classes ::: author, Poetry, Philosophy, History, Literature,
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branches ::: Victor Hugo

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object:Victor Hugo
class:author
subject class:Poetry
subject class:Philosophy
subject class:History
subject class:Literature

Novelist, Dramatist, Writer

influences ::: William Shakespeare, Chateaubriand, Walter Scott, Lamartine, Dante


Wikipedia - Victor Hugo
Goodreads - Victor Hugo
Wikiquote


--- WIKI
Victor-Marie Hugo (French: [vikt mai yo] (About this soundlisten); 7 Ventse year X [26 February 1802] 22 May 1885) was a French poet, novelist, and dramatist of the Romantic movement. During a literary career that spanned more than sixty years, he wrote abundantly in an exceptional variety of genres: lyrics, satires, epics, philosophical poems, epigrams, novels, history, critical essays, political speeches, funeral orations, diaries, letters public and private, as well as dramas in verse and prose.

Hugo is considered to be one of the greatest and best-known French writers. Outside France, his most famous works are the novels Les Misrables, 1862, and The Hunchback of Notre-Dame (French: Notre-Dame de Paris), 1831. In France, Hugo is renowned for his poetry collections, such as Les Contemplations (The Contemplations) and La Lgende des sicles (The Legend of the Ages). Hugo was at the forefront of the Romantic literary movement with his play Cromwell and drama Hernani. Many of his works have inspired music, both during his lifetime and after his death, including the musicals Les Misrables and Notre-Dame de Paris. He produced more than 4,000 drawings in his lifetime, and campaigned for social causes such as the abolition of capital punishment.

Though a committed royalist when he was young, Hugo's views changed as the decades passed, and he became a passionate supporter of republicanism serving in politics as both deputy and senator. His work touched upon most of the political and social issues and the artistic trends of his time. His opposition to absolutism and his colossal literary achievement established him as a national hero. He was honoured by interment in the Panthon.



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now begins generated list of local instances, definitions, quotes, instances in chapters, wordnet info if available and instances among weblinks


OBJECT INSTANCES [0] - TOPICS - AUTHORS - BOOKS - CHAPTERS - CLASSES - SEE ALSO - SIMILAR TITLES

TOPICS
SEE ALSO


AUTH

BOOKS

IN CHAPTERS TITLE

IN CHAPTERS CLASSNAME

IN CHAPTERS TEXT
01.02_-_Sri_Aurobindo_-_Ahana_and_Other_Poems
05.01_-_Man_and_the_Gods
1.04_-_GOD_IN_THE_WORLD
18.05_-_Ashram_Poets
2.05_-_On_Poetry
2.2.1.01_-_The_World's_Greatest_Poets
27.02_-_The_Human_Touch_Divine
30.01_-_World-Literature
30.12_-_The_Obscene_and_the_Ugly_-_Form_and_Essence
BOOK_II._--_PART_I._ANTHROPOGENESIS.
Book_of_Imaginary_Beings_(text)
Talks_With_Sri_Aurobindo_1
The_Dwellings_of_the_Philosophers
the_Eternal_Wisdom

PRIMARY CLASS

author
SIMILAR TITLES
Victor Hugo

DEFINITIONS


TERMS STARTING WITH

Victor Hugo in The Toilers of the Sea confirms De

Victor Hugo’s La Fin de Satan, it is through the


TERMS ANYWHERE

Victor Hugo in The Toilers of the Sea confirms De

Victor Hugo’s La Fin de Satan, it is through the

Demons.” In The Toilers of the Sea, Victor Hugo,



QUOTES [5 / 5 - 1500 / 3744]


KEYS (10k)

   5 Victor Hugo

NEW FULL DB (2.4M)

1485 Victor Hugo
   3 Richard Dawkins

1:Idleness is the heaviest of all oppressions. ~ Victor Hugo,
2:Initiative is doing the right thing without being told." ~ Victor Hugo,
3:He never went out without a book under his arm, and he often came back with two. ~ Victor Hugo,
4:Nothing is wholly dead nor wholly alive. ~ Victor Hugo, the Eternal Wisdom
5:The real human division is this: the luminous and the shady. To diminish the number of the shady, to augment the number of the luminous,-that is the object. That is why we cry: Education! science! To teach reading, means to light the fire; every syllable spelled out sparkles. However, he who says light does not, necessarily, say joy. People suffer in the light; excess burns. The flame is the enemy of the wing. To burn without ceasing to fly,-therein lies the marvel of genius. When you shall have learned to know, and to love, you will still suffer. The day is born in tears. The luminous weep, if only over those in darkness. ~ Victor Hugo,

*** WISDOM TROVE ***

1:Emotion is always new. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
2:Another story must begin! ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
3:He who despairs is wrong. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
4:Despotism is a long crime. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
5:I think, therefore I doubt. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
6:Loving is half of believing. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
7:Stupidity talks, vanity acts. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
8:Wisdom is a sacred communion. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
9:Liberation is not deliverance. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
10:A wedding is not house-keeping. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
11:Be happy without picking flaws. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
12:Habit is the nursery of errors. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
13:To love beauty is to see light. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
14:Virtue has a veil, vice a mask. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
15:Art needs no spur beyond itself. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
16:Labor is life; thought is light. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
17:Morality is truth in full bloom. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
18:Toleration is the best religion. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
19:A sewer is a cynic. It tells All. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
20:Conscience is God present in man. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
21:Happiness wishes everybody happy. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
22:Wisdom is the health of the soul. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
23:Enthusiasm is the fever of reason. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
24:Foppery is the egotism of clothes. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
25:He does not weep who does not see. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
26:Reality in strong doses frightens. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
27:Those who do not weep, do not see. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
28:To love is the half of to believe. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
29:Go to sleep in peace. God is awake. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
30:I see black light (his last words). ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
31:Love is the only future God offers. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
32:The ox suffers, the cart complains. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
33:Those who live are those who fight. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
34:I'm religiously opposed to religion. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
35:Press on! A better fate awaits thee. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
36:Taste is the common sense of genius. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
37:To learn to read is to light a fire. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
38:When liberty returns, I will return. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
39:I am for religion, against religions. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
40:Monastic incarceration is castration. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
41:Perseverance, secret of all triumphs. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
42:To contemplate is to look at shadows. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
43:To err is human. To loaf is Parisian. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
44:When the heart is dry the eye is dry. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
45:Art moves. Hence its civilizing power. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
46:Caution is the eldest child of wisdom. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
47:If nobody loved, the sun would go out. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
48:Popularity? It's glory's small change. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
49:There shall be no slavery of the mind. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
50:A war between Europeans is a civil war. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
51:Dreaming is happiness. Waiting is life. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
52:Freedom begins where it ends ignorance. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
53:God made only water, but man made wine. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
54:If we must suffer, let us suffer nobly. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
55:Puns are the droppings of soaring wits. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
56:To think of shadows is a serious thing. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
57:A fixed idea ends in madness or heroism. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
58:Are you afraid of the good you might do? ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
59:A writer is a world trapped in a person. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
60:Melancholy is the pleasure of being sad. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
61:Men hate those to whom they have to lie. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
62:Now life has killed the dream I dreamed. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
63:Prayer is an august avowal of ignorance. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
64:Revolution is the larva of civilization. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
65:Sleep comes more easily than it returns. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
66:The earth is a great piece of stupidity. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
67:The sewer is the conscience of the city. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
68:God knows better than we do what we need. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
69:God made the water but men made the wine. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
70:Inspiration and genius -one and the same. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
71:Melancholy is the happiness of being sad. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
72:Not being heard is no reason for silence. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
73:Proverty and wealth are comparative sins. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
74:The true artist can only labor con amore. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
75:The wind of revolutions is not tractable. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
76:For sight is woman-like and shuns the old. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
77:Knowledge is a weight added to conscience. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
78:Progress is not accomplished in one stage. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
79:The learned man knows that he is ignorant. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
80:The word is the Verb, and the Verb is God. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
81:Curiosity is gluttony. To see is to devour. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
82:If I were Jesus Christ, I would save Judas. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
83:I was always a lover of soft-winged things. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
84:Love is reducing the universe to one being. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
85:Nothing awakens reminiscence like an aroma. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
86:The owl goes not into the nest of the lark. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
87:The wise man does not grow old, but ripens. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
88:What makes night within us may leave stars. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
89:Wisdom and eloquence are not always united. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
90:He did not study God; he was dazzled by him. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
91:He who opens a school door, closes a prison. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
92:Idleness is the heaviest of all oppressions. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
93:People do not lack strength; they lack will. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
94:The thirst for the Infinite proves infinity. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
95:What is fright by night is curiosity by day. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
96:As the purse is emptied, the heart is filled. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
97:I write with one hand, but I fight with both. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
98:No one can keep a secret better than a child. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
99:To meditate is to labour; to think is to act. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
100:Dear God! how beauty varies in nature and art. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
101:Fashions have done more harm than revolutions. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
102:History has its truth; and so has legend hers. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
103:One cannot resist an idea whose time has come. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
104:One of the magnanimities of woman is to yield. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
105:Strong and bitter words indicate a weak cause. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
106:The clouds, - the only birds that never sleep. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
107:The flesh is the upper surface of the unknown. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
108:A great artist is a great man in a great child. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
109:If suffer we must, let's suffer on the heights. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
110:It is often our best friends who throw us down. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
111:Life is the flower for which love is the honey. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
112:Slaves would be tyrants were the chance theirs. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
113:. . .where there is no more hope, song remains. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
114:by making himself a priest made himself a demon. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
115:Every man is a book in which God himself writes. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
116:He loved books; books are cold but safe friends. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
117:Love is the salutation of the angel to the stars ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
118:Scepticism, that dry caries of the intelligence. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
119:There is a secret drawer in every woman's heart. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
120:The smaller it is the heart, more hatred houses. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
121:To know, to think, to dream. That is everything. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
122:Wherever the Turkish hoof trods, no grass grows. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
123:Dying is nothing. What's terrible is not to live. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
124:There are many lovely women, but no perfect ones. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
125:There are things stronger than the strongest man. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
126:The wise man is he who knows when and how to stop ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
127:To love another person is to see the face of God. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
128:What love commences can be finished by God alone. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
129:Curiosity is one of the forms of feminine bravery. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
130:God became man, granted. The devil became a woman. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
131:God created the flirt as soon as he made the fool. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
132:It is not enough to be happy, one must be content. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
133:It is nothing to die. It is frightful not to live. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
134:Joy's smile is much closer to tears than laughter. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
135:My tastes are aristocratic, my actions democratic. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
136:The cruel of heart have their own black happiness. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
137:There is such a thing as the pressure of darkness. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
138:To die is nothing; but it is terrible not to live. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
139:To rise from error to truth is rare and beautiful. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
140:Years place at last a venerable crown upon a head. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
141:Adversity makes men, and prosperity makes monsters. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
142:It is by suffering that human beings become angels. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
143:There is nothing like a dream to create the future. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
144:Whatever causes night in our souls may leave stars. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
145:Being good is easy, what is difficult is being just. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
146:Every bad institution of this world ends by suicide. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
147:In the domain of art there is no light without heat. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
148:Many great actions are committed in small struggles. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
149:Music expresses that which cannot be put into words. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
150:Revolutions are not born of chance but of necessity. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
151:The persistence of an all-absorbing idea is terrible. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
152:Too much improvisation leaves the mind stupidly void. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
153:Even the darkest night will end and the sun will rise. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
154:Every body drags its shadow, and every mind its doubt. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
155:Let us sacrifice one day to gain perhaps a whole life. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
156:Love is the foolishness of men, and the wisdom of God. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
157:Nothing makes a man so adventurous as an empty pocket. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
158:Peace is the virtue of civilization. War is its crime. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
159:The wicked envy and hate; it is their way of admiring. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
160:When a person opens a book, he can never be in prison. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
161:A fall from such a height is rarely straight downwards. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
162:As with stomachs, we should pity minds that do not eat. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
163:Initiative is doing the right thing without being told. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
164:One believes others will do what he will do to himself. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
165:Poetry contains philosophy as the soul contains reason. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
166:The soul has greater need of the ideal than of the real ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
167:This child whom we Love, Brings daylight Into our soul. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
168:Yes, the brutalities of progress are called revolutions ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
169:Do you hear the people sing? Singing a song of angry men ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
170:He reached for his pocket, and found there, only reality ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
171:He was fond of books, for they are cool and sure friends ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
172:The beautiful has but one type, the ugly has a thousand. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
173:Tobacco is the plant that converts thoughts into dreams. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
174:We teachers make the road, others will make the journey. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
175:When dictatorship is a fact, revolution becomes a right. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
176:Winter is on my head, but eternal spring is in my heart. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
177:A stout heart may be ruined in fortune but not in spirit. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
178:Hope is a delusion; no hand can grasp a wave or a shadow. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
179:I am not in the world to care for my life, but for souls. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
180:Our life dreams the Utopia. Our death achieves the Ideal. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
181:Forty is the old age of youth; fifty the youth of old age. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
182:Hypocrisy is nothing, in fact, but a horrible hopefulness. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
183:If I speak, I am condemned. If I stay silent, I am damned! ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
184:If you want to civilize a man, begin with his grandmother. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
185:Life's greatest happiness is to be convinced we are loved. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
186:Popularity - a piece of faded tinsel, that is out of date. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
187:The hand which moves over the dial moves also among souls. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
188:An intelligent hell would be better than a stupid paradise. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
189:Concision in style, precision in thought, decision in life. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
190:Friend is sometimes a word devoid of meaning; enemy, never. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
191:It is not so easy to keep silent when the silence is a lie. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
192:Laughter is the sun that drives winter from the human face. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
193:The man who fights against his own country is never a hero. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
194:There are many tongues to talk, and but few heads to think. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
195:There is but one way of refusing To-morrow, that is to die. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
196:What a gloomy thing, not to know the address of one's soul. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
197:Common sense is in spite of, not as the result of education. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
198:God blesses man, not for having found but for having sought. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
199:In every cradle decked with rosy wreath Lurk germs of death. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
200:I would rather be the head of a fly than the tail of a lion. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
201:One drop of wine is enough to redden a whole glass of water. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
202:The production of souls is the secret of unfathomable depth. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
203:Those who always pray are necessary to those who never pray. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
204:Vengeance comes from the individual and punishment from God. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
205:Do not let it be your aim to be something, but to be someone. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
206:Logic ignores the almost, just as the sun ignores the candle. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
207:... Man lives by affirmation even more than he does by bread. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
208:I dislike wealth and prosperity, especially that of other men. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
209:Our acts make or mar us, we are the children of our own deeds. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
210:The realities of life do not allow themselves to be forgotten. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
211:To die for lack of love is horrible. The asphyxia of the soul. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
212:When you get an idea into your head you find it in everything. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
213:A shadow is hard to seize by the throat and dash to the ground. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
214:Doing nothing is happiness for children and misery for old men. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
215:Youth, even in its sorrows, always has a brilliancy of its own. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
216:A woman's best qualities are harmful if undiluted with prudence. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
217:Night and the day, when united, Bring forth the beautiful light. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
218:The convent is supreme egotism resulting in supreme self-denial. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
219:What would be ugly in a garden constitutes beauty in a mountain. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
220:Great buildings, like great mountains, are the work of centuries. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
221:On this point, the priest and the philosopher agree: We must die. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
222:To lie a little is not possible: he who lies, lies the whole lie. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
223:Every bird which flies has the thread of the infinite in its claw. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
224:Never laugh at those who suffer; suffer sometimes those who laugh. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
225:No army can withstand the strength of an idea whose time has come. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
226:The supreme happiness of life is the conviction that we are loved. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
227:A man trying to escape never thinks himself sufficiently concealed. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
228:First problem. To produce wealth. Second problem. To distribute it. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
229:For there are many great deeds done in the small struggles of life. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
230:Not seeing people permits us to imagine them with every perfection. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
231:Our mind is enriched by what we receive, our heart by what we give. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
232:The most ferocious animals are disarmed by caresses to their young. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
233:Winter changes into stone the water of heaven and the heart of man. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
234:You ask me what forces me to speak? a strange thing; my conscience. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
235:A faith is a necessity to a man. Woe to him who believes in nothing. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
236:Men like me are impossible until the day when they become necessary. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
237:They say love is blindness of heart; I say not to love is blindness. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
238:But when ill indeed, Even dismissing the doctor don't always succeed. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
239:God has made the cat to give man the pleasure of caressing the tiger. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
240:Idleness is a mother. She has a son, robbery, and a daughter, hunger. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
241:I have been loving you a little more every minute since this morning. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
242:I love all men who think, even those who think otherwise than myself. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
243:Indigestion is charged by God with enforcing morality on the stomach. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
244:What a grand thing, to be loved! What a grander thing still, to love! ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
245:A translation in verse . . . seems to me something absurd, impossible. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
246:I repeat, whether we be Italians or Frenchmen, misery concerns us all. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
247:Social prosperity means man happy, the citizen free, the nation great. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
248:The soul has illusions as the bird has wings: it is supported by them. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
249:When a woman is talking to you, listen to what she says with her eyes. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
250:Greater than the tread of mighty armies is an idea whose time has come. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
251:He who is not capable of enduring poverty is not capable of being free. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
252:I'd rather be hissed at for a good verse, than applauded for a bad one. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
253:Life is a theatre set in which there are but few practicable entrances. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
254:Since we shall love each other, I shall be great and you shall be rich. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
255:The quantity of civilization is measured by the quality of imagination. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
256:True thinkers are characterized by a blending of clearness and mystery. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
257:A bit of mould is a pleiad of flowers; a nebula is an ant-hill of stars. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
258:Science says the first word on everything, and the last word on nothing. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
259:Style is the substance of the subject called unceasingly to the surface. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
260:When a man is out of sight, it is not too long before he is out of mind. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
261:By putting forward the hands of the clock you shall not advance the hour. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
262:Religion, Society, and Nature&
263:Short as life is, we make it still shorter by the careless waste of time. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
264:The straight line, a respectable optical illusion which ruins many a man. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
265:where would the shout of love begin, if not from the summit of sacrifice? ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
266:A mother's arms are made of tenderness and children sleep soundly in them. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
267:Death belongs to God alone; by what right do men touch that unknown thing? ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
268:In my old age there is a coming into flower. My body wanes; my mind waxes. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
269:It is from books that wise men derive consolation in the troubles of life. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
270:It is God who makes woman beautiful, it is the devil who makes her pretty. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
271:Sorrow is a fruit. God does not make it grow on limbs too weak to bear it. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
272:Promise to give me a kiss on my brow when I am dead.&
273:Solitude either develops the mental power, or renders men dull and vicious. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
274:The man is placed where the Earth ends, the woman, where the heaven starts. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
275:We are all under sentence of death, but with a sort of indefinite reprieve. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
276:Word which the finger of God has written on the brow of every man — hope! ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
277:Heaven, on occasion, half opens its arms to us; and that is the great moment. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
278:If you don't build castles in the air you won't build anything on the ground. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
279:In joined hands there is still some token of hope, in the clenched fist none. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
280:Intelligence is the wife, imagination is the mistress, memory is the servant. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
281:Sacrificing the earth for paradise is giving up the substance for the shadow. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
282:She might have melted a heart of stone, but nothing can melt a heart of wood. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
283:Success is a very hideous thing. Its false resemblance to merit deceives men. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
284:The guilty one is not he who commits the sin, but he who causes the darkness. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
285:Work, which makes a man free, and thought, which makes him worthy of freedom. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
286:A doctor’s door should never be closed, a priest's door should always be open. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
287:Great grief is a divine and terrible radiance which transfigures the wretched. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
288:He who is not master of his own thoughts is not accountable for his own deeds. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
289:In love, such a word, whispered, is a mysterious kiss of the soul to the soul. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
290:No one knows like a woman how to say things which are at once gentle and deep. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
291:Not seeing people allows you to think of them as perfect in all kinds of ways. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
292:One resists the invasion of armies; one does not resist the invasion of ideas. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
293:All the forces in the world are not so powerful as an idea whose time has come. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
294:A smile is the same as sunshine; it banishes winter from the human countenance. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
295:It is man's consolation that the future is to be a sunrise instead of a sunset. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
296:My day's work will begin again the next morning. The tomb is not a blind alley. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
297:What happened between those two beings? Nothing. They were adoring one another. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
298:Where the telescope ends the microscope begins, and which has the wider vision? ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
299:Almost all our desires, when examined, contain something too shameful to reveal. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
300:Every blade has two edges; he who wounds with one wounds himself with the other. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
301:He never went out without a book under his arm, and he often came back with two. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
302:We need those who pray constantly to compensate for those who do not pray at all. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
303:Because one doesn't like the way things are is no reason to be unjust towards God. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
304:Each man should frame life so that at some future hour fact and his dreaming meet. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
305:Human society, the world, and the whole of mankind is to be found in the alphabet. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
306:There is in every village a torch - the teacher; and an extinguisher - the priest. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
307:There is something more terrible than a hell of suffering&
308:At the shrine of friendship never say die, let the wine of friendship never run dry ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
309:... mothers are often fondest of the child which has caused them the greatest pain. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
310:One can resist the invasion of an army but one cannot resist the invasion of ideas. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
311:The left-handed are precious; they take places which are inconvenient for the rest. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
312:The ode lives upon the ideal, the epic upon the grandiose, the drama upon the real. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
313:To learn to read is to light a fire; every syllable that is spelled out is a spark. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
314:Try as you will, you cannot annihilate that eternal relic of the human heart, love. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
315:Work is the law of life, and to reject it as boredom is to submit to it as torment. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
316:You who suffer because you love, love still more. To die of love, is to live by it. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
317:A criminal remains a criminal whether he uses a convict's suit or a monarch's crown. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
318:Great perils have this beauty, that they bring to light the fraternity of strangers. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
319:I refuse the oration of all churches. I ask a prayer of all souls. I believe in God. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
320:During a wise man's whole life, his destiny holds his philosophy in a state of siege. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
321:Let us fear the worst, but work with faith; the best will always take care of itself. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
322:Music expresses that which cannot be said and on which it is impossible to be silent. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
323:Oh Lord! Open the doors of night for me So that I may leave this place and disappear. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
324:Reason is intelligence taking exercise. Imagination is intelligence with an erection. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
325:For dogs we kings should have lions, and for cats, tigers. The great benefits a crown. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
326:God will reward you,' he said. &
327:If a writer wrote merely for his time, I would have to break my pen and throw it away. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
328:If you are stone, be magnetic; if a plant, be sensitive; but if you are human be love. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
329:Nothing is really small; whoever is open to the deep penetration of nature knows this. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
330:Close by the Rights of Man, at the least set beside them, are the Rights of the Spirit. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
331:We are reassured almost as foolishly as we are alarmed; human nature is so constituted. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
332:Mothers arms are made of tenderness, And sweet sleep blesses the child who lies therein. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
333:Rhyme, that enslaved queen, that supreme charm of our poetry, that creator of our meter. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
334:To think is of itself to be useful; it is always and in all cases a striving toward God. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
335:I advance in life, I grow more simple, and I become more and more patriotic for humanity. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
336:The poetic element lying hidden in most women is the source of their magnetic attraction. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
337:There is always more misery among the lower classes than there is humanity in the higher. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
338:What is history? An echo of the past in the future; a reflex from the future on the past. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
339:Change your opinions, keep to your principles; change your leaves, keep intact your roots. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
340:It is ourselves we have to fear. Prejudice is the real robber, and vice the real murderer. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
341:The last resort of kings, the cannonball. The last resort of the people, the paving stone. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
342:Yes, instruction! Light! Light! Everything comes from light, and to everything it returns. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
343:We would be ashamed of our best behavior if the people knew the motives of our behaving so. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
344:That is the explanation of war, an outrage by humanity upon humanity in despite of humanity. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
345:That is to be two and to be but one. A man and a woman mingled into one angel. It is heaven. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
346:One only needs to see a smile in a white crape bonnet in order to enter the palace of dreams. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
347:The saints were his friends, and blessed him; the monsters were his friends, and guarded him. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
348:Women play with their beauty as children do with their knives. They wound themselves with it. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
349:Every step which the intelligence of Europe has taken has been in spite of the clerical party. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
350:Love is like a tree, it grows of its own accord, it puts down deep roots into our whole being. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
351:The great acts of love are done by those who are habitually performing small acts of kindness. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
352:The most powerful symptom of love is a tenderness which becomes at times almost insupportable. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
353:We are not loved by our friends for what we are; rather, we are loved in spite of what we are. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
354:His whole life was now summed up in two words: absolute uncertainty within an impenetrable fog. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
355:A few feet under the ground reigns so profound a silence, and yet so much tumult on the surface! ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
356:A one-eyed man is much more incomplete than a blind man, for he knows what it is that's lacking. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
357:Daring is the price of progress. All splendid conquests are the prize of boldness, more or less. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
358:Let us study things that are no more. It is necessary to understand them, if only to avoid them. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
359:The miserable's name is Man; he is agonizing in all climes, and he is groaning in all languages. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
360:Nothing can be sadder or more profound than to see a thousand things for the first and last time. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
361:A stand can be made against invasion by an army; no stand can be made against invasion by an idea. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
362:Diamonds are to be found only in the darkness of the earth, and truth in the darkness of the mind. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
363:When grace is joined with wrinkles, it is adorable. There is an unspeakable dawn in happy old age. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
364:A man without a woman is like a pistol without a trigger; it is the woman who makes the man go off. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
365:The animal is ignorant of the fact that he knows. The man is aware of the fact that he is ignorant. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
366:To rise at six, to dine at ten, To sup at six, to sleep at ten, Makes a man live for ten times ten. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
367:I don't mind what Congress does, as long as they don't do it in the streets and frighten the horses. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
368:If people did not love one another, I really don't see what use there would be in having any spring. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
369:It is most pleasant to commit a just action which is disagreeable to someone whom one does not like. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
370:Philosophy is the microscope of thought. Everything desires to flee from it, but nothing escapes it. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
371:Nature has made a pebble and a female. The lapidary makes the diamond, and the lover makes the woman. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
372:The most beautiful of altars, he said, is the soul of an unhappy creature consoled and thankfing God. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
373:There is one thing stronger than all the armies in the world, and that is an idea whose time as come. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
374:The tomb is not a blind alley: it is a thoroughfare. It closes on the twilight. It opens on the dawn. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
375:Why worry about what threatens our heads or purses? Let us think instead of what threatens our souls. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
376:England has two books, the Bible and Shakespeare. England made Shakespeare,but the Bible made England. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
377:If God had intended that man should go backward, he would have given him eyes in the back of his head. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
378:I like the laughter that opens the lips and the heart, shows at the same time the pearls and the soul. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
379:In the animal world no creature born to be a dove turns into a scavenger. This happens only among men. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
380:The soul helps the body, and at certain moments raises it. It is the only bird that sustains its cage. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
381:If you look in the eyes of the young, you see flame. If you look in the eyes of the old, you see light. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
382:There is no rapture in the love which is prompted by esteem; such affection is lasting, not passionate. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
383:You are adorable, mademoiselle. I study your feet with the microscope and your soul with the telescope. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
384:A day will come when markets, open to trade, and minds, open to ideas, will become the sole battlefield. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
385:Diamonds are found only in the dark places of the earth, truths are found only in the depths of thought. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
386:Emotion is always new and the word has always served; therein lies the difficulty of expressing emotion. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
387:God has set his intentions in the flowers, in the dawn, in the spring, it is his will that we should love. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
388:Love each other dearly always. There is scarcely anything else in the world but that: to love one another. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
389:Reaction - a boat which is going against the current but which does not prevent the river from flowing on. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
390:There are fathers who do not love their children; there is no grandfather who does not adore his grandson. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
391:I believe in religion against the religious; in the pitifulness of orisons, and in the sublimity of prayer. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
392:Between the government which does evil and the people who accept it - there is a certain shameful solidarity. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
393:A man is not idle because he is absorbed in thought. There is a visible labor and there is an invisible labor. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
394:And then, strange to say, the first symptom of true love in a young man is timidity; in a girl, it is boldness. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
395:Civil war? What does that mean? Is there any foreign war? Isn't every war fought between men, between brothers? ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
396:He had slipped, climbed, rolled, searched, walked, persevered, that is all. Such is the secret of all triumphs. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
397:It was SHE. Whoever has loved knows all the radiant meaning contained in the three letters of this word ‘she. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
398:We see past time in a telescope and present time in a microscope. Hence the apparent enormities of the present. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
399:So long as ignorance and poverty exist on earth, books of the nature of Les Miserables cannot fail to be of use. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
400:As a means of contrast with the sublime, the grotesque is, in our view, the richest source that nature can offer. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
401:If a man has his throat cut in Paris, it's a murder. If 50,000 people are murdered in the east, it is a question. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
402:It may be remarked in passing that success is an ugly thing. Men are deceived by its false resemblences to merit. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
403:Don't educate your children to be rich. Educate them to be happy, so they know the value of things, not the price. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
404:Need is a low door which, when we must by stern necessity pass through, forces the greatest to bend down the most. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
405:Nothing is more dangerous than discontinued labor; it is habit lost. A habit easy to abandon, difficult to resume. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
406:Children at once accept joy and happiness with quick familiarity, being themselves naturally all happiness and joy. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
407:The aim of art is almost divine: to bring to life again if it is writing history, to create if it is writing poetry. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
408:A bird sings, a child prattles, but it is the same hymn; hymn indistinct, inarticulate, but full of profound meaning. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
409:Certain thoughts are prayers. There are moments when, whatever be the attitude of the body, the soul is on its knees. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
410:The mountains, the forest, and the sea, render men savage; they develop the fierce, but yet do not destroy the human. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
411:A library implies an act of faith which generations, still in darkness hid, sign in their night in witness of the dawn. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
412:Freedom in art, freedom in society, this is the double goal towards which all consistent and logical minds must strive. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
413:Well, for us, in history where goodness is a rare pearl, he who was good almost takes precedence over he who was great. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
414:He sought... to transform the grief which looks down into the grave by showing it the grief which looks up to the stars. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
415:No man is more unhappy than the one who is never in adversity; the greatest affliction of life is never to be afflicted. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
416:Of all the things that God has made, the human heart is the one which sheds the most light, alas! and the most darkness. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
417:Crime is redeemed by remorse, but not by a blow of the axe or slipknot. Blood has to be washed by tears but not by blood. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
418:Where no plan is laid, where the disposal of time is surrendered merely to the chance of incident, chaos will soon reign. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
419:&
420:At a certain depth of distress, the poor, in their stupor, groan no longer over evil, and are no longer thankful for good. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
421:Jesus wept; Voltaire smiled. From that divine tear and from that human smile is derived the grace of present civilization. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
422:The pupil dilates in darkness and in the end finds light, just as the soul dilates in misfortune and in the end finds God. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
423:To love or have loved, that is enough. Ask nothing further. There is no other pearl to be found in the dark folds of life. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
424:What is said about men often has as much influence upon their lives, and especially upon their destinies, as what they do. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
425:What matters deafness of the ear, when the mind hears? The one true deafness, the incurable deafness, is that of the mind. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
426:Love is a portion of the soul itself, and it is of the same nature as the celestial breathing of the atmosphere of paradise. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
427:What's our baggage? Only vows, Happiness, and all our care, And the flower that sweetly shows Nestling lightly in your hair. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
428:Let us fear ourselves. Prejudices are the real robbers; vices are the real murderers. The great dangers lie within ourselves. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
429:Mankind is not a circle with a single center but an ellipse with two focal points of which facts are one and ideas the other. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
430:A garden to walk in and immensity to dream in&
431:A house is built of logs and stone, of tiles and posts and piers; a home is built of loving deeds that stand a thousand years. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
432:There is a spectacle more grand than the sea; it is heaven; there is a spectacle more grand than heaven; it is the conscience. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
433:Animals are nothing but the portrayal of our virtues and vices made manifest to our eyes, the visible reflections of our souls. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
434:The greatest happiness of life is the conviction that we are loved; loved for ourselves, or rather, loved in spite of ourselves. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
435:Hell is an outrage on humanity. When you tell me that your deity made you in his image, I reply that he must have been very ugly. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
436:If you wish to understand what Revolution is, call it Progress; and if you wish to understand what Progress is, call it Tomorrow. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
437:A creditor is worse than a slave-owner; for the master owns only your person, but a creditor owns your dignity, and can command it. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
438:Dear God! how beauty varies in nature and art. In a woman the flesh must be like marble; in a statue the marble must be like flesh. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
439:Love resembles a tree: it bends under its own weight, deeply rooted in our being and sometimes turns green in the ruins of a heart. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
440:Profound hearts, wise minds, take life as God makes it; it is a long trial, and unintelligible preparation for the unknown destiny. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
441:A language does not become fixed. The human intellect is always on the march, or, if you prefer, in movement, and languages with it. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
442:Amnesty is as good for those who give it as for those who receive it. It has the admirable quality of bestowing mercy on both sides. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
443:Be as a bird perched on a frail branch that she feels bending beneath her, still she sings away all the same, knowing she has wings. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
444:The future has several names. For the weak, it is impossible; for the fainthearted, it is unknown; but for the valiant, it is ideal. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
445:Son, brother, father, lover, friend. There is room in the heart for all the affections, as there is room in heaven for all the stars. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
446:When a man understands the art of seeing, he can trace the spirit of an age and the features of a king even in the knocker on a door. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
447:The human soul has still greater need of the ideal than of the real. It is by the real that we exist; it is by the ideal that we live. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
448:Nihilism has no substance. There is no such thing as nothingness, and zero does not exist. Everything is something. Nothing is nothing. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
449:The ideal and the beautiful are identical; the ideal corresponds to the idea, and beauty to form; hence idea and substance are cognate. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
450:Do not ask the name of the person who seeks a bed for the night. He who is reluctant to give his name is the one who most needs shelter. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
451:Loving is almost a substitute for thinking. Love is a burning forgetfulness of all other things. How shall we ask passion to be logical? ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
452:There is suffering in the light; in excess it burns. Flame is hostile to the wing. To burn and yet to fly, this is the miracle of genius. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
453:To give thanks in solitude is enough. Thanksgiving has wings and goes where it must go. Your prayer knows much more about it than you do. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
454:It is an unpleasant thing to go to bed without supper, it is a still less pleasant thing not to sup and not to know where one is to sleep. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
455:When God desires to destroy a thing, he entrusts its destruction to the thing itself. Every bad institution of this world ends by suicide. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
456:He who contemplates the depths of Paris is seized with vertigo. Nothing is more fantastic. Nothing is more tragic. Nothing is more sublime. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
457:If the soul is left in darkness, sins will be committed. The guilty one is not he who commits the sin, but the one who causes the darkness. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
458:Civil war... . What did the words mean? Was there any such thing as "foreign war"? Was not all warfare between men warfare between brothers? ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
459:Strange to say, the luminous world is the invisible world; the luminous world is that which we do not see. Our eyes of flesh see only night. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
460:The omnipotence of evil has never resulted in anything but fruitless efforts. Our thoughts always escape from whoever tries to smother them. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
461: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, @wisdomtrove
462:Who then can calculate the path of the molecule? how do we know that the creations of worlds are not determined by the fall of grains of sand? ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
463:I had a dream my life would be different from this hell I am living, so different from what it seemed. Now life has killed the dream I dreamed. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
464:The nearer I approach the end, the plainer I hear around me the immortal symphonies of the worlds which invite me. It is marvelous, yet simple. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
465:Be like the bird who, pausing in her flight awhile on boughs too slight, feels them give way beneath her, and yet sings, knowing she hath wings. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
466:There comes an hour when protest no longer suffices; after philosophy there must be action; the strong hand finishes what the idea has sketched. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
467:Music is the vapor of art. It is to poetry what reverie is to thought, what fluid is to solid, what the ocean of clouds is to the ocean of waves. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
468:Nobody knows like a woman how to say things at the same time sweet and profound. Sweetness and depth, this is all of woman; this is all of Heaven. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
469:Anger may be foolish and absurd, and one may be wrongly irritated, but a man never feels outraged unless in some respect he is fundamentally right. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
470:Revolutions spring not from accident, but from necessity. A revolution is a return from the factitious to the real. It takes place because it must. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
471:Woe, alas, to those who have loved only bodies, forms, appearances! Death will rob them of everything. Try to love souls, you will find them again. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
472:The future has many names: For the weak, it means the unattainable. For the fearful, it means the unknown. For the courageous, it means opportunity. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
473:Architecture has recorded the great ideas of the human race. Not only every religious symbol, but every human thought has its page in that vast book. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
474:It is sad to tell, but after having tried society, which had caused his misfortune, he tried Providence which created society, and condemned it also. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
475:True or false, that which is said of men often occupies as important a place in their lives, and above all in their destinies, as that which they do. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
476:Religions do a useful thing: they narrow God to the limits of man. Philosophy replies by doing a necessary thing: it elevates man to the plane of God. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
477:Often the losing of a battle leads to the winning of progress. Less glory but greater liberty: the drum is silent and the voices of reason can be heard. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
478:To pay compliments to the one we love is the first method of caressing, a demi-audacity venturing. A compliment is something like a kiss through a veil. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
479:From a political point of view, there is but one principle, the sovereignty of man over himself. This sovereignty of myself over myself is called Liberty ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
480:All the human and animal manure which the world wastes, if returned to the land, instead of being thrown into the sea, would suffice to nourish the world. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
481:There is no such thing as a little country. The greatness of a people is no more determined by their numbers than the greatness of a man is by his height. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
482:Lastly, this threefold poetry flows from three great sources - The Bible, Homer, Shakespeare... . The Bible before the Iliad, the Iliad before Shakespeare. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
483:Let the one fight for his flag, and the other for his ideal, and let them both imagine that they are fighting for the country; the strife will be colossal. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
484:Have courage for the great sorrows of life and patience for the small ones; and when you have laboriously accomplished your daily task, go to sleep in peace. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
485:Let us say it now: to be blind and to be loved, is indeed, upon this earth where nothing is complete, one of the most strangely exquisite forms of happiness. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
486:... It all seemed to him to have disappeared as if behind a curtain at a theater. There are such curtains that drop in life. God is moving on to the next act. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
487:He, who every morning plans the transactions of the day, and follows that plan, carries a thread that will guide him through a labyrinth of the most busy life. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
488:There is no vacuum in the human heart. Certain demolitions take place, and it is well that they do, but on condition that they are followed by reconstructions. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
489:Go out in the world and work like money doesn't matter, sing as if no one is listening, love as if you have never been hurt, and dance as if no one is watching. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
490:You look at a star for two reasons, because it is luminous, and because it is impenetrable. You have beside you a sweeter radiance and a greater mystery, woman. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
491:As we have explained, in first love the soul is taken long before the body; later the body is taken long before the soul; sometimes the soul is not taken at all. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
492:Large, heavy, ragged black clouds hung like crape hammocks beneath the starry cope of the night. You would have said that they were the cobwebs of the firmament. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
493:The heart becomes heroic through passion. It is no longer composed of anything but what is pure; it no longer rests upon anything but what is elevated and great. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
494:If I have not been exposed and am not in any danger of pursuit. But I have been exposed, I am pursued - by myself! That is a pursuer that does not readily let go. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
495:The three great problems of this century; the degradation of man in the proletariat, the subjection of women through hunger, the atrophy of the child by darkness. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
496:Every day has its great grief or its small anxiety. ... One cloud is dispelled, another forms. There is hardly one day in a hundred of real joy and bright sunshine. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
497:Everything speaks: the flowing airstream and the sailing halycon, the blade of grass, the flower, the bud, the element; did you imagine the universe to be otherwise? ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
498:He had not yet lived long enough to have discovered that nothing is more close at hand then the impossible, and that what must be looked for is always the unforeseen. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
499:One sometimes says: &
500:The delight we inspire in others has this enchanting peculiarity that, far from being diminished like every other reflection, it returns to us more radiant than ever. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove

*** NEWFULLDB 2.4M ***

1:I see a dark light. ~ Victor Hugo,
2:Open, nevertheless. ~ Victor Hugo,
3:BOOK SECOND—THE FALL ~ Victor Hugo,
4:Era lo que no es ya. ~ Victor Hugo,
5:Homo homini monstrum ~ Victor Hugo,
6:No fear, no regrets. ~ Victor Hugo,
7:Part 1
A Just Man ~ Victor Hugo,
8:Chapter1
M. Myriel ~ Victor Hugo,
9:God was bored by him. ~ Victor Hugo,
10:LES MISÉRABLES VOLUME ~ Victor Hugo,
11:Sin is a gravitation. ~ Victor Hugo,
12:The mind is a garden, ~ Victor Hugo,
13:THIS IS THE SURPRISE. ~ Victor Hugo,
14:CHAPTER V—TRANQUILLITY ~ Victor Hugo,
15:Emotion is always new. ~ Victor Hugo,
16:Light renders healthy. ~ Victor Hugo,
17:A chair is not a caste. ~ Victor Hugo,
18:Oh! Everything I loved! ~ Victor Hugo,
19:Right is just and true. ~ Victor Hugo,
20:BOOK FIFTH.—THE DESCENT. ~ Victor Hugo,
21:your name is My Brother. ~ Victor Hugo,
22:Another story must begin! ~ Victor Hugo,
23:He who despairs is wrong. ~ Victor Hugo,
24:La galera fa il galeotto. ~ Victor Hugo,
25:Make thought a whirlwind. ~ Victor Hugo,
26:(stare in dimidio rerum), ~ Victor Hugo,
27:Despotism is a long crime. ~ Victor Hugo,
28:I was dying when you came. ~ Victor Hugo,
29:Love is a fault; so be it. ~ Victor Hugo,
30:Qu'était-ce que cet homme? ~ Victor Hugo,
31:Sramota žudi za štovanjem. ~ Victor Hugo,
32:Aures habet, et non audiet. ~ Victor Hugo,
33:CHAPTER XIII—LITTLE GERVAIS ~ Victor Hugo,
34:Do you permit it?" Enjolras ~ Victor Hugo,
35:I think, therefore I doubt. ~ Victor Hugo,
36:uttering that terrific cry: ~ Victor Hugo,
37:Vi sono abissi che salvano. ~ Victor Hugo,
38:As for wine, he drank water. ~ Victor Hugo,
39:BOOK THIRD.—IN THE YEAR 1817 ~ Victor Hugo,
40:CHAPTER XII—THE BISHOP WORKS ~ Victor Hugo,
41:Joy is the reflex of terror. ~ Victor Hugo,
42:Loving is half of believing. ~ Victor Hugo,
43:Peace is happiness digesting ~ Victor Hugo,
44:Sleep in peace, God is awake ~ Victor Hugo,
45:Blind is he who will not see! ~ Victor Hugo,
46:Confiar es a veces abandonar. ~ Victor Hugo,
47:Ignominy thirsts for respect. ~ Victor Hugo,
48:partir,c'est mourir un peu... ~ Victor Hugo,
49:Running beer gathers no foam. ~ Victor Hugo,
50:Sleep in Peace, God is awake. ~ Victor Hugo,
51:Spira, spera. (breathe, hope) ~ Victor Hugo,
52:Stupidity talks, vanity acts. ~ Victor Hugo,
53:Wisdom is a sacred communion. ~ Victor Hugo,
54:Algebra applies to the clouds. ~ Victor Hugo,
55:Genius: the superhuman in man. ~ Victor Hugo,
56:Liberation is not deliverance. ~ Victor Hugo,
57:Misery offers; society accepts ~ Victor Hugo,
58:Progress is the stride of God. ~ Victor Hugo,
59:Qui non laborat, non manducet. ~ Victor Hugo,
60:What's our baggage? Only vows, ~ Victor Hugo,
61:An aged man is a thinking ruin. ~ Victor Hugo,
62:A wedding is not house-keeping. ~ Victor Hugo,
63:Be happy without picking flaws. ~ Victor Hugo,
64:Books are cold but safe friends ~ Victor Hugo,
65:Habit is the nursery of errors. ~ Victor Hugo,
66:Il faut être mangeant ou mangé. ~ Victor Hugo,
67:Les mots manquent aux émotions. ~ Victor Hugo,
68:Look at the people of Briançon! ~ Victor Hugo,
69:M. de Salaberry was not amused. ~ Victor Hugo,
70:The mind is a garden," said he. ~ Victor Hugo,
71:Time is greedy, man is greedier ~ Victor Hugo,
72:To love beauty is to see light. ~ Victor Hugo,
73:To rise at six, to dine at ten, ~ Victor Hugo,
74:Virtue has a veil, vice a mask. ~ Victor Hugo,
75:Art needs no spur beyond itself. ~ Victor Hugo,
76:Books are cold but safe friends. ~ Victor Hugo,
77:Books are cold but sure friends. ~ Victor Hugo,
78:CHAPTER VIII—BILLOWS AND SHADOWS ~ Victor Hugo,
79:Faire rire, c'est faire oublier. ~ Victor Hugo,
80:It was the beginning of the end. ~ Victor Hugo,
81:Labor is life; thought is light. ~ Victor Hugo,
82:Morality is truth in full bloom. ~ Victor Hugo,
83:Phantoms do not wear round hats. ~ Victor Hugo,
84:Quatorze Vers À Victor Hugo
~ Charles Cros,
85:Right is right only when entire. ~ Victor Hugo,
86:Sublime characters are stubborn. ~ Victor Hugo,
87:Svarbiausia, neišsigimk į žmogų. ~ Victor Hugo,
88:[THE END OF VOLUME I. "FANTINE"] ~ Victor Hugo,
89:There are no rules for felicity. ~ Victor Hugo,
90:Toleration is the best religion. ~ Victor Hugo,
91:A sewer is a cynic. It tells All. ~ Victor Hugo,
92:CHAPTER VIII—THE DEATH OF A HORSE ~ Victor Hugo,
93:Conscience is God present in man. ~ Victor Hugo,
94:God in his harmony has equal ends ~ Victor Hugo,
95:God whose gifts in gracious flood ~ Victor Hugo,
96:Happiness wishes everybody happy. ~ Victor Hugo,
97:He resolved to leave the convent. ~ Victor Hugo,
98:La primera igualdad es la equidad ~ Victor Hugo,
99:Love is life, if it be not death. ~ Victor Hugo,
100:Love is life, if it is not death. ~ Victor Hugo,
101:[THE END OF VOLUME II. "COSETTE"] ~ Victor Hugo,
102:To have lied is to have suffered. ~ Victor Hugo,
103:vicdan insanın içindeki tanrıdır. ~ Victor Hugo,
104:Wisdom is the health of the soul. ~ Victor Hugo,
105:Adorable ambuscades of providence! ~ Victor Hugo,
106:A library implies an act of faith. ~ Victor Hugo,
107:Enthusiasm is the fever of reason. ~ Victor Hugo,
108:Errors make excellent projectiles. ~ Victor Hugo,
109:Foppery is the egotism of clothes. ~ Victor Hugo,
110:He does not weep who does not see. ~ Victor Hugo,
111:He who does not weep does not see. ~ Victor Hugo,
112:I see black light (his last words) ~ Victor Hugo,
113:La tolerancia es la mejor religión ~ Victor Hugo,
114:One kiss, and that was everything. ~ Victor Hugo,
115:Progress is the life-style of man. ~ Victor Hugo,
116:Reality in strong doses frightens. ~ Victor Hugo,
117:The only social peril is darkness. ~ Victor Hugo,
118:Those who do not weep, do not see. ~ Victor Hugo,
119:To love is the half of to believe. ~ Victor Hugo,
120:Women are more credulous than men. ~ Victor Hugo,
121:CHAPTER VII—THE INTERIOR OF DESPAIR ~ Victor Hugo,
122:CHAPTER VII—THE WISDOM OF THOLOMYES ~ Victor Hugo,
123:Go to sleep in peace. God is awake. ~ Victor Hugo,
124:I don't want your money," said she. ~ Victor Hugo,
125:Ignominy thirsts for consideration. ~ Victor Hugo,
126:I will be Chateaubriand or nothing. ~ Victor Hugo,
127:Love is the only future God offers. ~ Victor Hugo,
128:One does not cross-examine a saint. ~ Victor Hugo,
129:Right is on the side of the hungry. ~ Victor Hugo,
130:Sunshine helps to make man patient. ~ Victor Hugo,
131:The ox suffers, the cart complains. ~ Victor Hugo,
132:Those who live are those who fight. ~ Victor Hugo,
133:To learn to read is to light a fire ~ Victor Hugo,
134:A poet is a world enclosed in a man. ~ Victor Hugo,
135:augurs; both of them had celebrated, ~ Victor Hugo,
136:C'è sempre dell'anarchia nella fama. ~ Victor Hugo,
137:I'm religiously opposed to religion. ~ Victor Hugo,
138:Le propre de l'amour, c'est d'errer. ~ Victor Hugo,
139:No religion but blasphemes a little. ~ Victor Hugo,
140:Press on! A better fate awaits thee. ~ Victor Hugo,
141:Respirer Paris, cela conserve l'âme. ~ Victor Hugo,
142:Spira, spera.

(breathe, hope) ~ Victor Hugo,
143:Taste is the common sense of genius. ~ Victor Hugo,
144:The malicious have a dark happiness. ~ Victor Hugo,
145:To learn to read is to light a fire. ~ Victor Hugo,
146:To learn to read is to light a fire; ~ Victor Hugo,
147:Un désespoir calme, froid, sinistre. ~ Victor Hugo,
148:When liberty returns, I will return. ~ Victor Hugo,
149:A breath of Paris preserves the soul. ~ Victor Hugo,
150:after philosophy, action is required; ~ Victor Hugo,
151:An opulent priest is a contradiction. ~ Victor Hugo,
152:Earnestness is the salt of eloquence. ~ Victor Hugo,
153:France lost a great novel last night. ~ Victor Hugo,
154:I am for religion, against religions. ~ Victor Hugo,
155:Misfortunes shared creates happiness. ~ Victor Hugo,
156:Monastic incarceration is castration. ~ Victor Hugo,
157:Perseverance, secret of all triumphs. ~ Victor Hugo,
158:To contemplate is to look at shadows. ~ Victor Hugo,
159:To err is human. To loaf is Parisian. ~ Victor Hugo,
160:When, like an Emir of tyrannic power, ~ Victor Hugo,
161:When the heart is dry the eye is dry. ~ Victor Hugo,
162:Abstruse speculations contain vertigo. ~ Victor Hugo,
163:Art moves. Hence its civilizing power. ~ Victor Hugo,
164:Caution is the eldest child of wisdom. ~ Victor Hugo,
165:C'è gente che pagherebbe per vendersi. ~ Victor Hugo,
166:CHAPTER VIII—PHILOSOPHY AFTER DRINKING ~ Victor Hugo,
167:Do we ever realize our fondest dreams? ~ Victor Hugo,
168:étudier à Paris, c’est naître à Paris. ~ Victor Hugo,
169:France is great because she is France. ~ Victor Hugo,
170:Freedom begins where it ends ignorance ~ Victor Hugo,
171:If nobody loved, the sun would go out. ~ Victor Hugo,
172:If no one loved, the sun would go out. ~ Victor Hugo,
173:Popularity? It's glory's small change. ~ Victor Hugo,
174:There shall be no slavery of the mind. ~ Victor Hugo,
175:To have debts is to possess something. ~ Victor Hugo,
176:A man may beg, but a woman has to sell. ~ Victor Hugo,
177:A queen, devoid of beauty is not queen; ~ Victor Hugo,
178:A war between Europeans is a civil war. ~ Victor Hugo,
179:A writer is a word trapped in a person. ~ Victor Hugo,
180:A writer is a world trapped in a person ~ Victor Hugo,
181:Dreaming is happiness. Waiting is life. ~ Victor Hugo,
182:Every skull-cap may dream of the tiara. ~ Victor Hugo,
183:Freedom begins where it ends ignorance. ~ Victor Hugo,
184:God made only water, but man made wine. ~ Victor Hugo,
185:great events have incalculable results. ~ Victor Hugo,
186:Hence, that crown is the money of hell. ~ Victor Hugo,
187:If we must suffer, let us suffer nobly. ~ Victor Hugo,
188:It's that big guy who's the government. ~ Victor Hugo,
189:(...) j'avais le paradis dans le coeur. ~ Victor Hugo,
190:Le ore d'estasi non sono che un minuto. ~ Victor Hugo,
191:Ništa je umreti - strašno je ne živeti. ~ Victor Hugo,
192:Oh Lord! Open the doors of night for me ~ Victor Hugo,
193:On ne lit pas impunément des niaiseries ~ Victor Hugo,
194:Puns are the droppings of soaring wits. ~ Victor Hugo,
195:To dare; that is the price of progress. ~ Victor Hugo,
196:To think of shadows is a serious thing. ~ Victor Hugo,
197:Viajar es nacer y morir a cada instante ~ Victor Hugo,
198:A fixed idea ends in madness or heroism. ~ Victor Hugo,
199:Are you afraid of the good you might do? ~ Victor Hugo,
200:A writer is a world trapped in a person. ~ Victor Hugo,
201:Books are cold, but sure friends indeed. ~ Victor Hugo,
202:CHAPTER VI—WHO GUARDED HIS HOUSE FOR HIM ~ Victor Hugo,
203:Dark Error's other hidden side is truth. ~ Victor Hugo,
204:Everything can be parodied, even parody. ~ Victor Hugo,
205:Il crepuscolo piace solo ai pipistrelli. ~ Victor Hugo,
206:It was a garbage heap, and it was Sinai. ~ Victor Hugo,
207:Javert, though hideous, was not ignoble. ~ Victor Hugo,
208:Les livres sont des amis froids et sûrs. ~ Victor Hugo,
209:Life is a flower of which love is honey. ~ Victor Hugo,
210:Melancholy is the pleasure of being sad. ~ Victor Hugo,
211:Men hate those to whom they have to lie. ~ Victor Hugo,
212:Nothing is wholly dead nor wholly alive. ~ Victor Hugo,
213:Now life has killed the dream I dreamed. ~ Victor Hugo,
214:Penser, voilà le triomphe vrai de l’âme. ~ Victor Hugo,
215:Philosophy is the microscope of thought. ~ Victor Hugo,
216:Prayer is an august avowal of ignorance. ~ Victor Hugo,
217:Protect the workers, encourage the rich. ~ Victor Hugo,
218:Revolution is the larva of civilization. ~ Victor Hugo,
219:Sleep comes more easily than it returns. ~ Victor Hugo,
220:That great little soul had taken flight. ~ Victor Hugo,
221:That's nice! You have called me Eponine! ~ Victor Hugo,
222:The earth is a great piece of stupidity. ~ Victor Hugo,
223:The sewer is the conscience of the city. ~ Victor Hugo,
224:To be wicked does not insure prosperity. ~ Victor Hugo,
225:To err his human, to stroll is Parisian. ~ Victor Hugo,
226:And still I am quite cramped with it all! ~ Victor Hugo,
227:Every idea must have a visible enfolding. ~ Victor Hugo,
228:Everything bows to success, even grammar. ~ Victor Hugo,
229:Factions are blind men who aim correctly. ~ Victor Hugo,
230:God knows better than we do what we need. ~ Victor Hugo,
231:God made the water but men made the wine. ~ Victor Hugo,
232:Hay una manera de huir que parece buscar. ~ Victor Hugo,
233:Inspiration and genius -one and the same. ~ Victor Hugo,
234:Inspiration and genius--one and the same. ~ Victor Hugo,
235:Melancholy is the happiness of being sad. ~ Victor Hugo,
236:Not being heard is no reason for silence. ~ Victor Hugo,
237:Proverty and wealth are comparative sins. ~ Victor Hugo,
238:The beautiful is as useful as the useful. ~ Victor Hugo,
239:The convict was transfigured into Christ. ~ Victor Hugo,
240:The true artist can only labor con amore. ~ Victor Hugo,
241:The wind of revolutions is not tractable. ~ Victor Hugo,
242:This humble soul loved, and that was all. ~ Victor Hugo,
243:To study in Paris is to be born in Paris! ~ Victor Hugo,
244:When the heart is dry, the eye is dry. On ~ Victor Hugo,
245:For sight is woman-like and shuns the old. ~ Victor Hugo,
246:Kad ne bi niko volio, sunce bi se ugasilo. ~ Victor Hugo,
247:Knowledge is a weight added to conscience. ~ Victor Hugo,
248:L’excès de la lâcheté a aussi son courage. ~ Victor Hugo,
249:Men become accustomed to poison by degrees ~ Victor Hugo,
250:Nobody loves the light like the blind man. ~ Victor Hugo,
251:Nothing oppresses the heart like symmetry. ~ Victor Hugo,
252:One would have called it a luminous wound. ~ Victor Hugo,
253:Parfois, insurrection, c'est résurrection. ~ Victor Hugo,
254:Progress is not accomplished in one stage. ~ Victor Hugo,
255:Skepticism, that dry rot of the intellect. ~ Victor Hugo,
256:The learned man knows that he is ignorant. ~ Victor Hugo,
257:The wise man does not grow old, but ripes. ~ Victor Hugo,
258:The word is the Verb, and the Verb is God. ~ Victor Hugo,
259:¡Todos los actos humanos tienen dos caras! ~ Victor Hugo,
260:We are for religion against the religions. ~ Victor Hugo,
261:Whom man kills, him God restoreth to life. ~ Victor Hugo,
262:Y la memoria es el tormento de los celosos ~ Victor Hugo,
263:a compliment is like a kiss through a veil. ~ Victor Hugo,
264:Curiosity is gluttony. To see is to devour. ~ Victor Hugo,
265:Death is the entrance into the great light. ~ Victor Hugo,
266:Duša se najbolje posmatra zatvorenih očiju. ~ Victor Hugo,
267:evil condoned wears the mask of benevolence ~ Victor Hugo,
268:If I were Jesus Christ, I would save Judas. ~ Victor Hugo,
269:I put a Phrygian cap on the old dictionary. ~ Victor Hugo,
270:It seems to me that I am shooting a flower. ~ Victor Hugo,
271:I was always a lover of soft-winged things. ~ Victor Hugo,
272:Love is reducing the universe to one being. ~ Victor Hugo,
273:Men become accustomed to poison by degrees. ~ Victor Hugo,
274:My greatness does not extend to this shelf. ~ Victor Hugo,
275:No corruption is possible with the diamond. ~ Victor Hugo,
276:Nothing awakens reminiscence like an aroma. ~ Victor Hugo,
277:One becomes gradually accustomed to poison. ~ Victor Hugo,
278:The owl goes not into the nest of the lark. ~ Victor Hugo,
279:The wise man does not grow old, but ripens. ~ Victor Hugo,
280:To breathe Paris is to preserve one's soul. ~ Victor Hugo,
281:What makes night within us may leave stars. ~ Victor Hugo,
282:Wisdom and eloquence are not always united. ~ Victor Hugo,
283:A thousand men enslaved fear one beast free. ~ Victor Hugo,
284:A writer is a world trapped inside a person. ~ Victor Hugo,
285:He did not study God; he was dazzled by him. ~ Victor Hugo,
286:He seemed to say to Fate: You wouldn't dare. ~ Victor Hugo,
287:He who opens a school door, closes a prison. ~ Victor Hugo,
288:Idleness is the heaviest of all oppressions. ~ Victor Hugo,
289:La prudencia aconseja a la sabiduría Aquella ~ Victor Hugo,
290:Let's not bring flame where light is enough. ~ Victor Hugo,
291:Love is the folly of men and the wit of God. ~ Victor Hugo,
292:Man lives more by affirmation than by bread. ~ Victor Hugo,
293:Ma non basta essere cattivi, per prosperare. ~ Victor Hugo,
294:No army can stop an idea whose time has come ~ Victor Hugo,
295:Now, one cannot read nonsense with impunity. ~ Victor Hugo,
296:Old men need affection as they need the sun. ~ Victor Hugo,
297:People do not lack strength, they lack will. ~ Victor Hugo,
298:People do not lack strength; they lack will. ~ Victor Hugo,
299:Philosophy is the microscope of the thought. ~ Victor Hugo,
300:the phantom of social justice tormented him. ~ Victor Hugo,
301:The thirst for the Infinite proves infinity. ~ Victor Hugo,
302:The thirst for the infinite proves infinity. ~ Victor Hugo,
303:To divinise is human, to humanise is divine. ~ Victor Hugo,
304:To love someone is to make them transparent. ~ Victor Hugo,
305:What is fright by night is curiosity by day. ~ Victor Hugo,
306:Who among us has not sought peace in a song? ~ Victor Hugo,
307:As the purse is emptied, the heart is filled. ~ Victor Hugo,
308:For sixteen sous he had a smile and a dinner. ~ Victor Hugo,
309:He was no longer Jean Valjean, but No. 24601. ~ Victor Hugo,
310:Hours of ecstasy are never more than a moment ~ Victor Hugo,
311:I believe I was a little bit in love with you ~ Victor Hugo,
312:Il y a des gens qui paieraient pour se vendre ~ Victor Hugo,
313:I write with one hand, but I fight with both. ~ Victor Hugo,
314:Les progrès ne se font pas tous en une étape. ~ Victor Hugo,
315:Munch no sugar, therefore, and you will live! ~ Victor Hugo,
316:No one can keep a secret better than a child. ~ Victor Hugo,
317:Now, don't kick a dog 'cause it's only a pup! ~ Victor Hugo,
318:People do not read stupidities with impunity. ~ Victor Hugo,
319:The reflection of a fact is in itself a fact. ~ Victor Hugo,
320:To meditate is to labour; to think is to act. ~ Victor Hugo,
321:Which of the two was the victim of the other? ~ Victor Hugo,
322:Dear God! how beauty varies in nature and art. ~ Victor Hugo,
323:Fashions have done more harm than revolutions. ~ Victor Hugo,
324:flaps and buttons. She concealed her gray hair ~ Victor Hugo,
325:History has its truth; and so has legend hers. ~ Victor Hugo,
326:L’amour est une mer dont le femme est la rive. ~ Victor Hugo,
327:La philosophie est le microscope de la pensée. ~ Victor Hugo,
328:Morrer não é nada; não viver é que é horrível! ~ Victor Hugo,
329:No one ever keeps a secret so well as a child. ~ Victor Hugo,
330:One cannot resist an idea whose time has come. ~ Victor Hugo,
331:One of the magnanimities of woman is to yield. ~ Victor Hugo,
332:Ser-se canhoto é circunstância digna de inveja ~ Victor Hugo,
333:Strong and bitter words indicate a weak cause. ~ Victor Hugo,
334:...Tanrı kendisine inandığıma tanıktır. (s.51) ~ Victor Hugo,
335:The beautiful is just as useful as the useful. ~ Victor Hugo,
336:The clouds, - the only birds that never sleep. ~ Victor Hugo,
337:The flesh is the upper surface of the unknown. ~ Victor Hugo,
338:To breath the air of Paris preserves the soul. ~ Victor Hugo,
339:V'è un modo d'evitare molto simile al cercare. ~ Victor Hugo,
340:Visitaba a los pobres mientras tenía dinero, y ~ Victor Hugo,
341:What is now in the past was once in the future ~ Victor Hugo,
342:What took place next in the fate of M. Myriel? ~ Victor Hugo,
343:A great artist is a great man in a great child. ~ Victor Hugo,
344:Be off with you, or I'll blow up the barricade! ~ Victor Hugo,
345:God gives air to men; the law sells it to them. ~ Victor Hugo,
346:I distrust a demolition complicated with wrath. ~ Victor Hugo,
347:If suffer we must, let's suffer on the heights. ~ Victor Hugo,
348:Il ne suffit pas d’être méchant pour prospérer. ~ Victor Hugo,
349:It is often our best friends who throw us down. ~ Victor Hugo,
350:Life is the flower for which love is the honey. ~ Victor Hugo,
351:Slaves would be tyrants were the chance theirs. ~ Victor Hugo,
352:Strong and bitter wordes indicate a weak cause. ~ Victor Hugo,
353:The world of sleep has an existence of its own. ~ Victor Hugo,
354:When one does wrong, one must do it thoroughly. ~ Victor Hugo,
355:. . .where there is no more hope, song remains. ~ Victor Hugo,
356:As the place is worth seeing, nobody goes there. ~ Victor Hugo,
357:by making himself a priest made himself a demon. ~ Victor Hugo,
358:Every man is a book in which God himself writes. ~ Victor Hugo,
359:Fever supports the sick man, and love the lover. ~ Victor Hugo,
360:He loved books; books are cold but safe friends. ~ Victor Hugo,
361:It is painful to break the sad links to the past ~ Victor Hugo,
362:Kitaplık kurmak, tapınak yapmak kadar kutsaldır. ~ Victor Hugo,
363:L’égout est le vice que la ville a dans le sang. ~ Victor Hugo,
364:Love is the only ecstasy, everything else weeps. ~ Victor Hugo,
365:Love is the salutation of the angel to the stars ~ Victor Hugo,
366:Non comprendiamo tutto, ma non insultiamo nulla. ~ Victor Hugo,
367:Scepticism, that dry caries of the intelligence. ~ Victor Hugo,
368:There is a secret drawer in every woman's heart. ~ Victor Hugo,
369:The smaller it is the heart, more hatred houses. ~ Victor Hugo,
370:This very slight change had worked a revolution. ~ Victor Hugo,
371:To know, to think, to dream. That is everything. ~ Victor Hugo,
372:To love another person is to see the face of God ~ Victor Hugo,
373:Whatever To-day may be, To-morrow will be peace. ~ Victor Hugo,
374:Wherever the Turkish hoof trods, no grass grows. ~ Victor Hugo,
375:Winds, clouds, whirlwinds, gusts, useless stars! ~ Victor Hugo,
376:You preserve your shame but you kill your glory. ~ Victor Hugo,
377:Dietro il vivere di poco, c'è il vivere di nulla. ~ Victor Hugo,
378:Dying is nothing. What's terrible is not to live. ~ Victor Hugo,
379:Esiste un modo di evitare che somiglia al cercare ~ Victor Hugo,
380:Examine the road over which the fault has passed. ~ Victor Hugo,
381:Fame must have enemies, as light must have gnats. ~ Victor Hugo,
382:Ideas can no more flow backward than can a river. ~ Victor Hugo,
383:It is nothing to die. It is dreadful not to live. ~ Victor Hugo,
384:It is nothing to die; it is dreadful not to live. ~ Victor Hugo,
385:It is nothing to die; it is horrible not to live. ~ Victor Hugo,
386:La forme, c'est le fond qui remonte à la surface. ~ Victor Hugo,
387:La sofferenza sociale incomincia a qualunque età. ~ Victor Hugo,
388:La suprema miseria porge occasione alle oscenità. ~ Victor Hugo,
389:On the one side blind force, on the other a soul. ~ Victor Hugo,
390:Sikap hati-hati adalah anak sulung kebijaksanaan. ~ Victor Hugo,
391:The episcopal palace of D—— adjoins the hospital. ~ Victor Hugo,
392:There are many lovely women, but no perfect ones. ~ Victor Hugo,
393:There are things stronger than the strongest man. ~ Victor Hugo,
394:The wise man is he who knows when and how to stop ~ Victor Hugo,
395:Time is the architect, the nation is the builder. ~ Victor Hugo,
396:To die is nothing, but it is terrible not to live ~ Victor Hugo,
397:To die is nothing; but it is terrible not to live ~ Victor Hugo,
398:To love another person is to see the face of God. ~ Victor Hugo,
399:total of three hundred sixty-five chapters). Each ~ Victor Hugo,
400:Une idée fixe aboutit à la folie ou à l'héroïsme. ~ Victor Hugo,
401:Voyager, c'est naître et mourir à chaque instant. ~ Victor Hugo,
402:What love commences can be finished by God alone. ~ Victor Hugo,
403:à des résultats magnifiques par des voies étroites ~ Victor Hugo,
404:Ce tout petit changement avait été une révolution. ~ Victor Hugo,
405:Children have their morning song as well as birds. ~ Victor Hugo,
406:Curiosity is one of the forms of feminine bravery. ~ Victor Hugo,
407:Dirt has been shrewdly termed "misplaced material. ~ Victor Hugo,
408:Era come il diciottesimo secolo: frivolo e grande. ~ Victor Hugo,
409:God became man, granted. The devil became a woman. ~ Victor Hugo,
410:God created the flirt as soon as he made the fool. ~ Victor Hugo,
411:How frightened hypocrisy hastens to defend itself. ~ Victor Hugo,
412:if merely for the sake of exactness in all points, ~ Victor Hugo,
413:It is not enough to be happy, one must be content. ~ Victor Hugo,
414:It is nothing to die. It is frightful not to live. ~ Victor Hugo,
415:Joy's smile is much closer to tears than laughter. ~ Victor Hugo,
416:L’amour, c’est la salutation des anges aux astres. ~ Victor Hugo,
417:Le plus lourd fardeau, c'est d'exister sans vivre. ~ Victor Hugo,
418:Le vrai nom du dévouement, c'est désintéressement. ~ Victor Hugo,
419:My tastes are aristocratic, my actions democratic. ~ Victor Hugo,
420:Nous sommes pour la religion contre les religions. ~ Victor Hugo,
421:Pain is as diverse as man. One suffers as one can. ~ Victor Hugo,
422:The cruel of heart have their own black happiness. ~ Victor Hugo,
423:There is such a thing as the pressure of darkness. ~ Victor Hugo,
424:To die is nothing, but it is terrible not to live. ~ Victor Hugo,
425:To die is nothing; but it is terrible not to live. ~ Victor Hugo,
426:To love and be loved, that is the miracle of youth ~ Victor Hugo,
427:To rise from error to truth is rare and beautiful. ~ Victor Hugo,
428:Years place at last a venerable crown upon a head. ~ Victor Hugo,
429:Adversity makes men, and prosperity makes monsters. ~ Victor Hugo,
430:A priest and a philosopher are two different things ~ Victor Hugo,
431:Catastrophes have a somber way of arranging things. ~ Victor Hugo,
432:CHAPTER VI—A CHAPTER IN WHICH THEY ADORE EACH OTHER ~ Victor Hugo,
433:Čovjek se hvata za svaku granu kada osjeća da pada. ~ Victor Hugo,
434:Duša se ne predaje očaju pre nego iscrpe sve obmane ~ Victor Hugo,
435:Eksige, olge nõrgad, patustage, kuid olge õiglased. ~ Victor Hugo,
436:God is behind everything, but everything hides God. ~ Victor Hugo,
437:He loved books; books are cold but safe friends. In ~ Victor Hugo,
438:Houses are like the human beings that inhabit them. ~ Victor Hugo,
439:It is by suffering that human beings become angels. ~ Victor Hugo,
440:Je vois de la lumière neuve
(I see a new light) ~ Victor Hugo,
441:L'âme qui aime et qui souffre est à l'état sublime. ~ Victor Hugo,
442:Le pavé lui était moins dur que le cœur de sa mère. ~ Victor Hugo,
443:L'hydre-Univers tordant son corps écaillé d'astres. ~ Victor Hugo,
444:Me, I’m much more than the master, I am the father. ~ Victor Hugo,
445:There are things stronger than the strongest man... ~ Victor Hugo,
446:There is a way of avoiding which resembles seeking. ~ Victor Hugo,
447:There is M. Geborand purchasing paradise for a sou. ~ Victor Hugo,
448:There is nothing like a dream to create the future. ~ Victor Hugo,
449:The rich's paradise was created by the poor's hell. ~ Victor Hugo,
450:Whatever causes night in our souls may leave stars. ~ Victor Hugo,
451:As he spoke all tongues, he entered into all hearts. ~ Victor Hugo,
452:Being good is easy, what is difficult is being just. ~ Victor Hugo,
453:Every bad institution of this world ends by suicide. ~ Victor Hugo,
454:In the domain of art there is no light without heat. ~ Victor Hugo,
455:It is not easy to keep silent when silence is a lie. ~ Victor Hugo,
456:Many great actions are committed in small struggles. ~ Victor Hugo,
457:Music expresses that which cannot be put into words. ~ Victor Hugo,
458:Noise does not waken a drunkard; silence wakens him. ~ Victor Hugo,
459:On ne se connaît pas tant qu'on n'a pas bu ensemble. ~ Victor Hugo,
460:Revolutions are not born of chance but of necessity. ~ Victor Hugo,
461:Slaying wealth is not the same thing as dividing it. ~ Victor Hugo,
462:The English took the eagle and Austrians the eaglet. ~ Victor Hugo,
463:There is nothing like a dream to create the future.. ~ Victor Hugo,
464:This is a leviathan I am about to ship out to sea... ~ Victor Hugo,
465:To travel is to be born and to die at every instant; ~ Victor Hugo,
466:A compliment is something like a kiss through a veil. ~ Victor Hugo,
467:A republic may be called the climate of civilization. ~ Victor Hugo,
468:Curiosity is a sort of gluttony. To see is to devour. ~ Victor Hugo,
469:Genius is a promontory jutting out into the infinite. ~ Victor Hugo,
470:Her heart turned dark at the place that had been his. ~ Victor Hugo,
471:Il y a une manière d'éviter qui ressemble à chercher. ~ Victor Hugo,
472:Qu'est-ce que ton baiser?
— Un lèchement de flamme ~ Victor Hugo,
473:Rien ne peut arrêter une idée dont l'heure est venue. ~ Victor Hugo,
474:Srušite podrum neznanja, srušili ste jazbinu zločina. ~ Victor Hugo,
475:The persistence of an all-absorbing idea is terrible. ~ Victor Hugo,
476:Too much improvisation leaves the mind stupidly void. ~ Victor Hugo,
477:Veamos el camino por donde ha pasado la falta. Siendo ~ Victor Hugo,
478:You are never fully dressed until you put on a smile! ~ Victor Hugo,
479:était bien fait de sa personne, quoique d'assez petite ~ Victor Hugo,
480:Even the darkest night will end and the sun will rise. ~ Victor Hugo,
481:Every body drags its shadow, and every mind its doubt. ~ Victor Hugo,
482:Good thoughts have their abysses as well as evil ones. ~ Victor Hugo,
483:He was full of sly caution and clumsy recklessness. He ~ Victor Hugo,
484:il arriva à cette phase de calme où l'on peut écouter. ~ Victor Hugo,
485:La historia de las ciudades se refleja en sus cloacas. ~ Victor Hugo,
486:Let us sacrifice one day to gain perhaps a whole life. ~ Victor Hugo,
487:L’ignorance vaut encore mieux que la mauvaise science. ~ Victor Hugo,
488:Love is the foolishness of men, and the wisdom of God. ~ Victor Hugo,
489:Niente è più forte di un'idea il cui tempo sia venuto. ~ Victor Hugo,
490:No force on earth can stop an idea whose time has come ~ Victor Hugo,
491:Nothing is so powerful as an idea whose time has come. ~ Victor Hugo,
492:Nothing makes a man so adventurous as an empty pocket. ~ Victor Hugo,
493:Peace is the virtue of civilization. War is its crime. ~ Victor Hugo,
494:Phenomena intersect; to see but one is to see nothing. ~ Victor Hugo,
495:The presence of angels is an announcement of Paradise. ~ Victor Hugo,
496:The wicked envy and hate; it is their way of admiring. ~ Victor Hugo,
497:Victor Hugo didn't know balls about being a zombie. ~ Scott Kenemore,
498:What's the use of praying if there's nobody who hears? ~ Victor Hugo,
499:When a person opens a book, he can never be in prison. ~ Victor Hugo,
500:A fall from such a height is rarely straight downwards. ~ Victor Hugo,
501:As with stomachs, we should pity minds that do not eat. ~ Victor Hugo,
502:Ce n'est rien de mourir, C'est affreux de ne pas vivre. ~ Victor Hugo,
503:even the darkest nights will end and the sun will rise. ~ Victor Hugo,
504:He loved books, those undemanding but faithful friends. ~ Victor Hugo,
505:I am the capitoul52 and the master of the floral games! ~ Victor Hugo,
506:Initiative is doing the right thing without being told. ~ Victor Hugo,
507:It has been said, error is human; I say, error is love. ~ Victor Hugo,
508:La vie n'est qu'une longue perte de tout ce qu'on aime. ~ Victor Hugo,
509:Les recomiendo la moderación en sus deseos. (Tholomyes) ~ Victor Hugo,
510:Life's great happiness is to be convinced we are loved. ~ Victor Hugo,
511:Love is a celestial respiration of the air of paradise. ~ Victor Hugo,
512:l riso è il sole che scaccia l'inverno dal volto umano. ~ Victor Hugo,
513:many mouths which talk, and very few heads which think. ~ Victor Hugo,
514:One believes others will do what he will do to himself. ~ Victor Hugo,
515:Oui, les brutalités du progrès s’appellent révolutions. ~ Victor Hugo,
516:pedantry. What was this excess of love? It was a serene ~ Victor Hugo,
517:Poetry contains philosophy as the soul contains reason. ~ Victor Hugo,
518:Point of departure: matter; point of arrival: the soul. ~ Victor Hugo,
519:See Monsieur Geborand, buying a pennyworth of paradise. ~ Victor Hugo,
520:Senin vazifen, unutmak veya ölmek... Azabından kime ne! ~ Victor Hugo,
521:Style is the form of the ideal; rhythm is its movement. ~ Victor Hugo,
522:The soul has greater need of the ideal than of the real ~ Victor Hugo,
523:This child whom we Love, Brings daylight Into our soul. ~ Victor Hugo,
524:This will destroy that. The book will kill the edifice. ~ Victor Hugo,
525:To confide is sometime to deliver into a person's power ~ Victor Hugo,
526:We do not comprehend everything, but we insult nothing. ~ Victor Hugo,
527:Yes, the brutalities of progress are called revolutions ~ Victor Hugo,
528:A las almas negras les ha llegado el momento de lavarse. ~ Victor Hugo,
529:aware of her beauty and ignorant of her love. Coquettish ~ Victor Hugo,
530:CHAPTER X—THE BISHOP IN THE PRESENCE OF AN UNKNOWN LIGHT ~ Victor Hugo,
531:Do you hear the people sing? Singing a song of angry men ~ Victor Hugo,
532:E la sofferenza e il lavoro sono le due facce dell'uomo. ~ Victor Hugo,
533:El soldado de hierro vale tanto como el duque de hierro. ~ Victor Hugo,
534:God put in man thought; society, action; nature, revery. ~ Victor Hugo,
535:Hay muchas bocas que hablan y pocas cabezas que piensan. ~ Victor Hugo,
536:He reached for his pocket, and found there, only reality ~ Victor Hugo,
537:He was fond of books, for they are cool and sure friends ~ Victor Hugo,
538:I'd rather be the head of a fly than the tail of a lion. ~ Victor Hugo,
539:If I exist, does this exist? if this exists, do I exist? ~ Victor Hugo,
540:If you would civilize a man, begin with his grandmother. ~ Victor Hugo,
541:I'm not totally useless. I can be used as a bad example. ~ Victor Hugo,
542:Kata-kata keras dan pedas menunjukkan alasan yang lemah. ~ Victor Hugo,
543:L'amour, c'est la bêtise de l'homme et l'esprit de Dieu. ~ Victor Hugo,
544:Love has no middle term; either it destroys or it saves. ~ Victor Hugo,
545:Out Milky Way is the dwelling; the nebulae are the city. ~ Victor Hugo,
546:The beautiful has but one type, the ugly has a thousand. ~ Victor Hugo,
547:The best way to look at the soul is through closed eyes. ~ Victor Hugo,
548:The gravedigger's work is charming when done by a child. ~ Victor Hugo,
549:The soul that loves and suffers is in the sublime state. ~ Victor Hugo,
550:Tobacco is the plant that converts thoughts into dreams. ~ Victor Hugo,
551:To destroy abuses is not enough; habits must be changed. ~ Victor Hugo,
552:Victor Hugo was a madman who thought he was Victor Hugo ~ Jean Cocteau,
553:We teachers make the road, others will make the journey. ~ Victor Hugo,
554:When dictatorship is a fact, revolution becomes a right. ~ Victor Hugo,
555:Winter is on my head, but eternal spring is in my heart. ~ Victor Hugo,
556:A flower should smell sweet, and a woman should have wit. ~ Victor Hugo,
557:A man without a woman is like a pistol without a trigger. ~ Victor Hugo,
558:a mother who loses her child can no longer believe in God ~ Victor Hugo,
559:A stout heart may be ruined in fortune but not in spirit. ~ Victor Hugo,
560:A vida não passa de uma longa perda de tudo o que amamos. ~ Victor Hugo,
561:A wretched woman is more unfortunate than a wretched man. ~ Victor Hugo,
562:Chi non ha nulla da rimproverarsi, non rimprovera altrui. ~ Victor Hugo,
563:Hope is a delusion; no hand can grasp a wave or a shadow. ~ Victor Hugo,
564:Hrabrost se ne boji zločina i poštenje se ne boji vlasti. ~ Victor Hugo,
565:I am not in the world to care for my life, but for souls. ~ Victor Hugo,
566:I buoni pensieri hanno i loro abissi al pari dei cattivi. ~ Victor Hugo,
567:Let us die facing out foes, make them bleed while we can. ~ Victor Hugo,
568:Life's greatest happiness is to be convinced we are loved ~ Victor Hugo,
569:Man lives by affirmation even more than he does by bread. ~ Victor Hugo,
570:Nothing is more powerful than an idea whose time has come ~ Victor Hugo,
571:Our life dreams the Utopia. Our death achieves the Ideal. ~ Victor Hugo,
572:Style is the shape the ideal takes, rhythm, its movement. ~ Victor Hugo,
573:The crumbling away of prejudices and errors causes light. ~ Victor Hugo,
574:The history of men is reflected in the history of sewers. ~ Victor Hugo,
575:To confide is sometimes to deliver into a person's power. ~ Victor Hugo,
576:When one has but a single idea he finds in it everything. ~ Victor Hugo,
577:A clock does not stop at the very moment you lose the key. ~ Victor Hugo,
578:As for him, he took the path which shortens,—the Gospel's. ~ Victor Hugo,
579:But you must have a lady"s maid."
"Don't I have Marius? ~ Victor Hugo,
580:Common sense is in spite of, not the result of, education. ~ Victor Hugo,
581:Forty is the old age of youth, fifty the youth of old age. ~ Victor Hugo,
582:Forty is the old age of youth; fifty the youth of old age. ~ Victor Hugo,
583:Geometry is deceptive; the hurricane alone is trustworthy. ~ Victor Hugo,
584:God secludes Himself; but the thinker listens at the door. ~ Victor Hugo,
585:Great grief contains dejection. They discourage existence. ~ Victor Hugo,
586:He had the confidence of a man who had never been wounded. ~ Victor Hugo,
587:Hypocrisy is nothing, in fact, but a horrible hopefulness. ~ Victor Hugo,
588:If I speak, I am condemned. If I stay silent, I am damned! ~ Victor Hugo,
589:If you want to civilize a man, begin with his grandmother. ~ Victor Hugo,
590:In the opera we call love, the libretto is almost nothing. ~ Victor Hugo,
591:Invading armies can be resisted, invading ideas cannot be. ~ Victor Hugo,
592:L'amour n'a point de moyen terme; ou il perd, ou il sauve. ~ Victor Hugo,
593:Life's greatest happiness is to be convinced we are loved. ~ Victor Hugo,
594:My fame will outshine that of Victor Hugo or Napoleon. ~ Raymond Roussel,
595:Nothing is more powerful than an idea whose time has come. ~ Victor Hugo,
596:Popularity - a piece of faded tinsel, that is out of date. ~ Victor Hugo,
597:She had the look of a market porter dressed in petticoats. ~ Victor Hugo,
598:The hand which moves over the dial moves also among souls. ~ Victor Hugo,
599:uma consciência em farrapos dá origem a vidas sem sentido. ~ Victor Hugo,
600:A bird alone could have extricated himself from that place. ~ Victor Hugo,
601:All war is a thing of terror, and there is no choice in it. ~ Victor Hugo,
602:An intelligent hell would be better than a stupid paradise. ~ Victor Hugo,
603:Be serious," said Enjolras. "I am wild," replied Grantaire. ~ Victor Hugo,
604:Be serious,” said Enjolras. “I am wild,” replied Grantaire. ~ Victor Hugo,
605:Concision in style, precision in thought, decision in life. ~ Victor Hugo,
606:Friend is sometimes a word devoid of meaning; enemy, never. ~ Victor Hugo,
607:God's whole policy consists in rendering slopes less steep. ~ Victor Hugo,
608:He sauntered. To stray is human. To saunter is Parisian. In ~ Victor Hugo,
609:Injustice had made her sulle, and misery had made her ugly. ~ Victor Hugo,
610:It is not so easy to keep silent when the silence is a lie. ~ Victor Hugo,
611:Laughter is sunshine, it chases winter from the human face. ~ Victor Hugo,
612:Laughter is the sun that drives winter from the human face. ~ Victor Hugo,
613:Memory is a gulf that a word can move to its lowest depths. ~ Victor Hugo,
614:Men become accustomed to poison by degrees” Victor Hugo ~ Joe Abercrombie,
615:On ne renverse pas le trône pour laisser l’échafaud debout. ~ Victor Hugo,
616:—'Place your hopes in the man from whom you do not inherit. ~ Victor Hugo,
617:Te diré su nombre y el mío: él se llama Crimen y yo Castigo ~ Victor Hugo,
618:The man who fights against his own country is never a hero. ~ Victor Hugo,
619:There are many tongues to talk, and but few heads to think. ~ Victor Hugo,
620:There is a way of meeting error while on the road of truth. ~ Victor Hugo,
621:There is but one way of refusing To-morrow, that is to die. ~ Victor Hugo,
622:What a gloomy thing, not to know the address of one's soul. ~ Victor Hugo,
623:Yet internally, poverty, the proletariat, wages, education, ~ Victor Hugo,
624:You always have everything better than the rest, even pain. ~ Victor Hugo,
625:Youth is the future smiling at a stranger, which is itself. ~ Victor Hugo,
626:A primeira santidade consiste em pensar no próximo. Vejamos, ~ Victor Hugo,
627:Common sense is in spite of, not as the result of education. ~ Victor Hugo,
628:Creation lives, grows, and multiplies; man is but a witness. ~ Victor Hugo,
629:Fex urbis, lex orbis, ‘Dregs of the city, law of the world’. ~ Victor Hugo,
630:Friend' is sometimes a word devoid of meaning; enemy, never. ~ Victor Hugo,
631:God blesses man, not for having found but for having sought. ~ Victor Hugo,
632:if she had not been a gypsy, and if he had not been a priest ~ Victor Hugo,
633:In every cradle decked with rosy wreath Lurk germs of death. ~ Victor Hugo,
634:It was the tone of austerity answering the tone of severity. ~ Victor Hugo,
635:I would rather be the head of a fly than the tail of a lion. ~ Victor Hugo,
636:La faccia dei secoli è composta della fisionomia degli anni. ~ Victor Hugo,
637:...Man lives by affirmation even more than he does by bread. ~ Victor Hugo,
638:Night sometimes lends such tragic assistance to catastrophe. ~ Victor Hugo,
639:Nothing like a soulful glance under the noses of the saints! ~ Victor Hugo,
640:One drop of wine is enough to redden a whole glass of water. ~ Victor Hugo,
641:One sees qualities at a distance and defects at close range. ~ Victor Hugo,
642:The production of souls is the secret of unfathomable depth. ~ Victor Hugo,
643:The real, native South Seas food is lousy. You can't eat it. ~ Victor Hugo,
644:There must be people who pray even for those who never pray. ~ Victor Hugo,
645:Those who always pray are necessary to those who never pray. ~ Victor Hugo,
646:to love, or have loved, that is enough. Ask nothing further. ~ Victor Hugo,
647:Vengeance comes from the individual and punishment from God. ~ Victor Hugo,
648:Book Twelve CORINTH I HISTORY OF CORINTH SINCE ITS FOUNDATION ~ Victor Hugo,
649:Do not let it be your aim to be something, but to be someone. ~ Victor Hugo,
650:Forty is the old age of youth; fifty is the youth of old age. ~ Victor Hugo,
651:Good actions are the invisible hinges on the doors of heaven. ~ Victor Hugo,
652:Her soul trembled on her lips like a drop of dew on a flower. ~ Victor Hugo,
653:If I speak, I am condemned.
If I stay silent, I am damned! ~ Victor Hugo,
654:I'm not in the world to guard my own life, but to guard souls ~ Victor Hugo,
655:I teatri sono come vascelli rovesciati, con la stiva in alto. ~ Victor Hugo,
656:Le gamin est un être qui s'amuse, parce qu'il est malheureux. ~ Victor Hugo,
657:Logic ignores the almost, just as the sun ignores the candle. ~ Victor Hugo,
658:The paradise of the rich is made out of the hell of the poor. ~ Victor Hugo,
659:There is a way of avoiding a person which resembles a search. ~ Victor Hugo,
660:There is one spectacle grander than the sea, That is the sky. ~ Victor Hugo,
661:The void in the heart does not accommodate itself to a proxy. ~ Victor Hugo,
662:We must not resort to the flame where only light is required. ~ Victor Hugo,
663:Au-dessus de l'absolu révolutionnaire, il y a l'absolu humain. ~ Victor Hugo,
664:CHAPTER V—MONSEIGNEUR BIENVENU MADE HIS CASSOCKS LAST TOO LONG ~ Victor Hugo,
665:¡Cuantós han muerto habiendo hecho planes para una larga vida! ~ Victor Hugo,
666:Do you want a priest?"
"I have one." answered Jean Valjean. ~ Victor Hugo,
667:En temps de révolution la misère est à la fois cause et effet. ~ Victor Hugo,
668:Faith is necessary to men; woe to him who believes in nothing! ~ Victor Hugo,
669:I dislike wealth and prosperity, especially that of other men. ~ Victor Hugo,
670:it is very easy to be kind; the difficulty lies in being just. ~ Victor Hugo,
671:La bontà della madre sta scritta nell'allegria del marmocchio. ~ Victor Hugo,
672:La nada no existe. Cero no existe. Todo es algo. Nada es nada. ~ Victor Hugo,
673:Los grandes acontecimientos tienen consecuencias incalculables ~ Victor Hugo,
674:Our acts make or mar us, we are the children of our own deeds. ~ Victor Hugo,
675:Our joys have shadows. The perfect smile belongs to God alone. ~ Victor Hugo,
676:The beautiful is as useful as the useful. ... perhaps more so. ~ Victor Hugo,
677:The devotion of one man had given strength and courage to all. ~ Victor Hugo,
678:The realities of life do not allow themselves to be forgotten. ~ Victor Hugo,
679:There is consent in a smile, while a laugh is often a refusal. ~ Victor Hugo,
680:the winter always bears away with it a portion of our sadness; ~ Victor Hugo,
681:This book is a drama, whose leading personage is the Infinite. ~ Victor Hugo,
682:To die for lack of love is horrible. The asphyxia of the soul. ~ Victor Hugo,
683:To love or to have loved, that is enough. Ask nothing further. ~ Victor Hugo,
684:Tous étant sourds pour lui, il n'avait pas été sourd pour elle ~ Victor Hugo,
685:Tu n’es plus là où tu étais, mais tu es partout là où je suis. ~ Victor Hugo,
686:When you get an idea into your head you find it in everything. ~ Victor Hugo,
687:which is rather widely prevalent in parliamentary families. In ~ Victor Hugo,
688:All is not at an end on earth since we can still talk nonsense. ~ Victor Hugo,
689:A shadow is hard to seize by the throat and dash to the ground. ~ Victor Hugo,
690:Bonapartist democrat."
"Grey shades of a quiet mouse colour. ~ Victor Hugo,
691:Doing nothing is happiness for children and misery for old men. ~ Victor Hugo,
692:Dubitava di tutto, grande forza, questa, agli occhi dei deboli. ~ Victor Hugo,
693:Gavroche added: "I authorize you to hit 'em a tremendous whack. ~ Victor Hugo,
694:Gentlemen of the human race, I say to hell with the lot of you. ~ Victor Hugo,
695:Great edifices, like great mountains, are the work of the ages. ~ Victor Hugo,
696:If one could only get out of a grief as one gets out of a city! ~ Victor Hugo,
697:Indigestion was designed by God to impose morality on stomachs. ~ Victor Hugo,
698:Kebahagiaan terbesar di dunia ialah merasa yakin kita dicintai. ~ Victor Hugo,
699:La pensée est le labeur de l'âme; la rêverie en est la volupté. ~ Victor Hugo,
700:Non so qual filosofo abbia detto: «Le vecchie non mancano mai». ~ Victor Hugo,
701:Now, there’s a young man who looks like a real pedant, for you! ~ Victor Hugo,
702:Si burlava il secolo, la qual cosa dispensava dal comprenderlo. ~ Victor Hugo,
703:There is only one way of refusing tomorrow, and that is to die. ~ Victor Hugo,
704:The repose of darkness is deeper on the water than on the land. ~ Victor Hugo,
705:The soul of the just contemplates in sleep a mysterious heaven. ~ Victor Hugo,
706:Thought is the labor of the intellect, reverie is its pleasure. ~ Victor Hugo,
707:Youth, even in its sorrows, always has a brilliancy of its own. ~ Victor Hugo,
708:All the invasions of history have been determined by petticoats. ~ Victor Hugo,
709:A vacancy in the heart does not accomodate itself to a stop-gap. ~ Victor Hugo,
710:A woman's best qualities are harmful if undiluted with prudence. ~ Victor Hugo,
711:Could the word ‘iron’ be the root from which ‘irony’ is derived? ~ Victor Hugo,
712:El pensador busca activamente, el soñador encuentra pasivamente. ~ Victor Hugo,
713:Everything being a constant carnival, there is no carnival left. ~ Victor Hugo,
714:Hope is the Word which God has written on the brow of every man. ~ Victor Hugo,
715:If she gives me all her time it is because I have all her heart. ~ Victor Hugo,
716:Let misery hide itself in silence, otherwise it becomes treason. ~ Victor Hugo,
717:Like old men and like the majority of thinkers, he slept little. ~ Victor Hugo,
718:Night and the day, when united, Bring forth the beautiful light. ~ Victor Hugo,
719:No tratar con la gente permite atribuirle todas las perfecciones ~ Victor Hugo,
720:The convent is supreme egotism resulting in supreme self-denial. ~ Victor Hugo,
721:The prosperity of right is that it is always beautiful and pure. ~ Victor Hugo,
722:[...] the purifying action of Conscience upsets the legal order. ~ Victor Hugo,
723:There are no bad plants or bad men. There is only bad husbandry. ~ Victor Hugo,
724:There is nothing more powerful than an idea whose time has come. ~ Victor Hugo,
725:What would be ugly in a garden constitutes beauty in a mountain. ~ Victor Hugo,
726:Desiring always to be in mourning, he clothed himself with night. ~ Victor Hugo,
727:Every bird that flies has the thread of the infinite in its claw. ~ Victor Hugo,
728:For the masses, success has almost the same profile as supremacy. ~ Victor Hugo,
729:Gans and Savigny controversy; he took Savigny, he took Gans, read ~ Victor Hugo,
730:Great buildings, like great mountains, are the work of centuries. ~ Victor Hugo,
731:La guerre : c'est l'humanité contre l'humanité malgré l'humanité. ~ Victor Hugo,
732:Nothing is so logical and nothing appears so absurd as the ocean. ~ Victor Hugo,
733:Ogni civiltà inizia con la teocrazia e finisce con la democrazia. ~ Victor Hugo,
734:On this point, the priest and the philosopher agree: We must die. ~ Victor Hugo,
735:The goodness of the mother is written in the gaiety of the child. ~ Victor Hugo,
736:the goodness of the mother is written in the gayety of the child; ~ Victor Hugo,
737:the goodness of the mother is written on the gaiety of the child. ~ Victor Hugo,
738:The oysters are spoiled, the servants are ugly. I hate humankind. ~ Victor Hugo,
739:The supreme happiness of life is the conviction that we are loved ~ Victor Hugo,
740:Through a religion you see the solar spectre of God, but not God. ~ Victor Hugo,
741:To lie a little is not possible: he who lies, lies the whole lie. ~ Victor Hugo,
742:Whatever may be happening today, peace is the meaning of tomorrow ~ Victor Hugo,
743:When a woman talks to you, listen to what she says with her eyes. ~ Victor Hugo,
744:A little garden in which to walk, and immensity in which to dream. ~ Victor Hugo,
745:Every bird which flies has the thread of the infinite in its claw. ~ Victor Hugo,
746:He flew into a rage on every occasion, most frequently when wrong. ~ Victor Hugo,
747:It is a mournful task to break the sombre attachments of the past. ~ Victor Hugo,
748:It seemed as though he had for a soul the book of the natural law. ~ Victor Hugo,
749:Just see how idiotic one can be! One reckons without the good God. ~ Victor Hugo,
750:La risa era seca, pero libre, el canto era bajo, pero indiferente. ~ Victor Hugo,
751:Les amis de l'abc... a group which barely missed becoming historic ~ Victor Hugo,
752:Never laugh at those who suffer; suffer sometimes those who laugh. ~ Victor Hugo,
753:No army can withstand the strength of an idea whose time has come. ~ Victor Hugo,
754:No era la facultad de amar lo que le faltaba, sino la posibilidad. ~ Victor Hugo,
755:Quand on n'est fait que de nuit, comment pardonner tant de rayons? ~ Victor Hugo,
756:Rien n’est stupide comme vaincre ; la vraie gloire est convaincre. ~ Victor Hugo,
757:The most ferocious animals are disarmed by caresses to their young ~ Victor Hugo,
758:There are no bad herbs or bad men; there are only bad cultivators. ~ Victor Hugo,
759:The supreme happiness of life is the conviction that we are loved. ~ Victor Hugo,
760:This book should be read as one would read the book of a dead man. ~ Victor Hugo,
761:Ah, miten mielelläni hukuttautuisin, jollei vesi olisi niin kylmää! ~ Victor Hugo,
762:A man trying to escape never thinks himself sufficiently concealed. ~ Victor Hugo,
763:Er was iets in mij omvergehaald, dat zich niet meer op kon richten. ~ Victor Hugo,
764:First problem. To produce wealth. Second problem. To distribute it. ~ Victor Hugo,
765:For there are many great deeds done in the small struggles of life. ~ Victor Hugo,
766:Le suprême bonheur dans la vie,c'est la conviction qu'on est aimé.. ~ Victor Hugo,
767:Los que padecéis porque amáis, amad más aún. Morir de amor es vivir ~ Victor Hugo,
768:Night and the day, when united,
Bring forth the beautiful light. ~ Victor Hugo,
769:Not seeing people permits us to imagine them with every perfection. ~ Victor Hugo,
770:Our mind is enriched by what we receive, our heart by what we give. ~ Victor Hugo,
771:Phoebus de Chateaupers likewise came to a 'tragic end': he married. ~ Victor Hugo,
772:The greatest happiness of life is the conviction that we are loved. ~ Victor Hugo,
773:The most ferocious animals are disarmed by caresses to their young. ~ Victor Hugo,
774:There is no more sovereign eloquence than the truth in indignation. ~ Victor Hugo,
775:What is Waterloo? A victory? No. The winning number in the lottery. ~ Victor Hugo,
776:Winter changes into stone the water of heaven and the heart of man. ~ Victor Hugo,
777:You ask me what forces me to speak? a strange thing; my conscience. ~ Victor Hugo,
778:A faith is a necessity to a man. Woe to him who believes in nothing. ~ Victor Hugo,
779:And so, being in Heaven, it was easy for him to lose sight of earth. ~ Victor Hugo,
780:As for methods of prayer, all are good, as long as they are sincere. ~ Victor Hugo,
781:Chi vuole restar virtuosa non deve aver compassione per le sue mani. ~ Victor Hugo,
782:Dream no small dreams. They have no power to stir the hearts of men. ~ Victor Hugo,
783:How pretty it is here!"
It was an awful hovel, but she felt free. ~ Victor Hugo,
784:It is nothing to die. It is frightful not to live.” ― Les miserables ~ Victor Hugo,
785:Men like me are impossible until the day when they become necessary. ~ Victor Hugo,
786:More powerful than the mighty armies is an idea whose time has come. ~ Victor Hugo,
787:No man was created good by God, nor can be made entirely bad by man. ~ Victor Hugo,
788:Non v'è nulla di più testardo delle supposizioni e delle congetture. ~ Victor Hugo,
789:... plunged into chance,--that is to say, swallowed up in Providence ~ Victor Hugo,
790:Prvi znak istinske ljubavi u mladića je stid, a u djevojke smjelost. ~ Victor Hugo,
791:Qu'il luise ou qu'il luiserne, L'ours rentre dans en sa caverne.[26] ~ Victor Hugo,
792:Religion, Society, and Nature--these are the three struggles of man. ~ Victor Hugo,
793:Se ignora lo que se debe saber, y se sabe lo que se debería ignorar. ~ Victor Hugo,
794:The world is the expanding Greece and Greece is the shrinking world. ~ Victor Hugo,
795:They say love is blindness of heart; I say not to love is blindness. ~ Victor Hugo,
796:A soul for a piece of bread. Misery makes the offer; society accepts. ~ Victor Hugo,
797:BOOK FOURTH.—TO CONFIDE IS SOMETIMES TO DELIVER INTO A PERSON'S POWER ~ Victor Hugo,
798:But when ill indeed, Even dismissing the doctor don't always succeed. ~ Victor Hugo,
799:Ces ténèbres, Dea les y avait en elle et Gwynplaine les avait sur lui ~ Victor Hugo,
800:Conscience is the quantity of innate science which we have within us. ~ Victor Hugo,
801:God has made the cat to give man the pleasure of caressing the tiger. ~ Victor Hugo,
802:Idleness is a mother. She has a son, robbery, and a daughter, hunger. ~ Victor Hugo,
803:I do not know whether it will be read by all, but I wrote it for all. ~ Victor Hugo,
804:I have been loving you a little more every minute since this morning. ~ Victor Hugo,
805:I love all men who think, even those who think otherwise than myself. ~ Victor Hugo,
806:Indigestion is charged by God with enforcing morality on the stomach. ~ Victor Hugo,
807:In the morning I write love letters and in the afternoon I dig graves ~ Victor Hugo,
808:It is only barbarous nations who have a sudden growth after a victory ~ Victor Hugo,
809:It is the peculiarity of grief to bring out the childish side of man. ~ Victor Hugo,
810:Let’s fight, ye gods and little fishes! I’ve had enough of despotism. ~ Victor Hugo,
811:Live and Let live"

" To love someone is to see the face of God ~ Victor Hugo,
812:L'uomo, creato buono da Dio, può dunque esser reso cattivo dall'uomo? ~ Victor Hugo,
813:Nesreća je za čoveka što ostavlja iza sebe noć kojoj je on dao oblik. ~ Victor Hugo,
814:There are no weeds, and no worthless men. There are only bad farmers. ~ Victor Hugo,
815:There is still a certain grace in a dead festival. It has been happy. ~ Victor Hugo,
816:The souls of the upright in sleep have vision of a mysterious heaven. ~ Victor Hugo,
817:Tout y est sobre, exact, nu, précis, correct. Un phare est un chiffre ~ Victor Hugo,
818:Waterloo is a battle of the first rank won by a captain of the second ~ Victor Hugo,
819:What a grand thing, to be loved! What a grander thing still, to love! ~ Victor Hugo,
820:What says the law? You will not kill. How does it say it? By killing! ~ Victor Hugo,
821:When a woman is talking to you, listen to what she says with her eyes ~ Victor Hugo,
822:Winter changes the water of heaven and the heart of man into a stone. ~ Victor Hugo,
823:Always and everywhere people are to be found who have seen everything. ~ Victor Hugo,
824:A translation in verse . . . seems to me something absurd, impossible. ~ Victor Hugo,
825:Better than the tread of mighty armies is an idea whose time has come. ~ Victor Hugo,
826:God decreed that the love which came to Cosette was a love that saves. ~ Victor Hugo,
827:I have just met Marius' new hat and new coat, with Marius inside them. ~ Victor Hugo,
828:In thought there always exists a certain amount of internal rebellion; ~ Victor Hugo,
829:I repeat, whether we be Italians or Frenchmen, misery concerns us all. ~ Victor Hugo,
830:I think I missed my calling. I should have been an interior decorator. ~ Victor Hugo,
831:Promise to give me a kiss on my brow when I am dead.--I shall feel it. ~ Victor Hugo,
832:Social prosperity means man happy, the citizen free, the nation great. ~ Victor Hugo,
833:The bureau is closed, said Gavroche. I'm receiving no more complaints. ~ Victor Hugo,
834:There are moments when the hands of a woman possess super human force. ~ Victor Hugo,
835:The soul has illusions as the bird has wings: it is supported by them. ~ Victor Hugo,
836:To be nothing where he had been everything was an unendurable decline. ~ Victor Hugo,
837:Venerate the man, whoever he may be, who has this sign—the starry eye. ~ Victor Hugo,
838:When a woman is talking to you, listen to what she says with her eyes. ~ Victor Hugo,
839:Es propio de las personas felices desear que las demás también lo sean. ~ Victor Hugo,
840:Greater than the tread of mighty armies is an idea whose time has come. ~ Victor Hugo,
841:he never was known to have a sweetheart; he had not time to be in love. ~ Victor Hugo,
842:He who is not capable of enduring poverty is not capable of being free. ~ Victor Hugo,
843:I'd rather be hissed at for a good verse, than applauded for a bad one. ~ Victor Hugo,
844:In spring, sad souls grow light, as light falls into cellars at midday. ~ Victor Hugo,
845:It is grievous for a man to leave behind him a shadow in his own shape. ~ Victor Hugo,
846:La vérité légendaire, c’est l’invention ayant pour résultat la réalité. ~ Victor Hugo,
847:Life is a theatre set in which there are but few practicable entrances. ~ Victor Hugo,
848:Nessun sentimento umano riesce ad essere così spaventoso come la gioia. ~ Victor Hugo,
849:Nisi Dominus custodierit domum, in vanum vigilant qui custodiunt eam.”* ~ Victor Hugo,
850:O nada não existe. O zero não existe. Tudo é alguma coisa. Nada é nada. ~ Victor Hugo,
851:Since we shall love each other, I shall be great and you shall be rich. ~ Victor Hugo,
852:Speech imprisoned frets to find a vent. To harangue space is an outlet. ~ Victor Hugo,
853:The boughs, without becoming detached from the trunk grow away from it. ~ Victor Hugo,
854:The just man frowns, but never sneers. We understand anger, not malice. ~ Victor Hugo,
855:The quantity of civilization is measured by the quality of imagination. ~ Victor Hugo,
856:To subdue matter is the first step; to realize the ideal is the second. ~ Victor Hugo,
857:True thinkers are characterized by a blending of clearness and mystery. ~ Victor Hugo,
858:What I feel for you seems less of earth and more of a cloudless heaven. ~ Victor Hugo,
859:where there are many mouths which talk, and very few heads which think. ~ Victor Hugo,
860:Youth, even in its sorrows, always possesses its own peculiar radiance. ~ Victor Hugo,
861:You would have imagined her at one moment a maniac, at another a queen. ~ Victor Hugo,
862:A bit of mould is a pleiad of flowers; a nebula is an ant-hill of stars. ~ Victor Hugo,
863:Facts are sometimes like a hailstorm. They bombard you; they deafen you. ~ Victor Hugo,
864:For there are things that make the dead open their eyes in their graves. ~ Victor Hugo,
865:Genius is rare because the means of becoming one have not been available ~ Victor Hugo,
866:His advocacy and understanding of Victor Hugo led to a close friendship, ~ Clive James,
867:If there did not exist some one who loved, the sun would become extinct. ~ Victor Hugo,
868:Il volgo è un vecchio Narciso che adora se stesso e applaude il volgare. ~ Victor Hugo,
869:It is like a skull, which still has holes for eyes, but no longer sight. ~ Victor Hugo,
870:La nuit fait des distributions d'essence stellaire aux fleurs endormies. ~ Victor Hugo,
871:La pensée est le labeur de l’intelligence, la rêverie en est la volupté. ~ Victor Hugo,
872:Science says the first word on everything, and the last word on nothing. ~ Victor Hugo,
873:Si la nature s’appelle providence, la société doit s’appeler prévoyance. ~ Victor Hugo,
874:Style is the substance of the subject called unceasingly to the surface. ~ Victor Hugo,
875:The first proof of charity in a priest, especially a bishop, is poverty. ~ Victor Hugo,
876:There are no trifles in the human story, no trifling leaves on the tree. ~ Victor Hugo,
877:There are no trivial facts in humanity, nor little leaves in vegetation. ~ Victor Hugo,
878:there is always more wretchedness below than there is brotherhood above, ~ Victor Hugo,
879:The slightest contact with logic makes all false arguments disintegrate. ~ Victor Hugo,
880:When a man is out of sight, it is not too long before he is out of mind. ~ Victor Hugo,
881:You see me no more comfortable in it than a cat coiffed with a calabash. ~ Victor Hugo,
882:Žene se igraju sa svojom ljepotom kao sa svojim nožem. To ih i posiječe. ~ Victor Hugo,
883:A harmony established contrary to sense is often more onerous than a war. ~ Victor Hugo,
884:By putting forward the hands of the clock you shall not advance the hour. ~ Victor Hugo,
885:Il y a des illusions touchantes qui sont peut-être des réalités sublimes. ~ Victor Hugo,
886:In principle any revolt strengthens the government it fails to overthrow. ~ Victor Hugo,
887:I shall die while he sleeps. The two slumbers may be good neighbors." The ~ Victor Hugo,
888:It is the end. But of what? The end of France? No. The end of kings? Yes. ~ Victor Hugo,
889:La guerre, c'est la guerre des hommes; la paix c'est la guerre des idées. ~ Victor Hugo,
890:La sonrisa de la mujer amada tiene una claridad que disipa las tinieblas. ~ Victor Hugo,
891:Ma bouche n'avait pas dit une chose
que deja ton coeur avait repondu. ~ Victor Hugo,
892:On the other hand, this affair afforded great delight to Madame Magloire. ~ Victor Hugo,
893:Short as life is, we make it still shorter by the careless waste of time. ~ Victor Hugo,
894:The straight line, a respectable optical illusion which ruins many a man. ~ Victor Hugo,
895:THE SUPREME HAPPINESS IN LIFE IS THE CONVICTION THAT WE ARE LOVED V. HUGO ~ Victor Hugo,
896:To love your neighbors is to see the face of God.

- Les Miserables ~ Victor Hugo,
897:To paint a battle requires those mighty artists with chaos in their brush ~ Victor Hugo,
898:Vous avez l'air d'un joli visage sur lequel, par mégarde, on s'est assis. ~ Victor Hugo,
899:where would the shout of love begin, if not from the summit of sacrifice? ~ Victor Hugo,
900:Word which the finger of God has written on the brow of every man — hope! ~ Victor Hugo,
901:Work is the law; whoever spurns it as tiresome will have it as punishment ~ Victor Hugo,
902:You've got the sniffles, old lady," said Gavroche. "Blow your promontory. ~ Victor Hugo,
903:A mother's arms are made of tenderness and children sleep soundly in them. ~ Victor Hugo,
904:An invasion of armies can be resisted, but not an idea whose time has come ~ Victor Hugo,
905:A person seated instead of standing - fate hangs on such a thread as that. ~ Victor Hugo,
906:Death belongs to God alone. By what right do men touch that unknown thing? ~ Victor Hugo,
907:Death belongs to God alone; by what right do men touch that unknown thing? ~ Victor Hugo,
908:Errors are excllent projectiles... Factions are blind men who aim straight ~ Victor Hugo,
909:for it seems that a woman must needs be a mother in order to be venerable. ~ Victor Hugo,
910:Great blunders are often made, like large ropes, of a multitude of fibres. ~ Victor Hugo,
911:In my old age there is a coming into flower. My body wanes; my mind waxes. ~ Victor Hugo,
912:It is from books that wise men derive consolation in the troubles of life. ~ Victor Hugo,
913:It is God who makes woman beautiful, it is the devil who makes her pretty. ~ Victor Hugo,
914:It is the property of grief to cause the childish side of man to reappear. ~ Victor Hugo,
915:les plus belles années d'une vie sont celles que l'on a pas encore vécues. ~ Victor Hugo,
916:Lo confieso: aún tenía esperanzas. Ahora, gracias a Dios, ya no las tengo. ~ Victor Hugo,
917:Love is a fault; so be it. Fantine was innocence floating high over fault. ~ Victor Hugo,
918:Naučiti čitati isto je što i upaliti vatru; svaki sročeni slog je varnica. ~ Victor Hugo,
919:Ne pas voir les gens, cela permet de leur supposer toutes les perfections. ~ Victor Hugo,
920:Sorrow is a fruit. God does not make it grow on limbs too weak to bear it. ~ Victor Hugo,
921:the galleys make the convict what he is; reflect upon that, if you please. ~ Victor Hugo,
922:The lancer put on the satisfied smirk of a bandit praised for his honesty. ~ Victor Hugo,
923:There are men who dig for gold; [Monseigneur Bienvenu] dug for compassion. ~ Victor Hugo,
924:The soul does not give up to despair until it has exhausted all illusions. ~ Victor Hugo,
925:To learn to read is to light a fire;every syllable spelled out is a spark. ~ Victor Hugo,
926:To sacrifice the world to paradise is to let slip the prey for the shadow. ~ Victor Hugo,
927:We are drawn to what we lack. No one loves daylight more than a blind man. ~ Victor Hugo,
928:And do you know Monsieur Marius? I believe I was a little in love with you. ~ Victor Hugo,
929:An invasion of armies can be resisted, but not an idea whose time has come. ~ Victor Hugo,
930:As for methods of prayer, all of them are good as long as they are sincere. ~ Victor Hugo,
931:C'era una volta una fata, che fece i prati e gli alberi per gli innamorati. ~ Victor Hugo,
932:Is any one the less ill because one does not know the name of one's malady? ~ Victor Hugo,
933:Often when we think we are knotting one thread, we are tying quite another. ~ Victor Hugo,
934:O youth! thou often tearest thy wings against the thorns of voluptuousness. ~ Victor Hugo,
935:Society absolutely must look into these things since they are its own work. ~ Victor Hugo,
936:Solitude either develops the mental power, or renders men dull and vicious. ~ Victor Hugo,
937:The man is placed where the Earth ends, the woman, where the heaven starts. ~ Victor Hugo,
938:To be wicked does not insure prosperity - for the inn did not succeed well. ~ Victor Hugo,
939:Un prete opulento è un controsenso. Il prete deve tenersi vicino al povero. ~ Victor Hugo,
940:We are all under sentence of death, but with a sort of indefinite reprieve. ~ Victor Hugo,
941:Aşkın orta yolu yoktur; ya mahveder ya kurtarır. Aşk, ölüm değilse hayattır. ~ Victor Hugo,
942:Car il est des choses qui font ouvrir les yeux aux mortes dans leur tombeau. ~ Victor Hugo,
943:He always took his meals alone, with an open book before him, which he read. ~ Victor Hugo,
944:Is it not when the fall is the lowest that charity ought to be the greatest? ~ Victor Hugo,
945:It is the lineaments of the years which form the countenance of the century. ~ Victor Hugo,
946:La honradez de un gran corazón, condensada en justicia y en verdad, fulmina. ~ Victor Hugo,
947:La liberazione non è la libertà; si esce dal carcere, ma non dalla condanna. ~ Victor Hugo,
948:Not seeing people permits one to attribute to them all possible perfections. ~ Victor Hugo,
949:Red, for the blood of angry men, black, for the night that will finally end. ~ Victor Hugo,
950:The first proof of charity in a priest, and especially a bishop, is poverty. ~ Victor Hugo,
951:The first symptom of true love in man is timidity, in a girl it is boldness. ~ Victor Hugo,
952:Then live your life, above all things. Make use of your I while you have it. ~ Victor Hugo,
953:To live a life which is a perpetual falsehood is to suffer unknown tortures. ~ Victor Hugo,
954:We are given up to those gods, those monsters, those giants, — our thoughts. ~ Victor Hugo,
955:As for Toussaint, she venerated Jean Valjean and liked everything he did. One ~ Victor Hugo,
956:As he wished always to appear in mourning, he clothed himself with the night. ~ Victor Hugo,
957:At that age, the countenance tells everything at once. Speech is unnecessary. ~ Victor Hugo,
958:Enormous gearing, whose first motor is the gnat and whose last is the zodiac. ~ Victor Hugo,
959:Heaven, on occasion, half opens its arms to us; and that is the great moment. ~ Victor Hugo,
960:If you don't build castles in the air you won't build anything on the ground. ~ Victor Hugo,
961:In joined hands there is still some token of hope, in the clenched fist none. ~ Victor Hugo,
962:In joined hands there is still some token of hope, in the clinched fist none. ~ Victor Hugo,
963:Intelligence is the wife, imagination is the mistress, memory is the servant. ~ Victor Hugo,
964:Is it not the best pity, when a man has a sore point, not to touch it at all? ~ Victor Hugo,
965:It is from books that wise people derive consolation in the troubles of life. ~ Victor Hugo,
966:Laughter is like sunshine; it chases winter away from the human face. Cosette ~ Victor Hugo,
967:Sacrificing the earth for paradise is giving up the substance for the shadow. ~ Victor Hugo,
968:Sembra che l'istinto delle famiglie miserabili sia quello di rompere il filo. ~ Victor Hugo,
969:She might have melted a heart of stone, but nothing can melt a heart of wood. ~ Victor Hugo,
970:Success is a very hideous thing. Its false resemblance to merit deceives men. ~ Victor Hugo,
971:Symmetry is tedious, and tedium is the very basis of mourning. Despair yawns. ~ Victor Hugo,
972:Teach those who are ignorant as many things as possible; society is culpable, ~ Victor Hugo,
973:The guilty one is not he who commits the sin, but he who causes the darkness. ~ Victor Hugo,
974:The most terrible of motives and the most unanswerable of responses: Because. ~ Victor Hugo,
975:The provincial dandy wore the longest of spurs and the fiercest of mustaches. ~ Victor Hugo,
976:There is something more terrible than a hell of suffering--a hell of boredom. ~ Victor Hugo,
977:[T]he small is great, the great is small; all is in equilibrium in necessity. ~ Victor Hugo,
978:To put everything in balance is good, to put everything in harmony is better. ~ Victor Hugo,
979:We are unjust towards these great men who attempt the future, when they fail. ~ Victor Hugo,
980:When infinity opens to us, terrible indeed is the closing of the gate behind. ~ Victor Hugo,
981:Work, which makes a man free, and thought, which makes him worthy of freedom. ~ Victor Hugo,
982:A doctor’s door should never be closed, a priest's door should always be open. ~ Victor Hugo,
983:All the birds that fly hold the thread of infinity in their claws. Germination ~ Victor Hugo,
984:As we have just observed, nothing trains children to silence like unhappiness. ~ Victor Hugo,
985:Et puis, tenez, monsieur Marius,je crois que j'étais un peu amoureuse de vous. ~ Victor Hugo,
986:Great grief is a divine and terrible radiance which transfigures the wretched. ~ Victor Hugo,
987:Há sempre na reflexão uma certa quantidade de rebelião íntima, que o irritava. ~ Victor Hugo,
988:He who is not master of his own thoughts is not accountable for his own deeds. ~ Victor Hugo,
989:In love, such a word, whispered, is a mysterious kiss of the soul to the soul. ~ Victor Hugo,
990:Las mujeres juegan con su belleza como los niños con un cuchillo, y se hieren. ~ Victor Hugo,
991:Mais les enfants ne connaissent point ce bris de prison qu'on nomme le suicide ~ Victor Hugo,
992:Never was keener anguish lavished upon a thing more charming or more delicate. ~ Victor Hugo,
993:No one knows like a woman how to say things which are at once gentle and deep. ~ Victor Hugo,
994:Not seeing people allows you to think of them as perfect in all kinds of ways. ~ Victor Hugo,
995:One resists the invasion of armies; one does not resist the invasion of ideas. ~ Victor Hugo,
996:She took recourse to the expedient of constantly terrified children. She lied. ~ Victor Hugo,
997:Smallness in a great man seems smaller by its disproportion with all the rest. ~ Victor Hugo,
998:Supreme resources spring from extreme resolutions.
Les Miserables, page 674 ~ Victor Hugo,
999:The arms of mothers are made of tenderness; in them children sleep profoundly. ~ Victor Hugo,
1000:The most ferocious creatures are disarmed by caresses bestowed on their young. ~ Victor Hugo,
1001:The sadness which reigned everywhere was but an excuse for unfailing kindness. ~ Victor Hugo,
1002:The Unknown is an ocean. What is conscience? It is the compass of the Unknown. ~ Victor Hugo,
1003:This book is a drama whose first character is the Infinite. Man is the second. ~ Victor Hugo,
1004:We are in the hands of those gods, those monsters, those giants: our thoughts. ~ Victor Hugo,
1005:A frightful exchange of metaphors took place between the maskers and the crowd. ~ Victor Hugo,
1006:All the forces in the world are not so powerful as an idea whose time has come. ~ Victor Hugo,
1007:A smile is the same as sunshine; it banishes winter from the human countenance. ~ Victor Hugo,
1008:Es propio de las personas felices desear que las demás también lo sean. Buscaba ~ Victor Hugo,
1009:Et puis, tenez, monsieur Marius, je crois que j'étais un peu amoureuse de vous. ~ Victor Hugo,
1010:Frigiven, men inte alls fri. Han hade undsluppit fängelset - men inte straffet. ~ Victor Hugo,
1011:He never went out without a book under his arm and he often came home with two. ~ Victor Hugo,
1012:His mind could do without faith, but his heart could not do without friendship. ~ Victor Hugo,
1013:It is man's consolation that the future is to be a sunrise instead of a sunset. ~ Victor Hugo,
1014:Love is an old invention but it is one that is always new. Make the most of it. ~ Victor Hugo,
1015:MUSIC expressed what cannot be said and on which it is IMPOSSEBLE TO BE SILENT. ~ Victor Hugo,
1016:My day's work will begin again the next morning. The tomb is not a blind alley. ~ Victor Hugo,
1017:Oh! if the good hearts had the fat purses, how much better everything would go! ~ Victor Hugo,
1018:One can perish from being undermined as well as from being struck by lightning. ~ Victor Hugo,
1019:Si eres piedra, sé imán; si eres planta; sé sensitiva; si eres hombre, sé amor. ~ Victor Hugo,
1020:The circumstances of happiness are not enough, there must also be peace of mind ~ Victor Hugo,
1021:The hatred of luxury is not an intelligent hatred. It implies a hatred of arts. ~ Victor Hugo,
1022:The man who is not loved soars like a vulture over the mistresses of other men; ~ Victor Hugo,
1023:The world is like Olympus - even a thief is accepted in it if he is also a god. ~ Victor Hugo,
1024:To teach reading, means to light the fire; every syllable spelled out sparkles. ~ Victor Hugo,
1025:What happened between those two beings? Nothing. They were adoring one another. ~ Victor Hugo,
1026:When those we love are in question, our prudence invents every sort of madness. ~ Victor Hugo,
1027:Where the telescope ends the microscope begins, and which has the wider vision? ~ Victor Hugo,
1028:Ye who suffer because ye love, love yet more. To die of love, is to live in it. ~ Victor Hugo,
1029:Almost all our desires, when examined, contain something too shameful to reveal. ~ Victor Hugo,
1030:Das Lachen ist die Sonne, die aus dem menschlichen Antlitz den Winter vertreibt. ~ Victor Hugo,
1031:Every blade has two edges; he who wounds with one wounds himself with the other. ~ Victor Hugo,
1032:Every blade has two edges; he who wounds with the one is wounded with the other. ~ Victor Hugo,
1033:God will reward you,' he said. 'You must be an angel since you care for flowers. ~ Victor Hugo,
1034:Gutenberg's invention of printing is the greatest event-the mother of revolution ~ Victor Hugo,
1035:He never went out without a book under his arm, and he often came back with two. ~ Victor Hugo,
1036:In becoming dirt, she has been turned to stone. To touch her is to feel a chill. ~ Victor Hugo,
1037:Intelligence is the wife, imagination is your mistress and memory is your slave. ~ Victor Hugo,
1038:La vérité est comme le soleil, elle fait tout voir et ne se laisse pas regarder. ~ Victor Hugo,
1039:Lavorava per vivere; poi, sempre per vivere, poiché anche il cuore ha fame, amò. ~ Victor Hugo,
1040:Per impadronirsi di un cinghiale ci vuole scienza di cacciatore e forza di cani. ~ Victor Hugo,
1041:Sans la moindre métaphore et dans toute l'acception du mot, vivre, c'est brûler. ~ Victor Hugo,
1042:The nourishment of the people is a good object; to massacre them is a bad means. ~ Victor Hugo,
1043:This cavern is below all, and the enemy of all; it is hatred, without exception. ~ Victor Hugo,
1044:To-morrow fulfils its work irresistibly, and it is already fulfilling it to-day. ~ Victor Hugo,
1045:Une habitude idiote qu'ont les peuples, c'est d'attribuer au roi ce qu'ils font. ~ Victor Hugo,
1046:Vi sono cose che non si deve neppure tentare di dipingere: il sole è fra queste. ~ Victor Hugo,
1047:hasret; özlenenden uzak mı kalmaktır?
özlenen yakındayken hicran duyulamaz mı? ~ Victor Hugo,
1048:If we ever feel the need to follow something, let it be our own Divine intuition. ~ Victor Hugo,
1049:Jacques Coppenole, calzettaio. Hai udito, usciere? Niente di più, niente di meno. ~ Victor Hugo,
1050:Ma sentì che fortificare la sua intelligenza significava fortificare il suo odio. ~ Victor Hugo,
1051:The soul does not give itself up to despair until it has exhausted all illusions. ~ Victor Hugo,
1052:The soul in the darkness sins, but the real sinner is he who caused the darkness. ~ Victor Hugo,
1053:We need those who pray constantly to compensate for those who do not pray at all. ~ Victor Hugo,
1054:y a des Benvenuto Cellini au bagne, de même que dans la langue il y a des Villon. ~ Victor Hugo,
1055:Because one doesn't like the way things are is no reason to be unjust towards God. ~ Victor Hugo,
1056:Death belongs only to God. By what right to men tamper with a thing so unknowable? ~ Victor Hugo,
1057:Death belongs only to God. What right have men to lay hands on a thing so unknown? ~ Victor Hugo,
1058:Each man should frame life so that at some future hour fact and his dreaming meet. ~ Victor Hugo,
1059:Human society, the world, and the whole of mankind is to be found in the alphabet. ~ Victor Hugo,
1060:I consent to live. All is not at an end on earth since we can still talk nonsense. ~ Victor Hugo,
1061:ignorance, changed to stupidity, was the equal of intelligence changed to despair. ~ Victor Hugo,
1062:In the case of sand as in that of woman, there is a fineness which is treacherous. ~ Victor Hugo,
1063:Jehan, Jehan! All this will have a bad end."
"It'll have had a good beginning. ~ Victor Hugo,
1064:La excarcelación no es la libertad. Se acaba el presidio, pero no la condena. Esto ~ Victor Hugo,
1065:Mais où sont les neiges d'antan?

But where are the snows of years gone by? ~ Victor Hugo,
1066:...mothers are often fondest of the child which has caused them the greatest pain. ~ Victor Hugo,
1067:Nos pères avaient un Paris de pierre ; nos fils auront un Paris de plâtre.   Quant ~ Victor Hugo,
1068:Remplacer la pensée par la rêverie, c’est confondre un poison avec une nourriture. ~ Victor Hugo,
1069:Revolution is the accession of the peoples, and, at the bottom, the People is Man. ~ Victor Hugo,
1070:The hospital was a low and narrow building of a single story, with a small garden. ~ Victor Hugo,
1071:There is in every village a torch - the teacher; and an extinguisher - the priest. ~ Victor Hugo,
1072:There is neither a foreign war nor a civil war; there is only just and unjust war. ~ Victor Hugo,
1073:Asemeni unui mut care ştie un secret, natura pare uneori că vrea să ne spună totul. ~ Victor Hugo,
1074:At the shrine of friendship never say die, let the wine of friendship never run dry ~ Victor Hugo,
1075:But the work of the wise is one thing and the work of the merely clever is another. ~ Victor Hugo,
1076:Citizens, the nineteenth century is great, but the twentieth century will be happy. ~ Victor Hugo,
1077:composed of all the innocence of the present, and of all the passion of the future. ~ Victor Hugo,
1078:Este arte magnífico, creado por los vándalos, ha sido asesinado por los académicos. ~ Victor Hugo,
1079:For prying into any human affairs, non are equal to those whom it does not concern. ~ Victor Hugo,
1080:If you ask the great city, ‘Who is this person?,’ she will answer, ‘He is my child. ~ Victor Hugo,
1081:In a little town, there are many mouths which talk, and very few heads which think. ~ Victor Hugo,
1082:It is a terrible thing to interrogate the shadow. Who knows what its reply will be? ~ Victor Hugo,
1083:Kings are for nations in their swaddling-clothes: France has attained her majority. ~ Victor Hugo,
1084:La scarcerazione non è liberazione. Si esce dal bagno penale ma non dalla condanna. ~ Victor Hugo,
1085:Les révolutions sont de magnifiques improvisatrices. Un peu échevelées quelquefois. ~ Victor Hugo,
1086:One can resist the invasion of an army but one cannot resist the invasion of ideas. ~ Victor Hugo,
1087:Police chiefs don't think a cat can possibly turn into a lion; and yet, it happens. ~ Victor Hugo,
1088:So long as ignorance and misery remain on earth, books like this cannot be useless. ~ Victor Hugo,
1089:The left-handed are precious; they take places which are inconvenient for the rest. ~ Victor Hugo,
1090:The ode lives upon the ideal, the epic upon the grandiose, the drama upon the real. ~ Victor Hugo,
1091:The pots jingled, quarrels arose, and broken mugs occasioned a destruction of rags. ~ Victor Hugo,
1092:There is not a metaphor, not an analogy, in slang, which does not contain a lesson. ~ Victor Hugo,
1093:To learn to read is to light a fire; every syllable that is spelled out is a spark. ~ Victor Hugo,
1094:To-morrow fulfils its work irresistibly, and it is already fulfilling it to-day. It ~ Victor Hugo,
1095:To see nothing of a person makes it possible to credit him with all the perfection. ~ Victor Hugo,
1096:Try as you will, you cannot annihilate that eternal relic of the human heart, love. ~ Victor Hugo,
1097:Vulgarity is an old Narcissus who adores himself and applauds the common vulgarity. ~ Victor Hugo,
1098:Work is the law of life, and to reject it as boredom is to submit to it as torment. ~ Victor Hugo,
1099:You who suffer because you love, love still more. To die of love, is to live by it. ~ Victor Hugo,
1100:A criminal remains a criminal whether he uses a convict's suit or a monarch's crown. ~ Victor Hugo,
1101:Así como los hombres cansados exigen reposo, los hechos consumados exigen garantías. ~ Victor Hugo,
1102:Blacheville smiles with the self-satisfied smugness of a man whose vanity is tickled ~ Victor Hugo,
1103:But logic ignores the more-or-less as absolutely as the sun ignores the candlelight. ~ Victor Hugo,
1104:By continually going out for reverie, a day comes when you go out to drown yourself. ~ Victor Hugo,
1105:C'est une étrange prétention des hommes de vouloir que l'amour conduise quelque part ~ Victor Hugo,
1106:Enjolras caught glimpses of a luminous uprising under the dark skirts of the future. ~ Victor Hugo,
1107:For prying into any human affairs, none are equal to those whom it does not concern. ~ Victor Hugo,
1108:Give to a being the useless, and deprive him of the needful, and you have the gamin. ~ Victor Hugo,
1109:Great perils have this beauty, that they bring to light the fraternity of strangers. ~ Victor Hugo,
1110:He had no shelter, no bread, no fire, no love; but he was merry because he was free. ~ Victor Hugo,
1111:he had the face of a businessman and the air of a rogue. They sometimes go together. ~ Victor Hugo,
1112:I refuse the oration of all churches. I ask a prayer of all souls. I believe in God. ~ Victor Hugo,
1113:O mais belo altar – dizia – é a alma de um infeliz que agradece a Deus um benefício. ~ Victor Hugo,
1114:Or, donner la grosse cloche en mariage à Quasimodo, c'était donner Juliette à Roméo. ~ Victor Hugo,
1115:She worked to live; then, also to live, for the heart too has its hunger, she loved. ~ Victor Hugo,
1116:There is nothing more powerful than an idea whose time has come,” said Victor Hugo ~ Peter M Senge,
1117:The utmost extremity of degradation is the obscene merriment to which it gives rise. ~ Victor Hugo,
1118:To cling to his paradise and become a devil or become a saint by going back to hell? ~ Victor Hugo,
1119:We should judge a man much more surely from what he dreams than from what he thinks. ~ Victor Hugo,
1120:Words being but a breath, the stir of awakened minds is like the rustling of leaves. ~ Victor Hugo,
1121:An invasion of armies can be resisted, but not an invasion of ideas.” —Victor Hugo ~ John C Maxwell,
1122:A person may not want any more of his cake; but that is no reason for giving it away. ~ Victor Hugo,
1123:believe, in St. Augustine,—'Place your hopes in the man from whom you do not inherit. ~ Victor Hugo,
1124:Does not beauty confer a benefit upon us, even by the simple fact of being beautiful? ~ Victor Hugo,
1125:Do what you will, you cannot annihilate that eternal relic in the heart of man, love. ~ Victor Hugo,
1126:During a wise man's whole life, his destiny holds his philosophy in a state of siege. ~ Victor Hugo,
1127:E avremmo intorno a noi cose tanto vecchie, che ci sembrerebbero completamente nuove. ~ Victor Hugo,
1128:Great perils share this beauty, that they bring to light the fraternity of strangers. ~ Victor Hugo,
1129:Il n'a pas besoin de dire qu'il aime Paris ; Paris est la ville natale de son esprit. ~ Victor Hugo,
1130:il n’y a ni mauvaises herbes ni mauvais hommes. Il n’y a que de mauvais cultivateurs. ~ Victor Hugo,
1131:in becoming malicious he only picked up the weapon with which he had been wounded. He ~ Victor Hugo,
1132:In every village there is a candle, the teacher;
and an extinguisher, the clergy. ~ Victor Hugo,
1133:It has always belonged to the truly great and strong to care for the weak and feeble. ~ Victor Hugo,
1134:Let us fear the worst, but work with faith; the best will always take care of itself. ~ Victor Hugo,
1135:Music expresses that which cannot be said and on which it is impossible to be silent. ~ Victor Hugo,
1136:Postoji razlika koja odvaja anđela s labudovim krilima od anđela s orlovskim krilima. ~ Victor Hugo,
1137:Reason is intelligence taking exercise. Imagination is intelligence with an erection. ~ Victor Hugo,
1138:The beautiful is as useful as the useful." He added after a pause, "More so, perhaps. ~ Victor Hugo,
1139:This demonstrates the novel truth - that great events have incalculable consequences. ~ Victor Hugo,
1140:To this celestial kindness he opposed pride, which is the fortress of evil within us. ~ Victor Hugo,
1141:True history being a mixture of all things, the true historian mingles in everything. ~ Victor Hugo,
1142:Where the telescope ends, the microscope begins. Which of the two has a grander view? ~ Victor Hugo,
1143:with the exception of wars of liberation, everything that armies do is by foul means. ~ Victor Hugo,
1144:At the end of life death is a departure; but at life's beginning a departure is death. ~ Victor Hugo,
1145:Dacă ești piatră, fii magnet; dacă ești plantă, fii simțire, dacă ești om, fii iubire. ~ Victor Hugo,
1146:For dogs we kings should have lions, and for cats, tigers. The great benefits a crown. ~ Victor Hugo,
1147:Hay encuentros que nos ligan, y casualidades que nos impulsan por el camino del deber. ~ Victor Hugo,
1148:If a writer wrote merely for his time, I would have to break my pen and throw it away. ~ Victor Hugo,
1149:If you are stone, be magnetic; if a plant, be sensitive; but if you are human be love. ~ Victor Hugo,
1150:It is on December nights, with the thermometer at zero, that we most think of the sun. ~ Victor Hugo,
1151:Nothing is really small; whoever is open to the deep penetration of nature knows this. ~ Victor Hugo,
1152:No ver a las personas es una cosa que permite suponer en ellas todas las perfecciones. ~ Victor Hugo,
1153:Questro libro è un dramma in cui il primo personaggio è l'infinito: l'uomo il secondo. ~ Victor Hugo,
1154:Recima uvek izmakne onaj neshvatljivi deo duse.Za izraz postoje granice,misao ih nema. ~ Victor Hugo,
1155:The incubation of insurrections gives the retort to the premeditation of coups d'etat. ~ Victor Hugo,
1156:Ausencia de luz en la tierra como en el cielo; ni una lámpara abajo, ni un astro arriba ~ Victor Hugo,
1157:Close by the Rights of Man, at the least set beside them, are the Rights of the Spirit. ~ Victor Hugo,
1158:En France, que de gens à longues oreilles : ânes en littérature, lièvres en politique ! ~ Victor Hugo,
1159:Examine the road over which the fault has passed.
- Charles Francios Bienvenu Myriel ~ Victor Hugo,
1160:Have but luck, and you will have the rest; be fortunate, and you will be thought great. ~ Victor Hugo,
1161:Hope in a child who has never known anything but despair is a sweet and touching thing. ~ Victor Hugo,
1162:It is in Paris that the beating of Europe’s heart is felt. Paris is the city of cities. ~ Victor Hugo,
1163:It is the same with wretchedness as with everything else. It ends by becoming bearable. ~ Victor Hugo,
1164:It was like a hand which had opened and thrown suddenly upon her a handful of sunbeams. ~ Victor Hugo,
1165:Man does not understand nor accept immortality except on condition of self-remembrance. ~ Victor Hugo,
1166:Music expresses that which cannot be put into words and that which cannot remain silent ~ Victor Hugo,
1167:Nessuno è meglio adatto a spiare le azioni d'una persona, di coloro cui non riguardano. ~ Victor Hugo,
1168:Nothing is so charming as the ruddy tints that happiness can shed around a garret room. ~ Victor Hugo,
1169:She flourishes and grows green amid ruins; she has ivy for the stones and love for man. ~ Victor Hugo,
1170:The counterfeits of the past assume false names, and gladly call themselves the future. ~ Victor Hugo,
1171:The holy law of Jesus Christ governs our civilisation, but it does not yet permeate it. ~ Victor Hugo,
1172:There is no one for spying on people's actions like those who are not concerned in them ~ Victor Hugo,
1173:The Unknown is an ocean. What is conscience? It is the compass of the Unknown. Thought, ~ Victor Hugo,
1174:True, I tore the drapery from the altar; but it was to dress the wounds of the country. ~ Victor Hugo,
1175:We are reassured almost as foolishly as we are alarmed; human nature is so constituted. ~ Victor Hugo,
1176:what can man do in hell, they sang; for song lingers where there is no longer any hope. ~ Victor Hugo,
1177:An army is a strange contrivance in which power is the sum of a vast total of impotence. ~ Victor Hugo,
1178:Aucun penseur n'oserait dire que le parfum de l'aubépine est inutile aux constellations. ~ Victor Hugo,
1179:Ballast yourself with reality and throw yourself into the sea . The sea is inspiration . ~ Victor Hugo,
1180:He doubted everything with an air of superiority--a great power in the eyes of the weak. ~ Victor Hugo,
1181:Il n’y a rien de tel pour épier les actions des gens que ceux qu’elles ne regardent pas. ~ Victor Hugo,
1182:In love there are no friends everywhere where there is a pretty woman hostility is open. ~ Victor Hugo,
1183:Les grands périls ont cela de beau qu'ils mettent en lumière la fraternité des inconnus. ~ Victor Hugo,
1184:Maudits soient les carrefours ! c'est le diable qui les a faits à l'image de sa fourche. ~ Victor Hugo,
1185:Mothers arms are made of tenderness, And sweet sleep blesses the child who lies therein. ~ Victor Hugo,
1186:Mother's arms are made of tenderness, and sweet sleep blesses the child who lies within. ~ Victor Hugo,
1187:Rhyme, that enslaved queen, that supreme charm of our poetry, that creator of our meter. ~ Victor Hugo,
1188:She is resigned, with that resignation resembling indifference as death resembles sleep. ~ Victor Hugo,
1189:Symmetry is ennui, and ennui is the very essence of grief and melancholy. Despair yawns. ~ Victor Hugo,
1190:The most sovereign symptom of love is a tenderness that is, at times, almost unbearable. ~ Victor Hugo,
1191:To think is of itself to be useful; it is always and in all cases a striving toward God. ~ Victor Hugo,
1192:Victor Hugo once said, “There is nothing more powerful than an idea whose time has come. ~ Liz Wiseman,
1193:why comes there an hour when we leave this azure, and why does life continue afterwards? ~ Victor Hugo,
1194:Afirmava que tinha 'um sistem'. No mais, um espertalhão. Um filósofo. Existe gente assim. ~ Victor Hugo,
1195:And you will keep me safe and you will keep me close and rain will make the flowers grow. ~ Victor Hugo,
1196:A torch-flame resembles the wisdom of cowards: it gives a poor light because it trembles. ~ Victor Hugo,
1197:Ce que Paris conseille, l'Europe le médite ; ce que Paris commence, l'Europe le continue. ~ Victor Hugo,
1198:I advance in life, I grow more simple, and I become more and more patriotic for humanity. ~ Victor Hugo,
1199:I only take a half share in the civil war; I am willing to die, I am not willing to kill. ~ Victor Hugo,
1200:Liberation is not deliverance. One gets free from the galleys, but not from the sentence. ~ Victor Hugo,
1201:Look down and show some mercy if you can.
Look down, look down, upon your fellow man. ~ Victor Hugo,
1202:Love is a fault; be it so. Fantine was innocence floating upon the surface of this fault. ~ Victor Hugo,
1203:Madame Thenardier was approaching her forties, which is equivalent to fifty in a woman... ~ Victor Hugo,
1204:No queda más remedio: tienen que existir quienes rezan siempre por quienes no rezan nunca ~ Victor Hugo,
1205:The poetic element lying hidden in most women is the source of their magnetic attraction. ~ Victor Hugo,
1206:There are certain natures which cannot have love on one side without hatred on the other. ~ Victor Hugo,
1207:There is always more misery among the lower classes than there is humanity in the higher. ~ Victor Hugo,
1208:The supreme ordeal, let us say rather, the only ordeal, is the loss of the beloved being. ~ Victor Hugo,
1209:To shape the soul of a young girl, all the nuns in the world are not equal to one mother. ~ Victor Hugo,
1210:What is history? An echo of the past in the future; a reflex from the future on the past. ~ Victor Hugo,
1211:Afirmava que tinha 'um sistema'. No mais, um espertalhão. Um filósofo. Existe gente assim. ~ Victor Hugo,
1212:...and when one says student, one says Parisian: to study in Paris is to be born in Paris. ~ Victor Hugo,
1213:A person who is seated instead of standing erect—destinies hang upon such a thing as that. ~ Victor Hugo,
1214:Change your opinions, keep to your principles; change your leaves, keep intact your roots. ~ Victor Hugo,
1215:Civilization survives on the constant discovery of amity and an equal supply of damnation. ~ Victor Hugo,
1216:Every profession has its aspirants who make up the cortège of those who are at the summit. ~ Victor Hugo,
1217:God has bestowed two gifts on man: hope and ignorance. Ignorance is the better of the two. ~ Victor Hugo,
1218:His ideas assumed a kind of stupefied and mechanical quality which is peculiar to despair. ~ Victor Hugo,
1219:It is ourselves we have to fear. Prejudice is the real robber, and vice the real murderer. ~ Victor Hugo,
1220:It was all over with him. Marius loved a woman. His destiny was entering upon the unknown. ~ Victor Hugo,
1221:Tempus edax homo edacior; which I willingly thus translate; "Time is blind, man is stupid. ~ Victor Hugo,
1222:The last resort of kings, the cannonball. The last resort of the people, the paving stone. ~ Victor Hugo,
1223:The reader has, no doubt, already divined that M. Madeleine is no other than Jean Valjean. ~ Victor Hugo,
1224:We do not claim that the portrait we present here is a true one, only that it comes close. ~ Victor Hugo,
1225:What is called honors and dignities, and even honor and dignity, is generally fool's gold. ~ Victor Hugo,
1226:Yes, instruction! Light! Light! Everything comes from light, and to everything it returns. ~ Victor Hugo,
1227:...you are looking at a plain man and I am looking at a great man. Each of us may benefit. ~ Victor Hugo,
1228:A good mayor is a useful person. How can you hold back when you have the chance to do good? ~ Victor Hugo,
1229:For, to make deserts, God, who rules mankind, Begins with kings, and ends the work by wind. ~ Victor Hugo,
1230:How do we know that the creation of worlds is not determined by the fall of grains of sand? ~ Victor Hugo,
1231:... In the morning I write love letters; in the evening I dig graves. Such is life, rustic. ~ Victor Hugo,
1232:—Le plus beau des autels, disait-il, c'est l'âme d'un malheureux consolé qui remercie Dieu. ~ Victor Hugo,
1233:On a beau tout rêver. Tu dépasses le rêve. Ton œil promet l' amour, ton cœur donne le ciel. ~ Victor Hugo,
1234:We would be ashamed of our best behavior if the people knew the motives of our behaving so. ~ Victor Hugo,
1235:where the telescope ends the microscope begins, and who can say which has the wider vision? ~ Victor Hugo,
1236:You look at a star for two reasons, because it is luminous, and because it is impenetrable. ~ Victor Hugo,
1237:A joyous little creature, so beautiful, It was as if a gate of Heaven opened as she came in. ~ Victor Hugo,
1238:All history is nothing but wearisome repetition. One century is the plagiarist of the other. ~ Victor Hugo,
1239:A person who is seated instead of standing erect — destinies hang upon such a thing as that. ~ Victor Hugo,
1240:Because things are unpleasant," said Jean Val- Jean, "that is no reason to be unjust to God. ~ Victor Hugo,
1241:I bear the dungeon within me; within me is winter, ice, despair; I have darkness in my soul. ~ Victor Hugo,
1242:« Il vient une heure où protester ne suffit plus : après la philosophie, il faut l’action. » ~ Victor Hugo,
1243:La plus belle comté est Flandre ; la plus belle duché, Milan ; le plus beau royaume, France. ~ Victor Hugo,
1244:That is the explanation of war, an outrage by humanity upon humanity in despite of humanity. ~ Victor Hugo,
1245:That is to be two and to be but one. A man and a woman mingled into one angel. It is heaven. ~ Victor Hugo,
1246:The peculiarity of prudery is to station the more sentries the less the fortress is menaced. ~ Victor Hugo,
1247:There is nothing like a dream to create the future. Utopia to-day, flesh and blood tomorrow. ~ Victor Hugo,
1248:these cause the ideas of renunciation and solitude to germinate in him? Was he, in the midst ~ Victor Hugo,
1249:The toad always has his eyes fixed on heaven. Why? In order to watch the bird in its flight. ~ Victor Hugo,
1250:Zabluda je uobraziti da se sudbina može iscrpsti i da se može dodirnuti dno makar čega bilo. ~ Victor Hugo,
1251:Bestow on an individual the useless and deprive him of the necessary, and you have the gamin. ~ Victor Hugo,
1252:But what is history? An echo of the past in the future; a reflex from the future on the past. ~ Victor Hugo,
1253:Death does not concern me. He who takes his first step uses perhaps his last shoes. (Halmalo) ~ Victor Hugo,
1254:France bleeds, but liberty smiles, and before the smile of liberty, France forgets her wound. ~ Victor Hugo,
1255:God can add nothing to the happiness of those who love, except to give them endless duration. ~ Victor Hugo,
1256:Il miglior mezzo per far attendere il pubblico sta nell'asserirgli che si sta per cominciare. ~ Victor Hugo,
1257:La Tour-Gauvain avait une destinée étrange : un Gauvain l'attaquait, un Gauvain la défendait. ~ Victor Hugo,
1258:Le ciel était absolument noir, il n'y avait plus d'étoiles, mais évidemment il en voyait une. ~ Victor Hugo,
1259:momentary life has its rights, and is not bound to sacrifice itself constantly to the future. ~ Victor Hugo,
1260:One only needs to see a smile in a white crape bonnet in order to enter the palace of dreams. ~ Victor Hugo,
1261:The beautiful is as useful as the useful.” He added after a moment’s pause, “Perhaps more so. ~ Victor Hugo,
1262:The saints were his friends, and blessed him; the monsters were his friends, and guarded him. ~ Victor Hugo,
1263:The sense of smell, that mysterious aid to memory, had just revived a whole world within him. ~ Victor Hugo,
1264:trivial,—there are no trivial facts in humanity, nor little leaves in vegetation,—are useful. ~ Victor Hugo,
1265:Women play with their beauty as children do with their knives. They wound themselves with it. ~ Victor Hugo,
1266:A quarter of an hour more of this success, and there won’t be ten cartridges in the barricade. ~ Victor Hugo,
1267:Every step which the intelligence of Europe has taken has been in spite of the clerical party. ~ Victor Hugo,
1268:He who has not been a determined accuser during prosperity should hold his peace in adversity. ~ Victor Hugo,
1269:In opposition to this celestial tenderness, he summoned up pride, the fortress of evil in man. ~ Victor Hugo,
1270:Liberation is not deliverance. One gets free from the galleys, but not from the sentence. That ~ Victor Hugo,
1271:Love is like a tree, it grows of its own accord, it puts down deep roots into our whole being. ~ Victor Hugo,
1272:Nature, like a kind and smiling mother, lends herself to our dreams and cherishes our fancies. ~ Victor Hugo,
1273:Should he remain in paradise and become a demon? Should he return to hell and become an angel? ~ Victor Hugo,
1274:Sire, you are looking at a plain man, and I am looking at a great man. Each of us may benefit. ~ Victor Hugo,
1275:The great acts of love are done by those who are habitually performing small acts of kindness. ~ Victor Hugo,
1276:The most powerful symptom of love is a tenderness which becomes at times almost insupportable. ~ Victor Hugo,
1277:There is lucidity inspired by the nearness of the grave:to be close to death is to see clearly ~ Victor Hugo,
1278:The sole social evil is darkness; humanity is identity, for all men are made of the same clay. ~ Victor Hugo,
1279:We are not loved by our friends for what we are; rather, we are loved in spite of what we are. ~ Victor Hugo,
1280:A forza d'uscire per recarsi a sognare, viene il giorno in cui si esce per andarsi ad annegare. ~ Victor Hugo,
1281:And remember, the truth that once was spoken: To love another person is to see the face of God. ~ Victor Hugo,
1282:Certainly, I approve of political opinions, but there are people who do not know where to stop. ~ Victor Hugo,
1283:Good-will never added an onion to the soup, and is good for nothing but a passport to paradise. ~ Victor Hugo,
1284:Here we stop. On the threshold of wedding nights stands an angel smiling, a finger to his lips. ~ Victor Hugo,
1285:He who has not been a stubborn accuser in prosperity should hold his peace in the face of ruin. ~ Victor Hugo,
1286:His whole life was now summed up in two words: absolute uncertainty within an impenetrable fog. ~ Victor Hugo,
1287:Mirrors, those revealers of the truth, are hated; that does not prevent them from being of use. ~ Victor Hugo,
1288:On s'en va parce qu'on a besoin de distraction et l'on revient parce qu'on a besoin de bonheur. ~ Victor Hugo,
1289:so long as ignorance and misery remain on earth, there should be a need for books such as this. ~ Victor Hugo,
1290:Succeed; that is the advice that falls, drop by drop, from the overhanging fruit of corruption. ~ Victor Hugo,
1291:The abyss sometimes has these thoughtful ideas; but you will do well to beware of its kindness. ~ Victor Hugo,
1292:The beautiful is as useful as the useful." He added after a moment’s silence, "Perhaps more so. ~ Victor Hugo,
1293:The light of torches resembles the wisdom of cowards; it gives a bad light because it trembles. ~ Victor Hugo,
1294:There are plenty who regard a wall behind which something is happening as a very curious thing. ~ Victor Hugo,
1295:The soul falls into contemplation before this sanctuary, where the celebration of love is held. ~ Victor Hugo,
1296:A few feet under the ground reigns so profound a silence, and yet so much tumult on the surface! ~ Victor Hugo,
1297:A one-eyed man is much more incomplete than a blind man, for he knows what it is that's lacking. ~ Victor Hugo,
1298:But, reverend master, it is not sufficient to pass one's life, one must earn the means for life. ~ Victor Hugo,
1299:Daring is the price of progress. All splendid conquests are the prize of boldness, more or less. ~ Victor Hugo,
1300:Great minds defend values—like justice in the case of Victor Hugo, and equality for Emile Zola. ~ Maude Julien,
1301:He had a small but well stocked library. He loved books; books are a remote but reliable friend. ~ Victor Hugo,
1302:He visited the poor so long as he had any money; when he no longer had any, he visited the rich. ~ Victor Hugo,
1303:I bear the dungeon within me; within me is winter, ice, and despair; I have darkness in my soul. ~ Victor Hugo,
1304:In these creations, life and symbolic value are not in contradiction: they intensify each other. ~ Victor Hugo,
1305:La lumière est dans le livre. Ouvrez le livre tout grand. Laissez-le rayonner, laissez-le faire. ~ Victor Hugo,
1306:Les bras d'une mère sont faits de tendresse et un doux sommeil benit l'enfant qui s'y abandonne. ~ Victor Hugo,
1307:Let us study things that are no more. It is necessary to understand them, if only to avoid them. ~ Victor Hugo,
1308:Najveća sreća života je ubeđenje da smo voljeni zbog nas samih, ili još bolje, uprkos nas samih. ~ Victor Hugo,
1309:No Prefect of Police believes that a cat can turn into a lion; nevertheless the thing happens... ~ Victor Hugo,
1310:She had had sweet dreams, which possibly arose from teh fact that her little bed was very white. ~ Victor Hugo,
1311:She had had sweet dreams, which possibly arose from the fact that her little bed was very white. ~ Victor Hugo,
1312:The miserable's name is Man; he is agonizing in all climes, and he is groaning in all languages. ~ Victor Hugo,
1313:The realities of the soul are none the less realities because they are not visible and palpable. ~ Victor Hugo,
1314:Clearly, he had his own strange way of judging things. I suspect he acquired it from the Gospels. ~ Victor Hugo,
1315:Great perils have this fine characteristic, that they bring to light the fraternity of strangers. ~ Victor Hugo,
1316:Le mot tantôt comme un passant mystérieux de l'âme, tantot comme un polype noir de l'océan pensê. ~ Victor Hugo,
1317:No one could have told: all that was known was, that when he returned from Italy he was a priest. ~ Victor Hugo,
1318:Nothing can be sadder or more profound than to see a thousand things for the first and last time. ~ Victor Hugo,
1319:Nothing chills the heart like symmetry, for symmetry is ennui and ennui is at the heart of grief. ~ Victor Hugo,
1320:Nothing is more imminent than the impossible . . . what we must always foresee is the unforeseen. ~ Victor Hugo,
1321:One can no more keep the mind from returning to an idea than the sea from returning to the shore. ~ Victor Hugo,
1322:Produce una inmensa tristeza pensar que la naturaleza habla mientras el género humano no escucha. ~ Victor Hugo,
1323:Table talk and Lovers' talk equally elude the grasp; Lovers' talk is clouds, table talk is smoke. ~ Victor Hugo,
1324:The Bishop remained silent for a moment; then he turned abruptly to the director of the hospital. ~ Victor Hugo,
1325:The first symptom of love in a young man is shyness; the first symptom in a woman, it's boldness. ~ Victor Hugo,
1326:There are people who observe the rules of honor as one observes the stars, from a great distance. ~ Victor Hugo,
1327:There is one thing sadder than to see one's children die; it is to see them leading an evil life. ~ Victor Hugo,
1328:The sacred law of Jesus Christ governs our civilization, but it does not, as yet, permeate it; it ~ Victor Hugo,
1329:This blind-man's-buff musketry lasted for a quarter of an hour and killed several panes of glass. ~ Victor Hugo,
1330:To speak out aloud when alone is as it were to have a dialogue with the divinity which is within. ~ Victor Hugo,
1331:A stand can be made against invasion by an army; no stand can be made against invasion by an idea. ~ Victor Hugo,
1332:Because things are unpleasant," said Jean Valjean, "that is no reason for being unjust toward God. ~ Victor Hugo,
1333:But I have been exposed, I am pursued - by myself! That is a pursuit that does not readily let go. ~ Victor Hugo,
1334:Civil war? What does that mean? Is there any war that is not fought between men, between brothers? ~ Victor Hugo,
1335:Diamonds are to be found only in the darkness of the earth, and truth in the darkness of the mind. ~ Victor Hugo,
1336:He had caught the general malevolence. He had picked up the weapon with which he had been wounded. ~ Victor Hugo,
1337:Here we stop. Upon the threshold of wedding nights stands an angel smiling, his finger on his lip. ~ Victor Hugo,
1338:It is necessary that society should look at these things, because it is itself which creates them. ~ Victor Hugo,
1339:La lumière des torches ressemble à la sagesse des lâches; elle éclaire mal, parce qu'elle tremble. ~ Victor Hugo,
1340:Love each other well and always. There is nothing else but that in the world: love for each other. ~ Victor Hugo,
1341:My friends, remember this: There are no bad herbs, and no bad men; there are only bad cultivators. ~ Victor Hugo,
1342:Once his decision had been taken, he waited for the right opportunity. It was not long coming. Old ~ Victor Hugo,
1343:Once she looked up from her work and was floored by the anxious way her father was looking at her. ~ Victor Hugo,
1344:Suddenly she let fly with this: "It's nice here!"

It was a ghastly dump, but she felt free. ~ Victor Hugo,
1345:There is in every village a torch—the teacher: and an extinguisher—the clergyman. —VICTOR HUGO ~ Richard Dawkins,
1346:Those who do deeds sovereignly great are always sure of being served by somebody in the multitude. ~ Victor Hugo,
1347:We do not claim that the portrait we are making is the whole truth, only that it is a resemblance. ~ Victor Hugo,
1348:When a man does wrong, he should do all the wrong he can; it is madness to stop half-way in crime! ~ Victor Hugo,
1349:When grace is joined with wrinkles, it is adorable. There is an unspeakable dawn in happy old age. ~ Victor Hugo,
1350:A man without a woman is like a pistol without a trigger; it is the woman who makes the man go off. ~ Victor Hugo,
1351:A wretched woman is more unfortunate than a wretched man, because she is an instrument of pleasure. ~ Victor Hugo,
1352:Esser santo è un'eccezione; esser giusto è la regola. Sbagliate, mancate, peccate, ma siate giusti. ~ Victor Hugo,
1353:Genuflection before the idol or the dollar destroys the muscles which walk and the will that moves. ~ Victor Hugo,
1354:he, "how many beds do you think this hall alone would hold?" "Monseigneur's dining-room?" exclaimed ~ Victor Hugo,
1355:Let us show that, if the people abandon the republicans, the republicans do not abandon the people. ~ Victor Hugo,
1356:The animal is ignorant of the fact that he knows. The man is aware of the fact that he is ignorant. ~ Victor Hugo,
1357:The peculiar property of truth is never to commit excesses. What need has it of exaggeration? There ~ Victor Hugo,
1358:There his wife died of a malady of the chest, from which she had long suffered. He had no children. ~ Victor Hugo,
1359:This man of lofty virtue had three domiciles in Paris solely for the purpose of evading the police. ~ Victor Hugo,
1360:Women play on their beauty as children play with their knives. And they hurt themselves on it, too. ~ Victor Hugo,
1361:I don't mind what Congress does, as long as they don't do it in the streets and frighten the horses. ~ Victor Hugo,
1362:If people did not love one another, I really don't see what use there would be in having any spring. ~ Victor Hugo,
1363:It is most pleasant to commit a just action which is disagreeable to someone whom one does not like. ~ Victor Hugo,
1364:Let us come to an understanding about equality; for, if liberty is the summit, equality is the base. ~ Victor Hugo,
1365:One of the hardest tasks is to extract continually from one's soul an almost inexhaustible ill will. ~ Victor Hugo,
1366:Philosophy is the microscope of thought. Everything desires to flee from it, but nothing escapes it. ~ Victor Hugo,
1367:she imagined that her mother’s soul had passed into this good man and had come to live close by her. ~ Victor Hugo,
1368:si salís con pensamientos de caridad, de dulzura y de paz, valdréis más que todos nosotros. Mientras ~ Victor Hugo,
1369:...the cold and bitter scorn of the passers-by penetrated her very flesh and soul like a north wind. ~ Victor Hugo,
1370:The hatred of luxury is not an intelligent hatred. This hatred would involve the hatred of the arts. ~ Victor Hugo,
1371:There is a material advancement; we desire it. There is, also, a moral grandeur; we hold fast to it. ~ Victor Hugo,
1372:There is nothing like the hand of the populace for building everything that is built by demolishing. ~ Victor Hugo,
1373:These are true felicities. No joy beyond these joys. Love is the only ecstasy, everything else weeps ~ Victor Hugo,
1374:To be perfectly happy it does not suffice to possess happiness, it is necessary to have deserved it. ~ Victor Hugo,
1375:To rove about, musing, that is to say loitering, is, for a philosopher, a good way of spending time. ~ Victor Hugo,
1376:What matters it if the earth be red! the moon remains white; these are the indifferences of the sky. ~ Victor Hugo,
1377:When I speak to you about myself, I am speaking to you about yourself. How is it you don't see that? ~ Victor Hugo,
1378:You have enemies? Why, it is the story of every man who has done a great deed or created a new idea. ~ Victor Hugo,
1379:I make little account of victory. Nothing is so stupid as to vanquish; the real glory is to convince. ~ Victor Hugo,
1380:L'âme aide le corps, et à de certains moments le soulève. C'est le seul oiseau qui soutienne sa cage. ~ Victor Hugo,
1381:Nature has made a pebble and a female. The lapidary makes the diamond, and the lover makes the woman. ~ Victor Hugo,
1382:Nous nous réveillons tous au même endroit du rêve: Tout commence en ce monde, et tout finit ailleurs. ~ Victor Hugo,
1383:Oh, love! That is to be two, and yet one. A man and a woman joined, as into an angel; that is heaven! ~ Victor Hugo,
1384:Philosophy should be an energy; it should find its aim and its effect in the amelioration of mankind. ~ Victor Hugo,
1385:Sa sazvježđima nebeskih dubina oni brkaju zvijezde koje ostaju od pačijih nogu u mekom blatu kaljuže. ~ Victor Hugo,
1386:Take an eye for an eye, turn your heart into stone, this all I have lived for, this all I have known. ~ Victor Hugo,
1387:The most beautiful of altars, he said, is the soul of an unhappy creature consoled and thankfing God. ~ Victor Hugo,
1388:There are instincts which respond to all the chance meetings in life. The little girl was not afraid. ~ Victor Hugo,
1389:There is in every village a torch – the teacher: and an extinguisher – the clergyman. VICTOR HUGO ~ Richard Dawkins,
1390:There is one thing stronger than all the armies in the world, and that is an idea whose time as come. ~ Victor Hugo,
1391:The tomb is not a blind alley: it is a thoroughfare. It closes on the twilight. It opens on the dawn. ~ Victor Hugo,
1392:Why worry about what threatens our heads or purses? Let us think instead of what threatens our souls. ~ Victor Hugo,
1393:. . . all that he might have felt of love in his entire life melted into a sort of ineffable radiance. ~ Victor Hugo,
1394:All the nuns in the world are not worth as much as one mother in the formation of a young girl's soul. ~ Victor Hugo,
1395:An army is a strange masterpiece of combination where force results from an enormous sum of impotence. ~ Victor Hugo,
1396:Because things are not agreeable," said Jean Valjean, "that is no reason for being unjust towards God. ~ Victor Hugo,
1397:England has two books, the Bible and Shakespeare. England made Shakespeare,but the Bible made England. ~ Victor Hugo,
1398:He had never known a "kind woman friend" in his native parts. He had not had the time to fall in love. ~ Victor Hugo,
1399:He was not his father, and this was not his work; but he was the master, and this was his masterpiece. ~ Victor Hugo,
1400:If God had intended that man should go backward, he would have given him eyes in the back of his head. ~ Victor Hugo,
1401:If you are a stone, be adamant; if you are a plant, be the sensitive plant; if you are a man, be love. ~ Victor Hugo,
1402:I like the laughter that opens the lips and the heart, shows at the same time the pearls and the soul. ~ Victor Hugo,
1403:In the animal world no creature born to be a dove turns into a scavenger. This happens only among men. ~ Victor Hugo,
1404:It is a shame that I am ignorant, otherwise I would quote to you a mass of things; but I know nothing. ~ Victor Hugo,
1405:It is often necessary to know how to obey a woman in order sometimes to have the right to command her. ~ Victor Hugo,
1406:Ma vie est une énigme dont ton nom est le mot. (My life is an enigma, of which your name is the word.) ~ Victor Hugo,
1407:No one is more avidly curious about other people's doings than those persons whom they do not concern. ~ Victor Hugo,
1408:One can resist the invasion of an army, but one cannot resist the invasion of ideas. —VICTOR HUGO ~ Chris Guillebeau,
1409:Pravedan čovjek mršti obrve, ali se nikada pakosno ne osmjehuje. Mi razumijemo srdžbu, ali ne i zlobu. ~ Victor Hugo,
1410:The guilty one is not the person who has committed the sin, but the person who has created the shadow. ~ Victor Hugo,
1411:The most beautiful of altars," he said, "is the soul of an unhappy creature consoled and thanking God. ~ Victor Hugo,
1412:There is in every village a torch – the teacher: and an extinguisher – the clergyman. –VICTOR HUGO ~ Richard Dawkins,
1413:There is one thing stronger than all the armies in the world , and that is an idea whose time has come ~ Victor Hugo,
1414:There is one thing stronger than all the armies in the world, and that is an idea whose time has come. ~ Victor Hugo,
1415:The soul helps the body, and at certain moments raises it. It is the only bird that sustains its cage. ~ Victor Hugo,
1416:Ako ima nečeg bolnijeg od tijela koje umire bez hljeba, to je duša koja umire jer je gladna svjetlosti. ~ Victor Hugo,
1417:All animals are to be found in men and each of theme exists in some man, sometimes several at the time. ~ Victor Hugo,
1418:Diamonds are found only in the dark places of the earth; truths are found only in the depths of thought ~ Victor Hugo,
1419:Every time that the wind blows it bears with it more of the dreams of men than of the clouds of heaven. ~ Victor Hugo,
1420:If you look in the eyes of the young, you see flame. If you look in the eyes of the old, you see light. ~ Victor Hugo,
1421:Il visitait les pauvres tant qu'il avait de l'argent; quand il n'en avait plus, il visitait les riches. ~ Victor Hugo,
1422:La palabra es soplo, el estremecimiento de las inteligencias se parece al estremecimiento de las hojas. ~ Victor Hugo,
1423:The best minds have their soft spots and sometimes feel somewhat bruised by the scant respect of logic. ~ Victor Hugo,
1424:There is no rapture in the love which is prompted by esteem; such affection is lasting, not passionate. ~ Victor Hugo,
1425:The unforeseen, that strange, haughty power which plays with man, had seized Gauvain and held him fast. ~ Victor Hugo,
1426:Where the telescope ends, the microscope begins. Which of the two possesses the larger field of vision? ~ Victor Hugo,
1427:You are adorable, mademoiselle. I study your feet with the microscope and your soul with the telescope. ~ Victor Hugo,
1428:A day will come when markets, open to trade, and minds, open to ideas, will become the sole battlefield. ~ Victor Hugo,
1429:A little girl without a doll is almost as unhappy, and quite as impossible, as a woman without children. ~ Victor Hugo,
1430:All who suffer are full of hatred; all who live drag a remorse: the dead alone have broken their chains. ~ Victor Hugo,
1431:But no sword is simple. Every blade has two edges; he who wounds with one wounds himself with the other. ~ Victor Hugo,
1432:Civil war—what does that mean? Is there a foreign war? Is not all war between men, war between brothers? ~ Victor Hugo,
1433:Diamonds are found only in the dark places of the earth, truths are found only in the depths of thought. ~ Victor Hugo,
1434:Diamonds are found only in the dark places of the earth; truths are found only in the depths of thought. ~ Victor Hugo,
1435:Emotion is always new and the word has always served; therein lies the difficulty of expressing emotion. ~ Victor Hugo,
1436:Hay siempre en el pensamiento cierta cantidad de rebelión interior, y le irritaba sentirla dentro de sí. ~ Victor Hugo,
1437:It is the habit of the envious man to absolve himself of public wrongs with his own personal grievances. ~ Victor Hugo,
1438:Love one another dearly, always. Nothing else in the world really matters but that: to love one another. ~ Victor Hugo,
1439:People weighed down with troubles do not look back; they know only too well that misfortune stalks them. ~ Victor Hugo,
1440:People who are crushed do not look behind them. They know but too well the evil fate which follows them. ~ Victor Hugo,
1441:Que lo pongan a uno en libertad no quiere decir que lo liberen. Del presidio se sale; de la condena, no. ~ Victor Hugo,
1442:Ser un santo es la excepción; ser un justo es la regla. Equivocaos, desfalleced, pecad, pero sed justos. ~ Victor Hugo,
1443:She found him insipid, silly, stupid, useless, conceited, offensive, impertinent—and extremely ugly. The ~ Victor Hugo,
1444:There is a crime commited by the society against the individual,a crime that is commited afresh each day ~ Victor Hugo,
1445:Todos sin excepción tenemos nuestros seres respirables. Si nos faltan, nos falta el aire y nos ahogamos. ~ Victor Hugo,
1446:When all was said, his fate, however ugly it might prove to be, was in his own hands; he was its master. ~ Victor Hugo,
1447:When Cosette went out with him, she leaned on his arm, proud, happy, her heart full to overflowing. Jean ~ Victor Hugo,
1448:When I speak to you about myself, I’m speaking to you about yourself. How is it that you don’t see that? ~ Victor Hugo,
1449:A man is not idle because he is absorbed in thought. There is visible labor and there is invisible labor. ~ Victor Hugo,
1450:Be it said in passing, that success is a very hideous thing. Its false resemblance to merit deceives men. ~ Victor Hugo,
1451:But that which pleases us in people who are rising pleases us less in the case of people who are falling. ~ Victor Hugo,
1452:Et ces deux âmes, sœurs tragiques, s'envolèrent ensemble, l'ombre de l'une mêlée à la lumière de l'autre. ~ Victor Hugo,
1453:Few know how much some feeble souls, who have grown old in privation and honesty, can extract from a sou. ~ Victor Hugo,
1454:in the bourgeoisie, honored situations decay through too easy relations; one must beware whom one admits; ~ Victor Hugo,
1455:L’homme a sur lui la chair, qui est tout à la fois son fardeau et sa tentation. Il la traîne et lui cède. ~ Victor Hugo,
1456:Monsieur' to a convict is a glass of water to a man dying of thirst at sea; ignominy thirsts for respect. ~ Victor Hugo,
1457:No dia em que nós não lhes formos mais convenientes, que nos anulem, mas até então ajudem-nos a caminhar. ~ Victor Hugo,
1458:One would say, to see all these snow-flakes fall, that there was a plague of white butterflies in heaven. ~ Victor Hugo,
1459:People overwhelmed with trouble do not look behind; they know only too well that misfortune follows them. ~ Victor Hugo,
1460:Sire," said M. Myriel, "you are looking at a good man, and I at a great man. Each of us can profit by it. ~ Victor Hugo,
1461:Vénérons le chien. Le chien (quel drôle de bête!), a sa sueur sur sa langue et son sourire dans sa queue. ~ Victor Hugo,
1462:Water! pretending to be pure, thou resemblest false friends. Thou art warm at the top and cold at bottom. ~ Victor Hugo,
1463:A room where one merely goes to bed costs twenty sous but a room where one retires may cost twenty francs. ~ Victor Hugo,
1464:Čovjek nije krug s jednim jedinim središtem; on je elipsa s dvije žiže. Činjenice su jedna, a ideje druga. ~ Victor Hugo,
1465:God has set his intentions in the flowers, in the dawn, in the spring, it is his will that we should love. ~ Victor Hugo,
1466:Love each other dearly always. There is scarcely anything else in the world but that: to love one another. ~ Victor Hugo,
1467:Love one another: He declared that to be complete; he desired nothing more, and it was his whole doctrine. ~ Victor Hugo,
1468:Reaction - a boat which is going against the current but which does not prevent the river from flowing on. ~ Victor Hugo,
1469:Release is not the same as liberation. You get out of jail, all right, but you never stop being condemned. ~ Victor Hugo,
1470:The most excellent symbol of the people is the paving stone. One walks on it until it falls on one's head. ~ Victor Hugo,
1471:There are fathers who do not love their children; there is no grandfather who does not adore his grandson. ~ Victor Hugo,
1472:The visit took place. It was a formidable campaign; a nocturnal battle against pestilence and suffocation. ~ Victor Hugo,
1473:Beauty is as useful as the useful. More so, perhaps. (Le beau est aussi utile que l'utile. Plus peut-etre.) ~ Victor Hugo,
1474:for it is a mistake to think that talking to one's self is not natural. Powerful emotions often speak aloud ~ Victor Hugo,
1475:His judgement demonstrates that one can be a genius and understand nothing of an art that is not one's own. ~ Victor Hugo,
1476:I believe in religion against the religious; in the pitifulness of orisons, and in the sublimity of prayer. ~ Victor Hugo,
1477:İnsan içinde bulunduğu umutsuz koşullarda bazen bir zinciri bir saç teliyle koparabileceğini sanır. (s. 55) ~ Victor Hugo,
1478:No hay nada como el sueño para crear el futuro. Lo que hoyes utopía, será carne y sangre mañana.” VICTOR HUGO ~ Anonymous,
1479:our judgement of a man would be much sounder were it based on what he dreams rather than on what he thinks. ~ Victor Hugo,
1480:The reduction of the universe to a single being, the expansion of a single being even to God, that is love. ~ Victor Hugo,
1481:The reduction of the universe to a single being, the expansion of a single being even to God, this is love. ~ Victor Hugo,
1482:The soul aids the body, and at certain moments, raises it. It is the only bird which bears up its own cage. ~ Victor Hugo,
1483:Where women are honored, the divinities are pleased. Where they are despised, it is useless to pray to God. ~ Victor Hugo,
1484:Ah," cried Gavroche, "what does this mean? It rains again! ...If this continues, I withdraw my subscription. ~ Victor Hugo,
1485:At the approach of a certain dark hour, the light of Heaven fills those who are quitting the light of Earth. ~ Victor Hugo,
1486:Cerchiamo di dirlo. Bisogna bene che la società tenga conto di queste cose, dal momento che essa le produce. ~ Victor Hugo,
1487:Cheerfulness is like money well expended in charity; the more we dispense of it, the greater our possession. ~ Victor Hugo,
1488:He had but one word for both these kinds of toil; he called them gardening. "The mind is a garden," said he. ~ Victor Hugo,
1489:Jean Valjean opened his eyes and looked at the bishop with an expression which no human tongue can describe. ~ Victor Hugo,
1490:Ladies, a second piece of advice--do not marry; marriage is a graft; it may take hold or not. Shun the risk. ~ Victor Hugo,
1491:La tempestad es un pulmón que agrega sin cesar lúgubres agravaciones a lo que ya no tiene matiz, a lo negro. ~ Victor Hugo,
1492:Por desgracia Dios les da aire a los hombres, pero la ley de lo vende. No acuso a la ley pero bendigo a Dios ~ Victor Hugo,
1493:Proper distribution does not imply an equal share but an equitable share. Equity is the essence of equality. ~ Victor Hugo,
1494:Si tout autour de moi, est monotone et décoloré, n'y a-t-il pas en moi une tempête, une lutte, une tragédie? ~ Victor Hugo,
1495:As for the bishop, the sight of the guillotine was a great shock to him, from which he recovered only slowly. ~ Victor Hugo,
1496:Between the government which does evil and the people who accept it - there is a certain shameful solidarity. ~ Victor Hugo,
1497:En esos momentos de la existencia en que el hombre tiene necesidad de orgullo porque tiene necesidad de amor. ~ Victor Hugo,
1498:In days gone by, I stole a loaf of bread in order to live; to-day, in order to live, I will not steal a name. ~ Victor Hugo,
1499:It was SHE. Whoever has loved knows all the radiant meaning contained in the three letters of this word ‘she. ~ Victor Hugo,
1500:Je pleurerais sur les enfants des rois avec vous, pourvu que vous pleuriez avec moir sur les petits du peuple ~ Victor Hugo,

IN CHAPTERS [14/14]



   8 Integral Yoga
   1 Philosophy
   1 Alchemy


   6 Nolini Kanta Gupta
   2 Sri Aurobindo


   2 Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta - Vol 07


01.02 - Sri Aurobindo - Ahana and Other Poems, #Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta - Vol 02, #Nolini Kanta Gupta, #Integral Yoga
   What is the world that Sri Aurobindo sees and creates? Poetry is after all passion. By passion I do not mean the fury of emotion nor the fume of sentimentalism, but what lies behind at their source, what lends them the force they have the sense of the "grandly real," the vivid and pulsating truth. What then is the thing that Sri Aurobindo has visualised, has endowed with a throbbing life and made a poignant reality? Victor Hugo said: Attachez Dieu au gibet, vous avez la croixTie God to the gibbet, you have the cross. Even so, infuse passion into a thing most prosaic, you create sublime poetry out of it. What is the dead matter that has found life and glows and vibrates in Sri Aurobindo's passion? It is something which appears to many poetically intractable, not amenable to aesthetic treatment, not usually, that is to say, nor in the supreme manner. Sri Aurobindo has thrown such a material into his poetic fervour and created a sheer beauty, a stupendous reality out of it. Herein lies the greatness of his achievement. Philosophy, however divine, and in spite of Milton, has been regarded by poets as "harsh and crabbed" and as such unfit for poetic delineation. Not a few poets indeed foundered upon this rock. A poet in his own way is a philosopher, but a philosopher chanting out his philosophy in sheer poetry has been one of the rarest spectacles.1 I can think of only one instance just now where a philosopher has almost succeeded being a great poet I am referring to Lucretius and his De Rerum Natura. Neither Shakespeare nor Homer had anything like philosophy in their poetic creation. And in spite of some inclination to philosophy and philosophical ideas Virgil and Milton were not philosophers either. Dante sought perhaps consciously and deliberately to philosophise in his Paradiso I Did he? The less Dante then is he. For it is his Inferno, where he is a passionate visionary, and not his Paradiso (where he has put in more thought-power) that marks the nee plus ultra of his poetic achievement.
   And yet what can be more poetic in essence than philosophy, if by philosophy we mean, as it should mean, spiritual truth and spiritual realisation? What else can give the full breath, the integral force to poetic inspiration if it is not the problem of existence itself, of God, Soul and Immortality, things that touch, that are at the very root of life and reality? What can most concern man, what can strike the deepest fount in him, unless it is the mystery of his own being, the why and the whither of it all? But mankind has been taught and trained to live merely or mostly on earth, and poetry has been treated as the expression of human joys and sorrows the tears in mortal things of which Virgil spoke. The savour of earth, the thrill of the flesh has been too sweet for us and we have forgotten other sweetnesses. It is always the human element that we seek in poetry, but we fail to recognise that what we obtain in this way is humanity in its lower degrees, its surface formulations, at its minimum magnitude.

05.01 - Man and the Gods, #Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta - Vol 01, #Nolini Kanta Gupta, #Integral Yoga
   or to which Victor Hugo gives a very similar expression:
   Nos destins tnbreux vont sous des lois immenses

1.04 - GOD IN THE WORLD, #The Perennial Philosophy, #Aldous Huxley, #Philosophy
  Today we recognize and condemn the first kind of imperialism; but most of us ignore the existence and even the very possibility of the second. And yet the author of Erewhon was certainly not a fool, and now that we are paying the appalling price for our much touted conquest of Nature his book seems more than ever topical. And Butler was not the only nineteenth-century sceptic in regard to Inevitable Progress. A generation or more before him, Alfred de Vigny was writing about the new technological marvel of his days, the steam enginewriting in a tone very different from the enthusiastic roarings and trumpetings of his great contemporary, Victor Hugo.
  Sur le taureau de fer, qui fume, souffle et beugle,
  --
  Looking backwards across the carnage and the devastation, we can see that Vigny was perfectly right. None of those gay travellers, of whom Victor Hugo was the most vociferously eloquent, had the faintest notion where that first, funny little Puffing Billy was taking them. Or rather they had a very clear notion, but it happened to be entirely false. For they were convinced that Puffing Billy was hauling them at full speed towards universal peace and the brotherhood of man; while the newspapers which they were so proud of being able to read, as the train rumbled along towards its Utopian destination not more than fifty years or so away, were the guarantee that liberty and reason would soon be everywhere triumphant. Puffing Billy has now turned into a four-motored bomber loaded with white phosphorus and high explosives, and the free press is everywhere the servant of its advertisers, of a pressure group, or of the government. And yet, for some inexplicable reason, the travellers (now far from gay) still hold fast to the religion of Inevitable Progresswhich is, in the last analysis, the hope and faith (in the teeth of all human experience) that one can get something for nothing. How much saner and more realistic is the Greek view that every victory has to be paid for, and that, for some victories, the price exacted is so high Uiat it outweighs any advantage that may be obtained! Modern man no longer regards Nature as being in any sense divine and feels perfectly free to behave towards her as an overweening conqueror and tyrant. The spoils of recent technological imperialism have been enormous; but meanwhile nemesis has seen to it that we get our kicks as well as halfpence. For example, has the ability to travel in twelve hours from New York to Los Angeles given more pleasure to the human race than the dropping of bombs and fire has given pain? There is no known method of computing the amount of felicity or goodness in the world at large. What is obvious, however, is that the advantages accruing from recent technological advancesor, in Greek phraseology, from recent acts of hubris directed against Natureare generally accompanied by corresponding disadvantages, that gains in one direction entail losses in other directions, and that we never get something except for something. Whether the net result of these elaborate credit and debit operations is a genuine Progress in virtue, happiness, charity and intelligence is something we can never definitely determine. It is because the reality of Progress can never be determined that the nineteenth and twentieth centuries have had to treat it as an article of religious faith. To the exponents of the Perennial Philosophy, the question whether Progress is inevitable or even real is not a matter of primary importance. For them, the important thing is that individual men and women should come to the unitive knowledge of the divine Ground, and what interests them in regard to the social environment is not its progressiveness or non-progressiveness (whatever those terms may mean), but the degree to which it helps or hinders individuals in their advance towards mans final end.
  next chapter: 1.05 - CHARITY

18.05 - Ashram Poets, #Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta - Vol 05, #Nolini Kanta Gupta, #Integral Yoga
   Victor Hugo, in exile,
   kept looking at the sea

2.05 - On Poetry, #Evening Talks With Sri Aurobindo, #unset, #Integral Yoga
   Sri Aurobindo: There has been an effort by Victor Hugo. His La Lgende des sicles is epic in tone, in thought and movement. And yet it is not given its right place by the critics. It does not deal with a story but with episodes. That is the only epic in the French language.
   Disciple: Some maintain that as there is no story in Dante's Divine Comedy it is not an epic.

2.2.1.01 - The World's Greatest Poets, #Letters On Poetry And Art, #Sri Aurobindo, #Integral Yoga
  Yes, I plead guilty. But that, I hope, will be no reason why Vyasa and Sophocles should remain unclassified by you. And the others they intrigue me even more. Who are these others? Saintsbury as good as declares that poetry is Shelley and Shelley poetrySpenser alone, to his mind, can contest the right to that equation. (Shakespeare, of course, is admittedly hors concours.) Aldous Huxley abominates Spenser: the fellow has got nothing to say and says it with a consummately cloying melodiousness! Swinburne, as is well known, could never think of Victor Hugo without bursting into half a dozen alliterative superlatives, while Matthew Arnold it was, I believe, who pitied Hugo for imagining that poetry consisted in using divinit, infinit ternit, as lavishly as possible. And then there is Keats, whose Hyperion compelled even the sneering Byron to forget his usual condescending attitude to wards Johnny and confess that nothing grander had been seen since Aeschylus. Racine, too, cannot be left outcan he? Voltaire adored him, Voltaire who called Shakespeare a drunken barbarian. Finally, what of Wordsworth, whose Immortality Ode was hailed by Mark Pattison as the ne plus ultra of English poetry since the days of Lycidas? Kindly shed the light of infallible viveka on this chaos of jostling opinions.
  I am not prepared to classify all the poets in the universeit was the front bench or benches you asked for. By others I meant poets like Lucretius, Euripides, Calderon, Corneille, Hugo. Euripides (Medea, Bacchae and other plays) is a greater poet than Racine whom you want to put in the first ranks. If you want only the very greatest, none of these can enteronly Vyasa and Sophocles. Vyasa could very well claim a place beside Valmiki, Sophocles beside Aeschylus. The rest, if you like, you can send into the third row with Goethe, but it is something of a promotion about which one can feel some qualms. Spenser too, if you like; it is difficult to draw a line.

27.02 - The Human Touch Divine, #Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta - Vol 06, #Nolini Kanta Gupta, #Integral Yoga
   - Victor Hugo One may recall here the famous Mahabharata story: it is the swayamvaraof princess Damayanti. Damayanti is to choose (that is to say, find out) her hero Nala from among the assembled gods who all aspired for the hand of the beautiful Damayanti. In order to confuse and baffle Damayanti all the gods put on the appearance of Nala. How to find out? How to distinguish? Damayanti was given clue by the winking eye: human eyes wink, a god's never wink. The still unwinking eye is a god's: the human eye blinks or twinkles. That is how Damayanti recognised her human partner.
   And it is precisely winking, we may say, that brings out the tear-drop - this is the hallmark of human nature. Winking or blinking means time-bound, time-made, i.e., mortality, therefore inevitably, tearfulness; on the other hand unwinking means the unbroken even stretch of eternity, i.e., immortality. It is this weakness in a thing ephemeral that opens up a secret spring in the human soul. It is a feeling, an elemental feeling that comes naturally perhaps to a humanly divine being, a saint such for example as Buddha. In this case it was named compassion, karuna -one whose being melted in deep sympathy (karuna - karunardra).In the Christian tradition it was called "pieta" (although it is not pity exactly), it is the foundation of the Christian virtue, charity, which was originally named "caritas", it is an exquisite feeling which is crudely called fellow-feeling, it is a deeper sympathy now and then termed empathy, the feeling of intimate togetherness in the root sense. It is not love either which belongs to another category of human feeling. It is in a way the very core of love, love transmuted and subtilised into its very essence: that is per haps the utmost limit of divinisation that is possible for the human element. Beyond it is the Brahman - advaitam, aksaram,

30.01 - World-Literature, #Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta - Vol 07, #Nolini Kanta Gupta, #Integral Yoga
   REAL poetry, the acme of poetical art, says Victor Hugo, is characterised by immensity alone. That is why Aeschylus, Lucretius, Shakespeare and Corneille had conquered his heart. Had he been acquainted with Sanskrit literature he would have included Valmiki and the Vedic seers. As a matter of fact, what we want to derive from poetry or any other artistic creation is a glimpse of the Infinite and the Eternal. When the heart opens wide, it soars aloft to clasp the whole universe with its outspread wings. In the absence of the spirit of universality any work of art, however fascinating, exq1Jisite, subtle or deep, is incomplete; it betrays an imperfection. And where this element of immensity is present, we get something superior even if it contains nothing else; whether it is charged with a grand significance or not, we get something that surpasses all other virtues and we see our heart full to the brim. Whatever be the matter, the, subject, the thought, the emotion or anything else, that does not touch the core of poetry. Through all these or reaching beyond them what is required is a glimpse of the vast, the waves of delight pervading the universe.
   When we read these lines of Shakespeare,
  --
   Even there poetry did not reach its deeper, its superior nature. It has had to rise one step higher: it crossed this third level and entered the fourth where poetry is in its very character vaster and wider and deeper - to be sure, Victor Hugo holds this touch of immensity. It is here that the poetic spirit has achieved a divine energising inspiration that wants to have a direct vision of the Truth and express it in words and rhythms in a noble manner. Victor Hugo may not have achieved, but he has touched the new bourne. Here the poet aims at infusing whatever is easy, simple, common and fluid with a new spirit. Nothing unnecessary, irrelevant, profuse and diffuse has any place in his creation. Ordinary everyday experiences are to be raised to the level of a vivid, luminous expression of something rare. 'Great Poetry' blossoms then and there, in this fourth stage. However fine Chaucer's first outburst,
   Enlumynd all Ytaille of Poetrie,
  --
   aeiernitatis - even a little of this saving factor saves us from a great peril. In the stark realism of a Balzac or in the winging romanticism of a Victor Hugo, or in the poised classicism of a Leconte de Lisle we get a glimpse of this very thing. That is why with all the defects we feel that the sleeping Brahman is, as it were, astir in them; that a cosmic life-force, a generous universal breath sways by in their creation, and we do not hesitate to hail them as poets of the world.
   The same thing holds good with regard to the literature of a particular nation. It is not true that poetry sweet and enthralling, the magic of the ballads, is not known to the Maoris or the Santals or the Bhils. If we leave aside the case of these uncivilised aboriginals, we come everywhere across a decent class of literature among the cultured and civilised peoples. But it is to be questioned whether that literature can be called a world-literature or, even if it be so, then to what extent? Further, it has to be seen whether the poet there has been able to go beyond the reality of physical facts, the grandeurs of emotions or the dexterities of thought and has seen the thing - his time and space and subject - sub specie aeternitatis,with the lofty vision of the Soul of the divine poet, of the god Varuna, that surpasses the immediate and the superficial, whether he has been able to raise the natural object to its supra-natural prototype.

30.12 - The Obscene and the Ugly - Form and Essence, #Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta - Vol 07, #Nolini Kanta Gupta, #Integral Yoga
   "Attachez Dieu au gibet, vous avez la croix." - Victor Hugo
   ***

BOOK II. -- PART I. ANTHROPOGENESIS., #The Secret Doctrine, #H P Blavatsky, #Theosophy
  for this, and for his Holiaetus Washingtonii,**** so Victor Hugo was ridiculed for . . . . his marvellous
  word-painting of the devil-fish, and his description of a man becoming its helpless victim. "The thing

Book of Imaginary Beings (text), #unset, #Anonymous, #Various
  In , young Victor Hugo wrote a tumultuous fifteenstanza poem Les Djinns about a gathering of these beings.
  With each stanza, as the Jinn cluster together, the lines grow

Talks With Sri Aurobindo 1, #unset, #Anonymous, #Various
  SRI AUROBINDO: There has been such an effort by Victor Hugo. His Legendes
  des siecles is an epic in conception, thought, tone and movement. It is the

The Dwellings of the Philosophers, #unset, #Anonymous, #Various
  process than that denounced by Father Hardouin. Victor Hugo (3) , citing the four best-known
  histories of France around 1830 those of Dupleix, Mezeray, Vely, and Father Daniel

the Eternal Wisdom, #unset, #Anonymous, #Various
  15) Nothing is wholly dead nor wholly alive. ~ Victor Hugo
  16) It is at all times a sensible consolation to be able to say, "Death is as natural as life." ~ Schopenhauer

WORDNET



--- Overview of noun victor_hugo

The noun victor hugo has 1 sense (no senses from tagged texts)
                
1. Hugo, Victor Hugo, Victor-Marie Hugo ::: (French poet and novelist and dramatist; leader of the romantic movement in France (1802-1885))


--- Synonyms/Hypernyms (Ordered by Estimated Frequency) of noun victor_hugo

1 sense of victor hugo                        

Sense 1
Hugo, Victor Hugo, Victor-Marie Hugo
   INSTANCE OF=> poet
     => writer, author
       => communicator
         => person, individual, someone, somebody, mortal, soul
           => organism, being
             => living thing, animate thing
               => whole, unit
                 => object, physical object
                   => physical entity
                     => entity
           => causal agent, cause, causal agency
             => physical entity
               => entity
   INSTANCE OF=> novelist
     => writer, author
       => communicator
         => person, individual, someone, somebody, mortal, soul
           => organism, being
             => living thing, animate thing
               => whole, unit
                 => object, physical object
                   => physical entity
                     => entity
           => causal agent, cause, causal agency
             => physical entity
               => entity
   INSTANCE OF=> dramatist, playwright
     => writer, author
       => communicator
         => person, individual, someone, somebody, mortal, soul
           => organism, being
             => living thing, animate thing
               => whole, unit
                 => object, physical object
                   => physical entity
                     => entity
           => causal agent, cause, causal agency
             => physical entity
               => entity


--- Hyponyms of noun victor_hugo
                                    


--- Synonyms/Hypernyms (Ordered by Estimated Frequency) of noun victor_hugo

1 sense of victor hugo                        

Sense 1
Hugo, Victor Hugo, Victor-Marie Hugo
   INSTANCE OF=> poet
   INSTANCE OF=> novelist
   INSTANCE OF=> dramatist, playwright




--- Coordinate Terms (sisters) of noun victor_hugo

1 sense of victor hugo                        

Sense 1
Hugo, Victor Hugo, Victor-Marie Hugo
  -> poet
   => bard
   => elegist
   => odist
   => poetess
   => poet laureate
   => poet laureate
   => sonneteer
   HAS INSTANCE=> Alcaeus
   HAS INSTANCE=> Apollinaire, Guillaume Apollinaire, Wilhelm Apollinaris de Kostrowitzki
   HAS INSTANCE=> Arnold, Matthew Arnold
   HAS INSTANCE=> Arp, Jean Arp, Hans Arp
   HAS INSTANCE=> Auden, W. H. Auden, Wystan Hugh Auden
   HAS INSTANCE=> Baudelaire, Charles Baudelaire, Charles Pierre Baudelaire
   HAS INSTANCE=> Benet, Stephen Vincent Benet
   HAS INSTANCE=> Blake, William Blake
   HAS INSTANCE=> Blok, Alexander Alexandrovich Blok, Aleksandr Aleksandrovich Blok
   HAS INSTANCE=> Boccaccio, Giovanni Boccaccio
   HAS INSTANCE=> Bradstreet, Anne Bradstreet, Anne Dudley Bradstreet
   HAS INSTANCE=> Brecht, Bertolt Brecht
   HAS INSTANCE=> Brooke, Rupert Brooke
   HAS INSTANCE=> Browning, Elizabeth Barrett Browning
   HAS INSTANCE=> Browning, Robert Browning
   HAS INSTANCE=> Burns, Robert Burns
   HAS INSTANCE=> Butler, Samuel Butler
   HAS INSTANCE=> Byron, Lord George Gordon Byron, Sixth Baron Byron of Rochdale
   HAS INSTANCE=> Calderon, Calderon de la Barca, Pedro Calderon de la Barca
   HAS INSTANCE=> Carducci, Giosue Carducci
   HAS INSTANCE=> Carew, Thomas Carew
   HAS INSTANCE=> Catullus, Gaius Valerius Catullus
   HAS INSTANCE=> Chaucer, Geoffrey Chaucer
   HAS INSTANCE=> Ciardi, John Ciardi, John Anthony Ciardi
   HAS INSTANCE=> Coleridge, Samuel Taylor Coleridge
   HAS INSTANCE=> Corneille, Pierre Corneille
   HAS INSTANCE=> Cowper, William Cowper
   HAS INSTANCE=> Crane, Hart Crane, Harold Hart Crane
   HAS INSTANCE=> Cynewulf, Cynwulf
   HAS INSTANCE=> Dante, Dante Alighieri
   HAS INSTANCE=> de la Mare, Walter de la Mare, Walter John de la Mare
   HAS INSTANCE=> Dickinson, Emily Dickinson
   HAS INSTANCE=> Donne, John Donne
   HAS INSTANCE=> Dryden, John Dryden
   HAS INSTANCE=> Eliot, T. S. Eliot, Thomas Stearns Eliot
   HAS INSTANCE=> Fitzgerald, Edward Fitzgerald
   HAS INSTANCE=> Frost, Robert Frost, Robert Lee Frost
   HAS INSTANCE=> Garcia Lorca, Frederico Garcia Lorca, Lorca
   HAS INSTANCE=> Gilbert, William Gilbert, William S. Gilbert, William Schwenk Gilbert, Sir William Gilbert
   HAS INSTANCE=> Ginsberg, Allen Ginsberg
   HAS INSTANCE=> Goethe, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
   HAS INSTANCE=> Gongora, Luis de Gongora y Argote
   HAS INSTANCE=> Gray, Thomas Gray
   HAS INSTANCE=> Herrick, Robert Herrick
   HAS INSTANCE=> Hesiod
   HAS INSTANCE=> Hoffmannsthal, Hugo von Hoffmannsthal
   HAS INSTANCE=> Hogg, James Hogg
   HAS INSTANCE=> Homer
   HAS INSTANCE=> Hopkins, Gerard Manley Hopkins
   HAS INSTANCE=> Horace
   HAS INSTANCE=> Housman, A. E. Housman, Alfred Edward Housman
   HAS INSTANCE=> Hughes, Ted Hughes, Edward James Hughes
   HAS INSTANCE=> Hugo, Victor Hugo, Victor-Marie Hugo
   HAS INSTANCE=> Ibsen, Henrik Ibsen, Henrik Johan Ibsen
   HAS INSTANCE=> Jarrell, Randall Jarrell
   HAS INSTANCE=> Jeffers, Robinson Jeffers, John Robinson Jeffers
   HAS INSTANCE=> Jimenez, Juan Ramon Jimenez
   HAS INSTANCE=> Jonson, Ben Jonson, Benjamin Jonson
   HAS INSTANCE=> Karlfeldt, Erik Axel Karlfeldt
   HAS INSTANCE=> Keats, John Keats
   HAS INSTANCE=> Key, Francis Scott Key
   HAS INSTANCE=> Klopstock, Friedrich Gottlieb Klopstock
   HAS INSTANCE=> Lindsay, Vachel Lindsay, Nicholas Vachel Lindsay
   HAS INSTANCE=> Li Po
   HAS INSTANCE=> Longfellow, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
   HAS INSTANCE=> Lovelace, Richard Lovelace
   HAS INSTANCE=> Lowell, Amy Lowell
   HAS INSTANCE=> Lowell, Robert Lowell, Robert Traill Spence Lowell Jr.
   HAS INSTANCE=> Lucretius, Titus Lucretius Carus
   HAS INSTANCE=> MacLeish, Archibald MacLeish
   HAS INSTANCE=> Mallarme, Stephane Mallarme
   HAS INSTANCE=> Mandelstam, Osip Mandelstam, Osip Emilevich Mandelstam, Mandelshtam
   HAS INSTANCE=> Marini, Giambattista Marini, Marino, Giambattista Marino
   HAS INSTANCE=> Marlowe, Christopher Marlowe
   HAS INSTANCE=> Marti, Jose Julian Marti
   HAS INSTANCE=> Martial
   HAS INSTANCE=> Marvell, Andrew Marvell
   HAS INSTANCE=> Masefield, John Masefield, John Edward Masefield
   HAS INSTANCE=> Masters, Edgar Lee Masters
   HAS INSTANCE=> Mayakovski, Vladimir Vladimirovich Mayakovski
   HAS INSTANCE=> Meredith, George Meredith
   HAS INSTANCE=> Milton, John Milton
   HAS INSTANCE=> Moore, Marianne Moore, Marianne Craig Moore
   HAS INSTANCE=> Moore, Thomas Moore
   HAS INSTANCE=> Morris, William Morris
   HAS INSTANCE=> Musset, Alfred de Musset, Louis Charles Alfred de Musset
   HAS INSTANCE=> Neruda, Pablo Neruda, Reyes, Neftali Ricardo Reyes
   HAS INSTANCE=> Noyes, Alfred Noyes
   HAS INSTANCE=> Omar Khayyam
   HAS INSTANCE=> Ovid, Publius Ovidius Naso
   HAS INSTANCE=> Palgrave, Francis Turner Palgrave
   HAS INSTANCE=> Petrarch, Petrarca, Francesco Petrarca
   HAS INSTANCE=> Pindar
   HAS INSTANCE=> Plath, Sylvia Plath
   HAS INSTANCE=> Poe, Edgar Allan Poe
   HAS INSTANCE=> Pope, Alexander Pope
   HAS INSTANCE=> Pound, Ezra Pound, Ezra Loomis Pound
   HAS INSTANCE=> Pushkin, Alexander Pushkin, Aleksandr Sergeyevich Pushkin
   HAS INSTANCE=> Racine, Jean Racine, Jean Baptiste Racine
   HAS INSTANCE=> Riley, James Whitcomb Riley
   HAS INSTANCE=> Rilke, Rainer Maria Rilke
   HAS INSTANCE=> Rimbaud, Arthur Rimbaud, Jean Nicholas Arthur Rimbaud
   HAS INSTANCE=> Robinson, Edwin Arlington Robinson
   HAS INSTANCE=> Rostand, Edmond Rostand
   HAS INSTANCE=> Seeger, Alan Seeger
   HAS INSTANCE=> Sexton, Anne Sexton
   HAS INSTANCE=> Shakespeare, William Shakespeare, Shakspere, William Shakspere, Bard of Avon
   HAS INSTANCE=> Shelley, Percy Bysshe Shelley
   HAS INSTANCE=> Shevchenko, Taras Grigoryevich Shevchenko
   HAS INSTANCE=> Sidney, Sir Philip Sidney
   HAS INSTANCE=> Silverstein, Shel Silverstein, Shelby Silverstein
   HAS INSTANCE=> Sitwell, Dame Edith Sitwell, Dame Edith Louisa Sitwell
   HAS INSTANCE=> Southey, Robert Southey
   HAS INSTANCE=> Spender, Stephen Spender, Sir Stephen Harold Spender
   HAS INSTANCE=> Spenser, Edmund Spenser
   HAS INSTANCE=> Stevens, Wallace Stevens
   HAS INSTANCE=> Suckling, Sir John Suckling
   HAS INSTANCE=> Swinburne, Algernon Charles Swinburne
   HAS INSTANCE=> Symons, Arthur Symons
   HAS INSTANCE=> Synge, J. M. Synge, John Millington Synge, Edmund John Millington Synge
   HAS INSTANCE=> Tasso, Torquato Tasso
   HAS INSTANCE=> Tate, Allen Tate, John Orley Allen Tate
   HAS INSTANCE=> Teasdale, Sara Teasdale
   HAS INSTANCE=> Tennyson, Alfred Tennyson, First Baron Tennyson, Alfred Lord Tennyson
   HAS INSTANCE=> Thespis
   HAS INSTANCE=> Thomas, Dylan Thomas, Dylan Marlais Thomas
   HAS INSTANCE=> Trumbull, John Trumbull
   HAS INSTANCE=> Tzara, Tristan Tzara, Samuel Rosenstock
   HAS INSTANCE=> Uhland, Johann Ludwig Uhland
   HAS INSTANCE=> Verlaine, Paul Verlaine
   HAS INSTANCE=> Villon, Francois Villon
   HAS INSTANCE=> Virgil, Vergil, Publius Vergilius Maro
   HAS INSTANCE=> Voznesenski, Andrei Voznesenski
   HAS INSTANCE=> Warren, Robert Penn Warren
   HAS INSTANCE=> Watts, Isaac Watts
   HAS INSTANCE=> Wheatley, Phillis Wheatley
   HAS INSTANCE=> Whitman, Walt Whitman
   HAS INSTANCE=> Whittier, John Greenleaf Whittier
   HAS INSTANCE=> Williams, William Carlos Williams
   HAS INSTANCE=> Wordsworth, William Wordsworth
   HAS INSTANCE=> Wyatt, Sir Thomas Wyatt, Wyat, Sir Thomas Wyat
   HAS INSTANCE=> Wylie, Elinor Morton Hoyt Wylie
   HAS INSTANCE=> Yeats, William Butler Yeats, W. B. Yeats
   HAS INSTANCE=> Yevtushenko, Yevgeni Yevtushenko, Yevgeni Aleksandrovich Yevtushenko
   HAS INSTANCE=> Young, Edward Young
  -> novelist
   HAS INSTANCE=> Agee, James Agee
   HAS INSTANCE=> Alcott, Louisa May Alcott
   HAS INSTANCE=> Balzac, Honore Balzac, Honore de Balzac
   HAS INSTANCE=> Faulkner, William Faulkner, William Cuthbert Faulkner, Falkner, William Falkner
   HAS INSTANCE=> Genet, Jean Genet
   HAS INSTANCE=> Giraudoux, Jean Giraudoux, Hippolyte Jean Giraudoux
   HAS INSTANCE=> Goethe, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
   HAS INSTANCE=> Hugo, Victor Hugo, Victor-Marie Hugo
   HAS INSTANCE=> Meredith, George Meredith
   HAS INSTANCE=> Pirandello, Luigi Pirandello
   HAS INSTANCE=> Proust, Marcel Proust
   HAS INSTANCE=> Zola, Emile Zola
  -> dramatist, playwright
   HAS INSTANCE=> Aeschylus
   HAS INSTANCE=> Albee, Edward Albee, Edward Franklin Albeen
   HAS INSTANCE=> Anderson, Maxwell Anderson
   HAS INSTANCE=> Anouilh, Jean Anouilh
   HAS INSTANCE=> Aristophanes
   HAS INSTANCE=> Barrie, James Barrie, J. M. Barrie, James Matthew Barrie, Sir James Matthew Barrie
   HAS INSTANCE=> Beaumont, Francis Beaumont
   HAS INSTANCE=> Beckett, Samuel Beckett
   HAS INSTANCE=> Brecht, Bertolt Brecht
   HAS INSTANCE=> Calderon, Calderon de la Barca, Pedro Calderon de la Barca
   HAS INSTANCE=> Capek, Karel Capek
   HAS INSTANCE=> Cervantes, Miguel de Cervantes, Cervantes Saavedra, Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra
   HAS INSTANCE=> Chekhov, Chekov, Anton Chekhov, Anton Chekov, Anton Pavlovich Chekhov, Anton Pavlovich Chekov
   HAS INSTANCE=> Congreve, William Congreve
   HAS INSTANCE=> Corneille, Pierre Corneille
   HAS INSTANCE=> Coward, Noel Coward, Sir Noel Pierce Coward
   HAS INSTANCE=> Crouse, Russel Crouse
   HAS INSTANCE=> Cyrano de Bergerac, Savinien Cyrano de Bergerac
   HAS INSTANCE=> Dekker, Decker, Thomas Dekker, Thomas Decker
   HAS INSTANCE=> Dryden, John Dryden
   HAS INSTANCE=> Eliot, T. S. Eliot, Thomas Stearns Eliot
   HAS INSTANCE=> Euripides
   HAS INSTANCE=> Fletcher, John Fletcher
   HAS INSTANCE=> Fry, Christopher Fry
   HAS INSTANCE=> Fugard, Athol Fugard
   HAS INSTANCE=> Garcia Lorca, Frederico Garcia Lorca, Lorca
   HAS INSTANCE=> Genet, Jean Genet
   HAS INSTANCE=> Gide, Andre Gide, Andre Paul Guillaume Gide
   HAS INSTANCE=> Giraudoux, Jean Giraudoux, Hippolyte Jean Giraudoux
   HAS INSTANCE=> Goethe, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
   HAS INSTANCE=> Goldoni, Carlo Goldoni
   HAS INSTANCE=> Granville-Barker, Harley Granville-Barker
   HAS INSTANCE=> Hart, Moss Hart
   HAS INSTANCE=> Havel, Vaclav Havel
   HAS INSTANCE=> Hebbel, Friedrich Hebbel, Christian Friedrich Hebbel
   HAS INSTANCE=> Hellman, Lillian Hellman
   HAS INSTANCE=> Hugo, Victor Hugo, Victor-Marie Hugo
   HAS INSTANCE=> Ibsen, Henrik Ibsen, Henrik Johan Ibsen
   HAS INSTANCE=> Inge, William Inge
   HAS INSTANCE=> Ionesco, Eugene Ionesco
   HAS INSTANCE=> Jonson, Ben Jonson, Benjamin Jonson
   HAS INSTANCE=> Kaufman, George S. Kaufman, George Simon Kaufman
   HAS INSTANCE=> Kleist, Heinrich von Kleist, Bernd Heinrich Wilhelm von Kleist
   HAS INSTANCE=> Kyd, Kid, Thomas Kyd, Thomas Kid
   HAS INSTANCE=> Lessing, Gotthold Ephraim Lessing
   HAS INSTANCE=> Lindsay, Howard Lindsay
   HAS INSTANCE=> Luce, Clare Booth Luce
   HAS INSTANCE=> Maeterlinck, Count Maurice Maeterlinck
   HAS INSTANCE=> Mamet, David Mamet
   HAS INSTANCE=> Marlowe, Christopher Marlowe
   HAS INSTANCE=> Marstan, John Marstan
   HAS INSTANCE=> Menander
   HAS INSTANCE=> Middleton, Thomas Middleton
   HAS INSTANCE=> Miller, Arthur Miller
   HAS INSTANCE=> Moliere, Jean-Baptiste Poquelin
   HAS INSTANCE=> Molnar, Ferenc Molnar
   HAS INSTANCE=> O'Casey, Sean O'Casey
   HAS INSTANCE=> Odets, Clifford Odets
   HAS INSTANCE=> O'Neill, Eugene O'Neill, Eugene Gladstone O'Neill
   HAS INSTANCE=> Osborne, John Osborne, John James Osborne
   HAS INSTANCE=> Pinter, Harold Pinter
   HAS INSTANCE=> Pirandello, Luigi Pirandello
   HAS INSTANCE=> Pitt, George Pitt, George Dibdin Pitt, George Dibdin-Pitt
   HAS INSTANCE=> Plautus, Titus Maccius Plautus
   HAS INSTANCE=> Racine, Jean Racine, Jean Baptiste Racine
   HAS INSTANCE=> Rattigan, Terence Rattigan, Sir Terence Mervyn Rattigan
   HAS INSTANCE=> Rice, Elmer Rice, Elmer Leopold Rice, Elmer Reizenstein
   HAS INSTANCE=> Robinson, Lennox Robinson, Esme Stuart Lennox Robinson
   HAS INSTANCE=> Rostand, Edmond Rostand
   HAS INSTANCE=> Sartre, Jean-Paul Sartre
   HAS INSTANCE=> Scribe, Augustin Eugene Scribe
   HAS INSTANCE=> Seneca, Lucius Annaeus Seneca
   HAS INSTANCE=> Shakespeare, William Shakespeare, Shakspere, William Shakspere, Bard of Avon
   HAS INSTANCE=> Shaw, G. B. Shaw, George Bernard Shaw
   HAS INSTANCE=> Shepard, Sam Shepard
   HAS INSTANCE=> Sheridan, Richard Brinsley Sheridan
   HAS INSTANCE=> Sherwood, Robert Emmet Sherwood
   HAS INSTANCE=> Simon, Neil Simon, Marvin Neil Simon
   HAS INSTANCE=> Sophocles
   HAS INSTANCE=> Stoppard, Tom Stoppard, Sir Tom Stoppard, Thomas Straussler
   HAS INSTANCE=> Strindberg, August Strindberg, Johan August Strindberg
   HAS INSTANCE=> Synge, J. M. Synge, John Millington Synge, Edmund John Millington Synge
   HAS INSTANCE=> Terence, Publius Terentius Afer
   HAS INSTANCE=> Tirso de Molina, Gabriel Tellez
   HAS INSTANCE=> Ustinov, Sir Peter Ustinov, Peter Alexander Ustinov
   HAS INSTANCE=> Vega, Lope de Vega, Lope Felix de Vega Carpio
   HAS INSTANCE=> Webster, John Webster
   HAS INSTANCE=> Wilde, Oscar Wilde, Oscar Fingal O'Flahertie Wills Wilde
   HAS INSTANCE=> Wilder, Thornton Wilder, Thornton Niven Wilder
   HAS INSTANCE=> Williams, Tennessee Williams, Thomas Lanier Williams
   HAS INSTANCE=> Wycherley, William Wycherley
   HAS INSTANCE=> Yeats, William Butler Yeats, W. B. Yeats




--- Grep of noun victor_hugo
victor hugo



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