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Victor Hugo Quotes

Victor Hugo quote from classy quote

There is one spectacle grander than the sea, that is the sky; there is one spectacle grander than the sky, that is the interior of the soul.

~ Victor Hugo

Victor Hugo Sea Sky Soul

To write the poem of the human conscience, were it only of a single man, were it only of the most infamous of men, would be to swallow up all epics in a superior and final epic. The conscience is the chaos of chimeras, of lusts and of temptations, the furnace of dreams, the cave of the ideas which are our shame; it is the pandemonium of sophisms, the battlefield of the passions. At certain hours, penetrate within the livid face of a human being who reflects, and look at what lies behind; look into that soul, look into that obscurity. There, beneath the external silence, there are combats of giants as in Homer, mêlées of dragons and hydras, and clouds of phantoms as in Milton, ghostly labyrinths as in Dante. What a gloom enwraps that infinite which each man bears within himself, and by which he measures in despair the desires of his will, and the actions of his life!

~ Victor Hugo

Victor Hugo Complexity Conscience Depth Desire Reflection Soul

His judgement demonstrates that one can be a genius and understand nothing of an art that is not one's own.

~ Victor Hugo

Victor Hugo Art

People do not read stupidities with impunity.

~ Victor Hugo

Victor Hugo Reading Stupidity

Reason is intelligence taking exercise. Imagination is intelligence with an erection.

~ Victor Hugo

Victor Hugo Imagination Intelligence Reason

The best minds have their soft spots and sometimes feel somewhat bruised by the scant respect of logic.

~ Victor Hugo

Victor Hugo Intelligence Logic

Let us study things that are no more. It is necessary to understand them, if only to avoid them.

~ Victor Hugo

Victor Hugo History Study

History has its truth, and so has legend. Legendary truth is of another nature than historical truth. Legendary truth is invention whose result is reality. Furthermore, history and legend have the same goal; to depict eternal man beneath momentary man.

~ Victor Hugo

Victor Hugo Fiction History Legends On Fiction

This light of history is pitiless; it has a strange and divine quality that, luminous as it is, and precisely because it is luminous, often casts a shadow just where we saw a radiance; out of the same man it makes two different phantoms, and the one attacks and punishes the other, the darkness of the despot struggles with the splendor of the captain. Hence a truer measure in the final judgment of the nations. Babylon violated diminishes Alexander; Rome enslaved diminishes Caesar; massacred Jerusalem diminishes Titus. Tyranny follows the tyrant. Woe to the man who leaves behind a shadow that bears his form.

~ Victor Hugo

Victor Hugo Dictators History Kings Legacy

On coming out of the chapel, a well can be seen on the left. There are two in this yard. You ask, Why is there no bucket and no pulley to this one? Because no water is drawn from it now. Why is no more water drawn from it? Because it is full of skeletons.

~ Victor Hugo

Victor Hugo Death History Waterloo

There is always more misery among the lower classes than there is humanity in the higher.

~ Victor Hugo

Victor Hugo Humanity Misery Poverty

A man is not idle because he is absorbed in thought. There is visible labor and there is invisible labor.

~ Victor Hugo

Victor Hugo Thought Work

Nature is pitiless; she never withdraws her flowers, her music, her fragrance and her sunlight, from before human cruelty or suffering. She overwhelms man by the contrast between divine beauty and social hideousness. She spares him nothing of her loveliness, neither wing or butterfly, nor song of bird; in the midst of murder, vengeance, barbarism, he must feel himself watched by holy things; he cannot escape the immense reproach of universal nature and the implacable serenity of the sky. The deformity of human laws is forced to exhibit itself naked amidst the dazzling rays of eternal beauty. Man breaks and destroys; man lays waste; man kills; but the summer remains summer; the lily remains the lily; and the star remains the star....As though it said to man, 'Behold my work. and yours.

~ Victor Hugo

Victor Hugo Human Cruelty Nature

He left her. She was dissatisfied with him. He had preferred to incur her anger rather than cause her pain. He had kept all the pain for himself.

~ Victor Hugo

Victor Hugo Pain

Phoebus de Chateaupers likewise came to a 'tragic end': he married.

~ Victor Hugo

Victor Hugo Humor Marriage

Do not economize on the hymeneal rites; do not prune them of their splendor, nor split farthings on the day when you are radiant. A wedding is not house-keeping.

~ Victor Hugo

Victor Hugo Marriage Wedding

Music expresses that which cannot be said and on which it is impossible to be silent.

~ Victor Hugo

Victor Hugo Music

Lend your ear then to this tutti of steeples; diffuse over the whole the buzz of half a million of human beings, the eternal murmur of the river, the infinite piping of the wind, the grave and distant quartet of the four forests placed like immense organs on the four hills of the horizon; soften down, as with a demi-tint, all that is too shrill and too harsh in the central mass of sound, and say if you know any thing in the world more rich, more gladdening, more dazzling than that tumult of bells; than that furnace of music; than those ten thousand brazen tones breathed all at once from flutes of stone three hundred feet high; than that city which is but one orchestra; than that symphony rushing and roaring like a tempest.

~ Victor Hugo

Victor Hugo Bells Music Paris Sound

In the chaos of sentiments and passions which defend a barricade, there is something of everything; there is bravery, youth, honor, enthusiasm, the ideal, conviction, the eager fury of the gamester, and above all, intervals of hope.

~ Victor Hugo

Victor Hugo Bravery Enthusiasm Honor Hope Les Miserables Passion Youth

The realities of life do not allow themselves to be forgotten.

~ Victor Hugo

Victor Hugo Reality

Daydream, which is to thought as the nebula is to the star, borders on sleep, and is concerned with it as its frontier. An atmosphere inhabited by living transparencies: there's a beginning of the unknown. But beyond it the Possible opens out, immense.Other beings, other facts, are there. No supernaturalism, only the occult continuation of infinite nature. . . . Sleep is in contact with the Possible, which we also call the improbable. The world of the night is a world. Night, as night, is a universe. . . . The dark things of the unknown world become neighbors of man, whether by true communication or by a visionary enlargement of the distances of the abyss . . . and the sleeper, not quite seeing, not quite unconscious, glimpses the strange animalities, weird vegetations, terrible or radiant pallors, ghosts, masks, figures, hydras, confusions, moonless moonlights, obscure unmakings of miracle, growths and vanishings within a murky depth, shapes floating in shadow, the whole mystery which we call Dreaming, and which is nothing other than the approach of an invisible reality. The dream is the aquarium of Night.

~ Victor Hugo

Victor Hugo Ambiguity Daydreams Discovery Dreams Imagination Nebulous Psychology Reality

A man may beg, but a woman has to sell.

~ Victor Hugo

Victor Hugo Poverty Reality

What am I to do on this earth? The choice rests with me: suffer or enjoy. Whither will suffering lead me? To nothingness, but I shall have suffered. Whither will enjoyment lead me? To nothingness, but I shall have enjoyed myself.

~ Victor Hugo

Victor Hugo Joy Suffering

In the morning, when he entered my room, I grumbled, but he was like the sunlight to me, all the same. One cannot defend oneself against those brats. They take hold of you, they hold you fast, they never let you go again. The truth is, that there never was a cupid like that child.

~ Victor Hugo

Victor Hugo Children Love

Mother's arms are made of tenderness, and sweet sleep blesses the child who lies within.

~ Victor Hugo

Victor Hugo Children

We do not claim that the portrait we are making is the whole truth, only that it is a resemblance.

~ Victor Hugo

Victor Hugo Fiction Literature Representation Truth

So long as there shall exist, by virtue of law and custom, decrees of damnation pronounced by society, artificially creating hells amid the civilization of earth, and adding the element of human fate to divine destiny; so long as the three great problems of the century—the degradation of man through pauperism, the corruption of woman through hunger, the crippling of children through lack of light—are unsolved; so long as social asphyxia is possible in any part of the world;—in other words, and with a still wider significance, so long as ignorance and poverty exist on earth, books of the nature of Les Misérables cannot fail to be of use. HAUTEVILLE HOUSE, 1862. [Translation by Isabel F. Hapgood]

~ Victor Hugo

Victor Hugo Inspirational Les Miserables Political Poverty Society Victor Hugo

Common right is nought but the protection of all radiating over the right of each. This protection of all is termed Fraternity. The point of intersection of all these aggregated sovereignties is called Society. This intersection being a junction, this point is a knot. Hence comes what is called the social tie.

~ Victor Hugo

Victor Hugo Fraternity Society

The sins of women and children, domestic servants and the weak, the poor and the ignorant, are the sins of the husbands and fathers, the masters, the strong and the rich and the educated.

~ Victor Hugo

Victor Hugo Sin Society

Those who are ignorant should be taught all you can teach them; society is to blame for not providing free public education; and society will answer for the obscurity it produces. If the soul is left in darkness, sin will be committed. The guilty party is not he who has sinned but he who created the darkness in the first place.

~ Victor Hugo

Victor Hugo Guilt Sin Society

Yes, the brutalities of progress are called revolutions. When they are done, we recognize one thing: that the human race has been badly manhandled, but that it has moved forward.

~ Victor Hugo

Victor Hugo Progress Revolution Society

He set out for Toulon. He arrived there, after a journey of twenty-seven days, on a cart, with a chain on his neck. At Toulon he was clothed in the red cassock. All that had constituted his life, even to his name, was effaced; he was no longer even Jean Valjean; he was number 24,601.

~ Victor Hugo

Victor Hugo Society

That it was no doubt a dark hour, but that he should get through it; that after all he held his destiny, evil as it might be, in his own hand; that he was master of it. He clung to that thought.

~ Victor Hugo

Victor Hugo Destiny Les Miserables

Where would the shout of love begin, if not from the summit of sacrifice? Oh my brothers, this is the junction between those who think and those who suffer; this barricade is made neither of paving stones, nor of timbers, nor of iron; it is made of two mounds, a mound of ideas and a mound of sorrows. Here misery encounters the ideal. Here day embraces night, and says: I will die with you and you will be born again with me. From the heavy embrace of all desolations springs faith. Sufferings bring their agony here, and ideas their immortality. This agony and immortality will mingle and make up our death.Brothers, whoever dies here dies in the radiance of the future, and we are entering a grave illuminated by the dawn.

~ Victor Hugo

Victor Hugo Barricade Death Future Happy Martyrs Love Revolution

Though one believes in nothing, there are moments in life when one accepts the religion of the temple nearest at hand.

~ Victor Hugo

Victor Hugo Athiesm Belief In The Foxholes Skepticism

Loving is half of believing.

~ Victor Hugo

Victor Hugo Belief Loving

He did not seek to assume the mantle of Elijah, to shed a light of the future upon the misty turmoil of events or resolve the prevailing light into a single flame; there was in him nothing of the prophet or the mystic. He was a simple soul who loved, and that was all.

~ Victor Hugo

Victor Hugo Belief Faith

Great griefs exhaust. They discourage us with life. The man into whom they enter feels something taken from him. In youth, their visit is sad; later on, it is ominous.

~ Victor Hugo

Victor Hugo Depression Grief

Emergencies have always been necessary to progress. It was darkness which produced the lamp. It was fog that produced the compass. It was hunger that drove us to exploration. And it took a depression to teach us the real value of a job.

~ Victor Hugo

Victor Hugo Depression Economy Exploration Inspirational Progress

His ideas assumed a kind of stupefied and mechanical quality which is peculiar to despair.

~ Victor Hugo

Victor Hugo Anxiety Depression Emotion Worry
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