real books should be the offspring not of daylight and casual talk but of darkness and silence - Marcel Proust
" "real books should be the offspring not of daylight and casual talk but of darkness and silence
English
Collect this quote
About Marcel Proust
Valentin Louis Georges Eugène Marcel Proust (10 July 1871 – 18 November 1922) was a French novelist, essayist and critic.
Biography information from Wikiquote
Also Known As
Alternative Names:
Valentin Louis Georges Eugène Marcel Proust
•
Proust
•
Valentin Louis Georges Eugéne Marcel Proust
•
Valentin-Louis-Georges-Eugéne-Marcel Proust
•
Valentin Louis Georges Eugene Marcel Proust
•
Valentin-Louis-Georges-Eugene-Marcel Proust
•
Bernard d'Algouvres
•
Valentin-Louis-Georges-Eugène-Marcel Proust
Related quotes. More quotes will automatically load as you scroll down, or you can use the load more buttons.
Additional quotes by Marcel Proust
In reading, friendship is restored immediately to its original purity. With books there is no forced sociability. If we pass the evening with those friends — books — it’s because we really want to. When we leave them, we do so with regret and, when we have left them, there are none of those thoughts that spoil friendship: “What did they think of us?” — “Did we make a mistake and say something tactless?” — “Did they like us?” — nor is there the anxiety of being forgotten because of displacement by someone else. All such agitating thoughts expire as we enter the pure and calm friendship of reading.
PREMIUM FEATURE
Advanced Search Filters
Filter search results by source, date, and more with our premium search tools.
In theory one is aware that the earth revolves, but in practice one does not perceive it, the ground upon which one treads seems not to move, and one can live undisturbed. So it is with Time in one’s life. And to make its flight perceptible novelists are obliged, by wildly accelerating the beat of the pendulum, to transport the reader in a couple of minutes over ten, or twenty, or even thirty years. At the top of one page we have left a lover full of hope; at the foot of the next we meet him again, a bowed old man of eighty, painfully dragging himself on his daily walk about the courtyard of an almshouse, scarcely replying to what is said to him, oblivious of the past.
Loading...