Sunday, July 22, 2007

Cool quote 2

Am presently reading Francoise Sagan's "The Painted Lady" -- a funny, heartbreaking book. Came across these lines mentioned right at the start, and wanted to share them:

"What importance can we attach to the things of this world? Friendship? It disappears when the one who is liked comes to grief, or when the one who likes becomes powerful. Love? It is deceived, fleeting, or guilty. Fame? You share it with mediocrity or crime. Fortune? Could that frivolity be called a blessing? All that remains are those so-called happy days which flow past unnoticed in the obscurity of domestic cares, leaving man with the desire neither to lose his life nor to begin it over."
--Chateaubriand, Vie de Rance

3 comments:

crazymumma said...

such smooth words. yet so cynical, a bit hopeless.

A Muser said...

It is kind of depressing, but it got me thinking.

Debdarsan said...

I read it a long time ago, but it still haunts me... It is depressing - but so are the facts of Life.