ca18827
|
As much money and life as you could want! The two things most human beings would choose above all - the trouble is, humans do have a knack of choosing precisely those things that are worst for them.
|
|
money
immortality
wisdom
eternal-life
human-desire
|
J.K. Rowling |
d19aeac
|
Yea, all things live forever, though at times they sleep and are forgotten.
|
|
sleep
mortality
immortality
death
life
live-forever
forgetting
forget
|
H. Rider Haggard |
2cfe921
|
Do you not know that a man is not dead while his name is still spoken?
|
|
immortality
remembrance
|
Terry Pratchett |
d80715d
|
I would love to believe that when I die I will live again, that some thinking, feeling, remembering part of me will continue. But as much as I want to believe that, and despite the ancient and worldwide cultural traditions that assert an afterlife, I know of nothing to suggest that it is more than wishful thinking.
|
|
immortality
atheism
|
Carl Sagan |
1e90629
|
"People do not die for us immediately, but remain bathed in a sort of aura of life which bears no relation to true immortality but through which they
|
|
travel
immortality
life
|
Marcel Proust |
c831ccf
|
Some pirates achieved immortality by great deeds of cruelty or derring-do. Some achieved immortality by amassing great wealth. But the captain had long ago decided that he would, on the whole, prefer to achieve immortality by not dying.
|
|
immortality
pirates
|
Terry Pratchett |
ef511be
|
The life given us, by nature is short; but the memory of a well-spent life is eternal.
|
|
immortality
inspirational
fame
|
Marcus Tullius Cicero |
a468474
|
It is wrong to bear children out of need, wrong to use a child to alleviate loneliness, wrong to provide purpose in life by reproducing another copy of oneself. It is wrong also to seek immortality by spewing one's germ into the future as though sperm contains your consciousness!
|
|
immortality
future
life
procreation
children
|
Irvin D. Yalom |
f50c221
|
Why is it we want so badly to memorialize ourselves? Even while we're still alive. We wish to assert our existence, like dogs peeing on fire hydrants.
|
|
immortality
|
Margaret Atwood |
089d7b5
|
Waking up was a daily cruelty, an affront, and she avoided it by not sleeping.
|
|
immortality
death
insomnia
|
Gregory Maguire |
260fb5a
|
Study, along the lines which the theologies have mapped, will never lead us to discovery of the fundamental facts of our existence. That goal must be attained by means of exact science and can only be achieved by such means. The fact that man, for ages, has superstitiously believed in what he calls a God does not prove at all that his theory has been right. There have been many gods - all makeshifts, born of inability to fathom the deep fundamental truth. There must be something at the bottom of existence, and man, in ignorance, being unable to discover what it is through reason, because his reason has been so imperfect, undeveloped, has used, instead, imagination, and created figments, of one kind or another, which, according to the country he was born in, the suggestions of his environment, satisfied him for the time being. Not one of all the gods of all the various theologies has ever really been proved. We accept no ordinary scientific fact without the final proof; why should we, then, be satisfied in this most mighty of all matters, with a mere theory
|
|
immortality
makeshift
satisfaction
theory
wonder
reason
science
truth
inspirational
superstitious
falsehood
miracles
study
theology
naturalism
gods
destruction
soul
|
Thomas A. Edison |
5e32593
|
Every reader exists to ensure for a certain book a modest immortality. Reading is, in this sense, a ritual of rebirth.
|
|
reading
immortality
books
rebirth
reader
|
Alberto Manguel |
9e06911
|
If, before every action, we were to begin by weighing up the consequences, thinking about them in earnest, first the immediate consequences, then the probable, then the possible, then the imaginable ones, we should never move beyond the point where our first thought brought us to a halt. The good and evil resulting from our words and deeds go on apportioning themselves, one assumes in a reasonably uniform and balanced way, throughout all the days to follow, including those endless days, when we shall not be here to find out, to congratulate ourselves or ask for pardon, indeed there are those who claim that this is the much talked of immortality.
|
|
immortality
deeds
forgiveness
consequences
|
José Saramago |
19bd5dc
|
Glenn used to say the reason you can't really imagine yourself being dead was that as soon as you say, 'I'll be dead,' you've said the word I, and so you're still alive inside the sentence. And that's how people got the idea of the immortality of the soul - it was a consequence of grammar.
|
|
immortality
grammar
|
Margaret Atwood |
a70ccd9
|
We carry the dead with us only until we die too, and then it is we who are borne along for a little while, and then our bearers in their turn drop, and so on into the unimaginable generations.
|
|
mourning
grief
loss
immortality
sorrow
death
life-goes-on
memory
|
John Banville |
984f58c
|
My life closed twice before its close; It yet remains to see If Immortality unveil A third event to me, So huge, so hopeless to conceive, As these that twice befell. Parting is all we know of heaven, And all we need of hell.
|
|
immortality
life
|
Emily Dickinson |
3a7723c
|
One plays at being immortal and after a few weeks one doesn't even know whether or not one can hang on till the next day.
|
|
immortality
the-fall
|
Albert Camus |
ed28c2d
|
The reappearance of the crescent moon after the new moon; the return of the Sun after a total eclipse, the rising of the Sun in the morning after its troublesome absence at night were noted by people around the world; these phenomena spoke to our ancestors of the possibility of surviving death. Up there in the skies was also a metaphor of immortality.
|
|
immortality
science
|
Carl Sagan |
3ce7bb8
|
. . . it is a glory and a privilege to love what Death doesn't touch.
|
|
immortality
art
|
Donna Tartt |
2891f74
|
"Lucien studied the wine in his goblet. "You don't hold on to power by being everyone's friend. And among the faeries, lesser and High Fae alike, a firm hand is needed. We're too powerful, and too bored with immortality, to be checked by anything else."
|
|
immortality
freyre
high-fae
lucien
powerful
power
faeries
|
Sarah J. Maas |
06f5f0a
|
In death - no! even in the grave all is not lost. Else there is no immortality for man. Arousing from the most profound slumbers, we break the gossamer web of some dream. Yet in a second afterward, (so frail may that web have been) we remember not that we have dreamed.
|
|
immortality
the-pit-and-the-pendulum
life-after-death
|
Edgar Allan Poe |
95dc0fb
|
Bones are patient. Bones never tire nor do they run away. When you come upon a man who has been dead many years, his bones will still be lying there, in place, content, patiently waiting, but his flesh will have gotten up and left him. Water is like flesh. Water will not stand still. It is always off to somewhere else; restless, talkative, and curious. Even water in a covered jar will disappear in time. Flesh is water. Stones are like bones. Satisfied. Patient. Dependable. Tell me, then, Alobar, in order to achieve immortality, should you emulate water or stone? Should you trust your flesh or your bones?
|
|
immortality
death
life
transitory
stones
permanence
|
Tom Robbins |
afd3b47
|
Yet some men say in many parts of England that King Arthur is not dead, but had by the will of our Lord Jesu into another place; and men say that he shall come again, and he shall win the holy cross.
|
|
immortality
hope
england
king-arthur
matter-of-britain
resurrection
|
Thomas Malory |
1ba3180
|
"Been thinking of my grandfather, whose wayward brilliance skipped my father's generation. Once, he showed me an aquatint of a certain Siamese temple. Don't recall its name, but ever since a disciple of the Buddha preached on the spot centuries ago, every bandit king, tyrant, and monarch of that kingdom has enhanced it with marble towers, scented arboretums, gold-leafed domes, lavished murals on its vaulted ceilings, set emeralds into the eyes of its statuettes. When the temple finally equals its counterpart in the Pure Land, so the story goes, that day humanity shall have fulfilled its purpose, and Time itself shall come to an end. To men like Ayrs, it occurs to me, this temple is civilization. The masses, slaves, peasants, and foot soldiers exist in the cracks of its flagstones, ignorant even of their ignorance. Not so the great statesmen, scientists, artists, and most of all, the composers of the age, any age, who are civilization's architects, masons, and priests. Ayrs sees our role is to make civilization ever more resplendent. My employer's profoundest, or only, wish is to create a minaret that inheritors of Progress a thousand years from now will point to and say, "Look, there is Vyvyan Ayrs!" How vulgar, this hankering after immortality, how vain, how false. Composers are merely scribblers of cave paintings. One writes music because winter is eternal and because, if one didn't, the wolves and blizzards would be at one's throat all the sooner."
|
|
immortality
music
composer
|
David Mitchell |
edb4468
|
That which is alive hath known death, and that which is dead can never die, for in the Circle of the Spirit life is naught and death is naught. Yea, all things live forever, though at times they sleep and are forgotten.
|
|
mortality
immortality
death
life
circle-of-life
|
H. Rider Haggard |
f0d5a59
|
One day I wrote her name upon the strand, But came the waves and washed it away: Again I wrote it with a second hand, But came the tide and made my pains his prey. Vain man (said she) that dost in vain assay A mortal thing so to immortalise; For I myself shall like to this decay, And eke my name be wiped out likewise. Not so (quod I); let baser things devise To die in dust, but you shall live by fame; My verse your virtues rare shall eternise, And in the heavens write your glorious name: Where, when as Death shall all the world subdue, Our love shall live, and later life renew.
|
|
immortality
poetry
love
|
Edmund Spenser |
1bf1b69
|
Immortality is a chancy thing; it cannot be promised or earned. Perhaps it cannot even be identified for what it is.
|
|
immortality
|
Gregory Maguire |
98093be
|
"If I should die," said I to myself, "I have left no immortal work behind me - nothing to make my friends proud of my memory - but I have lov'd the principle of beauty in all things, and if I had had time I would have made myself remember'd."
|
|
immortality
remeberance
|
Dan Simmons |
e8d4510
|
Though the face before me was that of a young woman of certainly not more than thirty years, in perfect health and the first flush of ripened beauty, yet it bore stamped upon it a seal of unutterable experience, and of deep acquaintance with grief and passion. Not even the slow smile that crept about the dimples of her mouth could hide the shadow of sin and sorrow. It shone even in the light of those glorious eyes, it was present in the air of majesty, and it seemed to say: 'Behold me, lovely as no woman was or is, undying and half-divine; memory haunts me from age to age, and passion leads me by the hand--evil have I done, and with sorrow have I made acquaintance from age to age, and from age to age evil shall I do, and sorrow shall I know till my redemption comes.
|
|
immortality
sorrow
beauty
life
goddess
|
H. Rider Haggard |
45e5ee0
|
A friend need not be kept either within sight or within reach. A friend must be allowed the freedom to find and follow his own path. If one is fortunate, those paths will for a time join. But if the paths separate, it is comforting to know that a friend still graces the universe with his skills, and his viewpoint, and his presence. For if one is remembered by a friend, one is never truly gone.
|
|
immortality
|
Timothy Zahn |
b97336a
|
[A] finished tale may give a man immortality in the light and literary sense; but an unfinished tale suggests another immortality, more essential and more strange.
|
|
immortality
writing
unfinished-works
fame
|
G.K. Chesterton |
ad4f7c8
|
Over the lives borne from under the shadow of death there seems to fall the shadow of madness.
|
|
loneliness
hate
mortality
immortality
friends
love
lifeboat
stranded
desperate
blame
society
enemies
guilt
mental-illness
|
Joseph Conrad |
550f496
|
If death is no longer a fear, we're really free. Free to take any risk under the sun for Christ and for love.
|
|
immortality
faith
death
|
John Piper |
135d12e
|
I wouldn't want [the people of Baleyworld] to live that long as a general thing. The pace of historical and intellectual advance would then become too slow. Those at the top would stay in power too long. Baleyworld would sink into conversation and decay - as your world has done.
|
|
progress
immortality
death
longevity
decadence
|
Isaac Asimov |
bc96e89
|
Shall a man grave his sorrows upon a stone when he hath but need to write them on the water? Nay, oh /She/, I will live my day, and grow old with my generation, and die my appointed death, and be forgotten.
|
|
mortality
immortality
|
H. Rider Haggard |
f0da447
|
Forget it, Jonathan, and go back to sleep. And before you go to sleep, pray that no well-meaning god ever makes you immortal.
|
|
sleep
immortality
jonathan-rebeck
|
Peter S. Beagle |
21606da
|
She had lost herself in this old work, her personality dissolving into it, so that she had been set free. The immortality of the soul lies in its dissolution; this was the cryptic comment that so frustrated Olivier and which Julien had only ever grasped as evidence for the history of a particular school of thought. He had known all about its history, but Julia knew what it meant. He found the realization strangely reassuring.
|
|
immortality
freedom
meaning
philosophy
self-abandonment
liberation
thought
soul
|
Iain Pears |
5afc299
|
Death starves us of life. So we learn to fabricate our own immortalities.
|
|
immortality
life
fabricate
immortalities
fabrication
starve
|
John Fowles |
8641e47
|
You know, it's really very peculiar. To be mortal is the most basic human experience, and yet man has never been able to accept it, grasp it, and behave accordingly. Man doesn't know how to be mortal. And when he dies, he doesn't even know how to be dead.
|
|
mortality
immortality
living
life
philosophy
dying
|
Milan Kundera |
f091105
|
What decides whether a man will become immortal, is not his character but his vitality. Nothing save intensity confers immortality. A man manifests himself more vividly, in proportion as he is strong and unified, effective and unique. Immortality knows nothing of morality or immorality, of good or evil; it measures only work and strength; it demands from a man not purity but unity. Here, morality is nothing; intensity, all.
|
|
immortality
morality
immorality
|
Stefan Zweig |
593242a
|
But man by his nature is an unnatural animal. If any creature stands a chance of defeating death, it is man.
|
|
immortality
|
Tom Robbins |
86b3d73
|
I love you now... I love you immortally, even if I die and there is nothing left of me.
|
|
immortality
love
ever
|
Gail Carson Levine |
8d01b76
|
"Holly steps back. Being warned about a ghost and seeing him are not the same. 'What did they
|
|
metaphor
time
mortality
immortality
death
life
title
speech
|
David Mitchell |
cf51f2c
|
If they succeed, it will not matter if Man becomes immortal. He will have nothing to live for.
|
|
true
immortality
greed
life
man-s-pride
page-58
greed-of-man
|
James Edwin Gunn |
d503bb8
|
For everyone nowadays knows, absolutely certain, that nothing will ever happen to me. Others die, I go on.
|
|
mortality
immortality
life
certainty
delusion
|
Ray Bradbury |
ada677c
|
Das verzweifelte Nichtsterbenwollen ist der sicherste Weg zum ewigen Tode, wahrend Sterbenkonnen, Hullenabstreifen, ewige Hingabe des Ichs an die Wandlung fuhrt zur Unsterblichkeit.
|
|
immortality
unsterblichkeit
tod
|
Hermann Hesse |
1d5c046
|
It is difficult to want to tell a grave that it is not immortal. It's so obvious at that point.
|
|
mortality
immortality
|
Aimee Bender |
49afe84
|
I am telling you that the child will not out live the buildings. Do you understand that wheras women may touch the immortal by giving birth, men--great men-- must build monuments and seek fame?
|
|
immortality
men-vs-women
seeking-fame
|
Karen Essex |
9314bdf
|
Are you ready to be rejoined for all time with your fellow gods? Oh yes, she explained, For not only was he a god, but so were all mortals gods in disguise, divorced from their divine lineage, their true identities, shrouded from their earthly selves. That is what she now revealed to him; He had been one of the rare humans who had not forgotten the connection with his divine self, and had lived like a god his mortal life.
|
|
immortality
gods
julius-caesar
|
Karen Essex |
80a28b5
|
"Boy, how can you think it wise to truck with this culture of death?" Even at ten I knew the correct answer to that cataclysmic catechism: "Right you are, Father. Much better to stick with the life-embracing imagery of a cult that worships a bleeding corpse nailed to bits of wood." ... Egypt was not -- I must repeat for Readers who still do not know it -- a culture of death, for all the mummies and bottled lungs, the jackal-men and cobra-queens. The Egyptians were the inventors of immortality, the first men who saw they could live forever."
|
|
immortality
|
Arthur Phillips |
2741626
|
Drunkenness is better for the body than physic! Drink always, and you shall never die!
|
|
immortality
drunkenness
alcoholism
|
E.R. Eddison |
99cb5ba
|
To lose a parent or a lifelong friend is often to lose the past: the person who died may be the only other living witness to golden events of long ago. But to lose a child is to lose the future: what is lost is no less than one's life project--what one lives for, how one projects oneself into the future, how one may hope to transcend death (indeed, one's child becomes one's immortality project).
|
|
immortality
death
child-loss
|
Irvin D. Yalom |
a0221d7
|
"Theme It's a sunny weekday in early May and after a ham sandwich and a cold bottle of beer on the brick terrace, I am consumed by the wish to add something to one of the ancient themes- youth dancing with his eyes closed, for example, in the shadows of corruption and death, or the rise and fall of illustrious men strapped to the turning wheel of mischance and disaster. There is a slight breeze, just enough to bend the yellow tulips on their stems, but that hardly helps me echo the longing for immortality despite the roaring juggernaut of time, or the painful motif of Nature's cyclial return versus man's blind rush to the grave. I could loosen my shirt and lie down in the soft grass, sweet now after its first cutting, but that would not produce a record of the pursuit of the moth of eternal beauty or the despondency that attends the eventual dribble of the once gurgling fountain of creativity. So, as far as great topics go, that seems to leave only the fall from exuberant maturity into sudden, headlong decline- a subject that fills me with silence and leaves me with no choice but to spend the rest of the day sniffing the jasmine vine and surrendering to the ivory goverance of the piano by picking out with my index finger the melody notes of "Easy to Love," a song in which Cole Porter expresses, with put-on nonchalance, the hopelessness of a love brimming with desire and a hunger for affection, but met only and always with frosty disregard."
|
|
hopelessness
immortality
poetry
love
|
Billy Collins |
d3521a9
|
As a species we are a predominantly intelligent and exploratory animal, and beliefs harnessed to this fact will be the most beneficial for us. A belief in the validity of the acquisition of knowledge and a scientific understanding of the world we live in, the creation and appreciation of aesthetic phenomena in all their many forms, and the broadening and deepening of our range of experiences in day-to-day living, is rapidly becoming the 'religion' of our time. Experience and understanding are our rather abstract god-figures, and ignorance and stupidity will make them angry. Our schools and universities are our religious training centres, our libraries, museums, art galleries, theatres, concert halls and sports arenas are our places of communal worship. At home we worship with our books. newspapers. magazines, radios and television sets. In a sense, we still believe in an after-life, because part of the reward obtained from our creative works is the feeling that, through them, we will 'live on' after we are dead. Like all religions, this one has its dangers, but if we have to have one, and it seems that we do, then it certainly appears to be the one most suitable for the unique biological qualities of our species. Its adoption by an ever-growing majority of the world population can serve as a compensating and reassuring source of optimism to set against the pessimism (...) concerning our immediate future as a surviving species.
|
|
literature
immortality
religion
science
belief
|
Desmond Morris |
74159a6
|
I saw that something remained of the fools' play, the death dance of human life, something lasting: works of art. They too will probably perish some day; they'll burn or crumble or be destroyed. Still, they outlast many human lives; they form a silent empire of images and relics beyond the fleeting moment. To work at that seems good and comforting to me, because it almost succeeds in making the transitory eternal.
|
|
immortality
|
Hermann Hesse |