Honore de Balzac Quotes About Passion

We have collected for you the TOP of Honore de Balzac's best quotes about Passion! Here are collected all the quotes about Passion starting from the birthday of the Novelist – May 20, 1799! We hope you will be inspired to new achievements with our constantly updated collection of quotes. At the moment, this page contains 24 sayings of Honore de Balzac about Passion. We will be happy if you share our collection of quotes with your friends on social networks!
  • For passion, be it observed, brings insight with it; it can give a sort of intelligence to simpletons, fools, and idiots, especially during youth.

    "'Les Célibataires' ('A Bachelor's Establishment')". Book by Honoré de Balzac, 1842.
  • But woman brings disorder into society through passion.

  • The duration of passion is proportionate with the original resistance of the woman.

  • The passion of love is essentially selfish, while motherhood widens the circle of our feelings.

    "Letters of Two Brides". Book by Honoré de Balzac, 1841-1842.
  • The duration of a couple's passion is in proportion to the woman's original resistance or to the obstacles that social hazards have placed in the way of her happiness.

  • Creole women take after Europe in their intelligence, after the Tropics in the illogical violence of their passions, and after the Indies in the apathetic indolence with which they commit or suffer good and evil.

  • Passion is universal humanity. Without it religion, history, romance and art would be useless.

  • They ended as all great passions do end - by a misunderstanding.

    Honore de Balzac (1899). “A Passion in the Desert”, p.17, Library of Alexandria
  • The fact is that love is of two kinds, one which commands, and one which obeys. The two are quite distinct, and the passion to which the one gives rise is not the passion of the other.

    Honore de Balzac (2011). “Letters of Two Brides”, p.135, The Floating Press
  • Ideas devour the ages as men are devoured by their passions. When man is cured, human nature will cure itself perhaps.

  • To stroll is a science, it is the gastronomy of the eye. To walk is to vegetate, to stroll is to live.... To stroll is to enjoy, it is to assume a mind-set, it is to admire the sublime pictures of unhappiness, of love, of joy, of graceful or grotesque portraits; it is to plunge one's vision to the depths of a thousand existences: young, it is to desire everything; old, it is to live the life of the young, to marry their passions.

  • Jealousy, an eminently credulous and suspicious passion, allows fancy the greatest possible play. But it does not bestow wit, it banishes all sense.

  • Noble passions are like vices: the more they are satisfied, the greater they grow, Mothers and gamblers are insatiable.

  • When passion is not fed, it changes to need. At this juncture, marriage becomes a fixed idea in the mind of the bourgeois, being the only means whereby he can win a woman and appropriate her to his uses.

  • Passions are no more forgiving than human laws and they reason more justly. Are they not based on a conscience of their own, infallible as an instinct?

  • Passion is born deaf and dumb.

  • Let passion reach a catastrophe and it submits us to an intoxicating force far more powerful than the niggardly irritation of wine or of opium. The lucidity our ideas then achieve, and the delicacy of our overly exalted sensations, produce the strangest and most unexpected effects.

  • By and large, women have a faith and a morality peculiar to themselves; they believe in the reality of everything that serves their interest and their passions.

  • The prodigality of millionaires is comparable only to their greed of gain. Let some whim or passion seize them and money is of no account. In fact these Croesuses find whims and passions harder to come by than gold.

  • However gross a man may be, the minute he expresses a strong and genuine affection, some inner secretion alters his features, animates his gestures, and colors his voice. The stupidest man will often, under the stress of passion, achieve heights of eloquence, in thought if not in language, and seem to move in some luminous sphere. Goriot's voice and gesture had at this moment the power of communication that characterizes the great actor. Are not our finer feelings the poems of the human will?

  • Love is the only passion which suffers neither past nor future.

  • Sometimes, one gesture comprises an entire drama, the accent of one word ruins an entire existence, and the indifference of one glance kills the happiest passion.

  • Love based upon money and vanity forms the most stubborn of passions.

  • Neither the passions not justice nor politics nor the great social forces ever consider the victims they strike.

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