Arthur Schnitzler Quotes & Sayings
Enjoy the top 18 famous quotes, sayings and quotations by Arthur Schnitzler.
Famous Quotes By Arthur Schnitzler
To be practical in life means to take everything seriously and nothing tragically. — Arthur Schnitzler
Most people who have been done a favor consider it an opportunity to show their incorruptibility rather than their gratitude. This is not only considerably cheaper morally, but it sometimes increases their pride so much that pretty soon they look down on their benefactor. — Arthur Schnitzler
There are all kinds of flight from responsibility. There is a flight into death, a flight into sickness, and finally a flight into stupidity. — Arthur Schnitzler
To be ready is one thing, to be able to wait is another; but to seize the right moment is everything. — Arthur Schnitzler
Martyrdom has always been a proof of the intensity, never of the correctness of a belief. — Arthur Schnitzler
So these - these were the Wanderings for which the youth of Vienna had yesterday sent him their thanks. Had he deserved them? He would not have been able to say. The whole sorry life that he had led now passed through his mind. Never had he felt so deeply that he was an old man, that not only the hopes, but also the disappointments lay far behind him. A dull hurt rose up in him. He put the book aside, he could not read on. He had the feeling that he had long since forgotten about himself. — Arthur Schnitzler
Oh, we do not understand death, we never understand it; creatures are only truly dead when everyone else has died who knew them. — Arthur Schnitzler
It's easy to write one's memoirs when one has a terrible memory. — Arthur Schnitzler
It seemed to her as if it had been an unpleasant day. She went over the actual events in her mind, and was astonished to find that, after all, the day had been like many hundreds before it and many, many more that were yet to come. — Arthur Schnitzler
Ghosts! - They exist, they exist! Dead things playing at being alive. — Arthur Schnitzler
No specter assails us in more varied disguises than loneliness, and one of its most impenetrable masks is called love. — Arthur Schnitzler
Am I sure? Only as sure as I am that the reality of one night, let alone that of a whole lifetime, can ever be the whole truth. — Arthur Schnitzler
Bertha divined what an enormous wrong had been wrought against the world in that the longing for pleasure is placed in woman just as in man; and that with women that longing is a sin, demanding expiation, if the yearning for pleasure is not at the same time a yearning for motherhood. — Arthur Schnitzler
You never so much want to be happy with a woman as when you know that you're ceasing to care for her. — Arthur Schnitzler
It seemed to him a thousand times worse to stand there as the only one unmasked amid a host of masks, than suddenly to stand naked among those fully dressed. — Arthur Schnitzler
I write of love and death. What other subjects are there? — Arthur Schnitzler