Famous Quotes & Sayings

Vissarion Belinsky Quotes & Sayings

Enjoy the top 7 famous quotes, sayings and quotations by Vissarion Belinsky.

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Famous Quotes By Vissarion Belinsky

Vissarion Belinsky Quotes 2143792

Do not worry about the incarnation of ideas. If you are a poet, your works will contain them without your knowledge'they will be both moral and national if you follow your inspiration freely. — Vissarion Belinsky

Vissarion Belinsky Quotes 882309

It is apparent at first glance that in The Double there is more creative talent and depth of thought than in Poor Folk. But meanwhile the consensus of St. Petersburg readers is that this novel is intolerably long-winded and therefore terribly boring ... — Vissarion Belinsky

Vissarion Belinsky Quotes 967150

I am strongly convinced that the people or society is the best and the most unerring critic. — Vissarion Belinsky

Vissarion Belinsky Quotes 971971

In order to have a literature, a nation must live, not merely on the practical, but on the moral and spiritual plane as well, contributing through its national life to the development of some side of the universal spirit of man. — Vissarion Belinsky

Vissarion Belinsky Quotes 1530896

In science one must search for ideas. If there are no ideas, there is no science. A knowledge of facts is only valuable in so far as facts conceal ideas: facts without ideas are just the sweepings of the brain and the memory. — Vissarion Belinsky

Vissarion Belinsky Quotes 1614667

But in this world of morally-warped phenomena there are rare and happy exceptions of truly great magnitude, which always pay dearly for their exclusiveness and fall a prey to their own superiority. Natures of genius, themselves unaware of their genius, they are relentlessly killed by an unconscious society as an expiatory sacrifice to its own sins ... Such is Pushkin's Tatiana. — Vissarion Belinsky

Vissarion Belinsky Quotes 1969809

The object of a comedy is not to correct morals or ridicule the vices of society; no, a comedy should depict the discrepancies between life and purpose, should be the fruit of bitter indignation aroused by the degradation of human dignity, should be sarcasm, and not an epigram, convulsive laughter and not an amused grin, should be written with bile and not diluted salt, in a word, it should embrace life in its highest significance. — Vissarion Belinsky