1,085 Quotes by Marcel Proust

  • Author Marcel Proust
  • Quote

    Time passes, and little by little everything that we have spoken in falsehood becomes true.

  • Tags
  • Share

  • Author Marcel Proust
  • Quote

    Certainly, it is more reasonable to devote one's life to women than to postage stamps or old snuff-boxes, even to pictures or statues. But the example of other collections should be a warning to us to diversify, to have not one woman only but several.

  • Tags
  • Share

  • Author Marcel Proust
  • Quote

    According to a charming law of nature which is evident even in the most sophisticated societies, we live in complete ignorance of whatever we love.

  • Tags
  • Share

  • Author Marcel Proust
  • Quote

    After a certain age our memories are so intertwined with one another that what we are thinking of, the book we are reading, scarcely matters any more. We have put something of ourselves everywhere, everything is fertile, everything is dangerous, and we can make discoveries no less precious than in Pascal's Pensées in an advertisement for soap.

  • Tags
  • Share

  • Author Marcel Proust
  • Quote

    For a long time I would go to bed early. [Fr., Longtemps, je me suis couche de bonne heure.]

  • Tags
  • Share

  • Author Marcel Proust
  • Quote

    We are less justified in saying that the thinking life of humanity is a miraculous perfectioning of animal and physical life than that it is an imperfection in the organization of spiritual life as rudimentary as the communal existence of protozoa in colonies.

  • Tags
  • Share

  • Author Marcel Proust
  • Quote

    To a great extent, suffering is a sort of need felt by the organism to make itself familiar with a new state, which makes it uneasy, to adapt its sensibility to that state.

  • Tags
  • Share

  • Author Marcel Proust
  • Quote

    There is no man, however wise, who has not at some period of his youth said things, or lived in a way the consciousness of which is so unpleasant to him in later life that he would gladly, if he could, expunge it from his memory.

  • Tags
  • Share

  • Author Marcel Proust
  • Quote

    ... in love, barriers cannot be destroyed from the outside by the one to whom the cause despair, no matter what he does; and it isonly when he is no longer concerned with them that, suddenly, as a result of work coming from elsewhere, accomplished within the one who did not love him, these barriers, formerly attacked without success, fall futilely.

  • Tags
  • Share