D. H. Lawrence quotes
"One watches them on the seashore, all the people, and there is something pathetic, almost wistful in them, as if they wished their lives did not add up to this scaly nullity of possession, but as if they could not escape. It is a dragon that has devoured us all: these obscene, scaly houses, this insatiable struggle and desire to possess, to possess always and in spite of everything, this need to be an owner, lest one be owned. It is too hideous and nauseating. Owners and owned, they are like the two sides of a ghastly disease. One feels a sort of madness come over one, as if the world had become hell. But it is only superimposed: it is only a temporary disease. It can be cleaned away."
"I want to live my life so that my nights are not full of regrets."
"How beautiful maleness is, if it finds its right expression."
"I have never seen a wild thing feel sorry for itself. A little bird will fall dead, frozen from a bough, without ever having felt sorry for itself."
"But better die than live mechanically a life that is a repetition of repetitions."
"For whereas the mind works in possibilities, the intuitions work in actualities, and what you intuitively desire, that is possible to you. Whereas what you mentally or consciously desire is nine times out of ten impossible; hitch your wagon to star, or you will just stay where you are."
"The mind can assert anything and pretend it has proved it. My beliefs I test on my body, on my intuitional consciousness, and when I get a response there, then I accept."
"But then peace, peace I am so mistrustful of it so much afraid that it means a sort of weakness and giving in."
"Try to find your deepest issue in every confusion, and abide by that."
"I believe a man is born first unto himself-for the happy developing of himself, while the world is a nursery, and the pretty thi"
