Marcel Proust Quotes About Suffering

We have collected for you the TOP of Marcel Proust's best quotes about Suffering! Here are collected all the quotes about Suffering starting from the birthday of the Novelist – July 10, 1871! We hope you will be inspired to new achievements with our constantly updated collection of quotes. At the moment, this page contains 20 sayings of Marcel Proust about Suffering. We will be happy if you share our collection of quotes with your friends on social networks!
  • A woman whom we need and who makes us suffer elicits from us a whole gamut of feelings far more profound and vital than a man of genius who interests us.

    Marcel Proust (2000). “In Search of Lost Time, Volume VI: Time Regained (A Modern Library E-Book)”, p.316, Modern Library
  • People who are not in love fail to understand how an intelligent man can suffer because of a very ordinary woman. This is like being surprised that anyone should be stricken with cholera because of a creature so insignificant as the common bacillus.

  • Often it is just lack of imagination that keeps a man from suffering very much.

  • In reality, in love there is a permanent suffering which joy neutralizes, renders virtual delays, but which can at any moment become what it would have become long earlier if one had not obtained what one wanted -- atrocious.

  • We are healed of a suffering only by experiencing it to the full.

    "Remembrance of Things Past". Volume 3,
  • 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.

    Marcel Proust (2006). “Remembrance of Things Past”, p.1127, Wordsworth Editions
  • ... we made much less happy by the kindness of a great writer, which strictly speaking we find only in his books, than we suffer from the hostility of a woman whom we have not chosen for her intelligence, but whom we cannot stop ourselves from loving.

  • How can we have the courage to wish to live, how can we make a movement to preserve ourselves from death, in a world where love is provoked by a lie and consists solely in the need of having our sufferings appeased by whatever being has made us suffer?

  • The sensitiveness claimed by neurotic is matched by their egotism: they cannot abide the flaunting by others of the sufferings to which they pay an even increasing amount of attention in themselves.

  • There is not a woman in the world the possession of whom is as precious as that of the truths which she reveals to us by causing us to suffer.

    Marcel Proust (2006). “Remembrance of Things Past”, p.854, Wordsworth Editions
  • We have such numerous interests in our lives that it is not uncommon, on a single occasion, for the foundations of a happiness that does not yet exist to be laid down alongside the intensification of a grief from which we are still suffering.

    Marcel Proust (2003). “In Search of Lost Time: The Way by Swann's”, ePenguin
  • Habit! that skillful but slow arranger, which starts out by letting our spirit suffer for weeks in a temporary state, but that thespirit is after all happy to discover, for without habit and reduced to its own resources, the spirit would be unable to make any lodgings seem habitable.

  • Nine tenths of the ills from which intelligent people suffer spring from their intellect.

    Marcel Proust (2016). “In Search of Lost Time: Or “Á la Recherche du temps perdu””, p.549, Jester House Publishing
  • We were resigned to suffering, thinking that we loved outside ourselves, and we perceive that our love is a function of our sorrow, that our love perhaps is our sorrow.

    Marcel Proust (2016). “In Search of Lost Time: Or “Á la Recherche du temps perdu””, p.1981, Jester House Publishing
  • Habit! that skilful but slow-moving arranger who begins by letting our minds suffer for weeks on end in temporary quarters, but whom our minds are none the less only too happy to discover at last, for without it, reduced to their own devices, they would be powerless to make any room seem habitable.

    Marcel Proust (2015). “Swann's Way”, p.9, Vintage
  • ...a writer's works, like the water in an artesian well, mount to a height which is in proportion to the depth to which suffering has penetrated his soul.

  • We are ordinarily so indifferent to people that when we have invested one of them with the possibility of giving us joy, or suffering, it seems as if he must belong to some other universe, he is imbued with poetry.

  • Those whose suffering is due to love are, as we say of certain invalids, their own physicians.

    Marcel Proust (2006). “Remembrance of Things Past”, p.578, Wordsworth Editions
  • The disinterest [of my two great-aunts] in anything that had to do with high society was such that their sense of hearing ... put to rest its receptor organs and allowed them to suffer the true beginnings of atrophy.

  • We scornfully decline, because of one whom we love and who will some day be of so little account, to see another who is of no account to-day, with whom we shall be in love to-morrow, with whom we might, perhaps, had we consented to see her now, have fallen in love a little earlier and who would thus have put a term to our present sufferings, bringing others, it is true, in their place.

    Marcel Proust (2013). “Delphi Complete Works of Marcel Proust (Illustrated)”, p.949, Delphi Classics
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