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In real love you want the other person's good. In romantic love you want the other person.
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It is rarely that you see an American writer who is not hopelessly sane.
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They've gone to the trouble to try to educate people that there is a cultural taboo there.
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We just felt like what we were doing would be appreciated by someone else. We've enjoyed it, but it's nice to pass it on and not just put it away in a drawer somewhere.
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I have always suspected that too much knowledge is a dangerous thing. It is a boon to people who don't have deep feelings; their pleasure comes from what they know. . . . But this only emphasizes the difference between the artist and the scholar.
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I wasn't born to be a fighter. The causes I have fought for have invariably been causes that should have been gained by a delicate suggestion. Since they never were, I made myself into a fighter.
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My unreality is chiefly this: I have never felt much like a human being. It's a splendid feeling.
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I defied nothing at all. I ignored the law because I didn't know it existed. It didn't occur to me that anyone would want to curb my inspiration.
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Intellectuals are too sentimental for me.
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Life for me has been exactly what I thought it would be, a cake, which I have eaten and had too.
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I was as repelled by the French as I was attracted by their country.
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I was feeling a bit nervous until I came along today. But now I'm looking forward to the shows so much.
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. . . the great thing to learn about life is, first, not to do what you don't want to do, and, second, to do what you do want to do.
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I have always fought for ideas - until I learned that it isn't ideas but grief, struggle, and flashes of vision which enlighten.