Victor Hugo
Victor Hugo
French, Author Quotes
(153 votes) There are obstinate and unknown braves who defend themselves inch by inch in the shadows against the fatal invasion of want and turpitude. There are noble and mysterious triumphs which no eye sees. No renown rewards, and no flourish of trumpets salutes. Life, misfortune, isolation, abandonment, and poverty and battlefields which have their heroes.
Victor Hugo
Victor Hugo
1802-1885, French Poet, Dramatist, Novelist
(151 votes) Freedom in art, freedom in society, this is the double goal towards which all consistent and logical minds must strive.
Victor Hugo
Victor Hugo
French, Author Quotes
(151 votes) The brutalities of progress are called revolutions. When they are over we realize this: that the human race has been roughly handled, but that it has advanced.
Victor Hugo
Victor Hugo
French, Author Quotes
(143 votes) The ode lives upon the ideal, the epic upon the grandiose, the drama upon the real.
Victor Hugo
Victor Hugo
French, Author Quotes
(137 votes) A faith is a necessity to a man. Woe to him who believes in nothing.
Victor Hugo
Victor Hugo
French, Author Quotes
(134 votes) When a man is out of sight, it is not too long before he is out of mind.
Victor Hugo
Victor Hugo
French, Author Quotes
Found 230 items. Pages: >> 1 2 3 4 5

