Lou Salome Quotes

We've searched our database for all the quotes and captions related to Lou Salome. Here they are! All 14 of them:

Poetry is something in-between the dream and its interpretation.
Lou Andreas-Salomé
Should we not be moved rather than chilled by the knowledge that he might have attained his greatness only through his frailties?
Lou Andreas-Salomé (Sigmund Freud and Lou Andreas-Salome Letters)
Believe me, the world won't give you any gifts. If you want to have a life, steal it.
Lou Andreas-Salomé
If you have no more happiness to give me, / Well then! you still have your pain.
Lou Andreas-Salomé
It's in giving yourself that you possess yourself
Lou Andreas-Salomé
I don't invent you at sadly cooled-off places from which you've gone away; even your not being there is warm with you and more real and more than a privation. Longing leads out too often into vagueness. Why should I cast myself, when, for all I know, your influence falls on me, gently, like moonlight on a window seat.
Rainer Maria Rilke
Conflicted creatures, that’s what we [parents] are — we give birth, without knowing to what; we educate, without knowing whom; we must answer for it, without knowing how; and we can give up neither our power nor our fear.
Lou Andreas-Salomé
Turn away from half measures and resolve to live wholly, fully and beautifully.
Julia Vickers (Lou von Salome: A Biography of the Woman Who Inspired Freud, Nietzsche and Rilke)
Songs of longing! And they will resound in my letters, just as they always have, sometimes loudly and sometimes secretly so that you alone can hear them… But they will also be different — different from how they used to be, these songs. For I have turned and found longing at my side, and I have looked into her eyes, and now she leads me with a steady hand.” ―from a letter to Lou Andreas-Salome
Rainer Maria Rilke
¿Sabe lo que es saber que, cuando muera, pueden pasar días o semanas sin que se descubra mi cuerpo, antes de que el olor fétido atraiga a algún extraño? Intento consolarme. A veces, cuando me siento más solo, hablo conmigo mismo.No demasiado alto, porque temo mi propio eco vacío.
Irvin D. Yalom (When Nietzsche Wept)
Marry me, Lou,” Nietzsche bent down on one knee, his knees creaked. He peered over top of his glasses with a gaze of pitiful defeat. He had met his match with Lou. She was brilliant, shrewd, and brave. Taking risks that other women dare not. “Get up, Friedrich,” she responded, “You know that I won’t marry you or anyone else.
Dylan Callens (Operation Cosmic Teapot)
The ancient Greeks who created the magnificent sculptures and structures were the same people who could be utterly cruel and barbaric.
Julia Vickers (Lou von Salome: A Biography of the Woman Who Inspired Freud, Nietzsche and Rilke)
Demişti ki Lou Salome, "Dünya sana hediye sunmaz. Bir yaşam istiyorsan çal onu." Bu cümleyi alın, hayatınızın duvarına asın. Çünkü dünya size hediye sunmaz, bir yaşam istiyorsanız çalın onu...
Beyza Alkoç (Sınır)
I am going to tell a story: Once Upon A Time there was a man and a woman. The man and the woman were dreaming. The man and the woman dreamed each other and when they finished dreaming they had invented each other. So I am going to tell the story of a dream: Once upon a time there was a couple: the ideal couple, the perfect couple, the archetypal couple, who would combine in their two faces the features of all the lovers of history, all those who might have been able to fall in love with each other, all those ever imagined by the poets, and all those unimagined yet. They were (or would be) Abelard and Héloïse, Venus and Tannhäuser, Hamlet and Ophelia, Agathe and Ulrich, Solomon and the Shulamite maiden, the Consul and Yvonne, Daphnis and Chloe, Percy and Mary Shelley, the narrator and Albertine, Jocasta and Oedipus, Hans Castorp and Clavdia Chauchat, Pygmalion and Galatea, Othello and Desdemona, Penelope and Ulysses, Baudelaire and Jeanne Duval, Laura and Petrarch, Humbert Humbert and Lolita, Elizabeth Barrett and Robert Browning, Alonso Quijano and Dulcinea, Leda and the Swan, Adam and Eve, Wagner and Cosima, Pelléas and Mélisande, Cleopatra and Mark Antony, Calisto and Melibea, Faust and Gretchen, Orpheus and Eurydice, Romeo and Juliet, Heathcliff and Cathy, Tristan and Isolde, Rilke and Lou Andreas-Salome, Jason and Medea, Miranda and Ferdinand, Kafka and Milena, Electra and Agamemnon, Don Juan and Thisbe, von Aschenbach and Tadzio, Poe and Annabel Lee, Borges and Matilde Urbach. As the curtain rises they are kissing each other passionately in the middle of a steamy, shadowed park, underneath the pines. Is this not perhaps the ideal beginning of any love story? Not to forget that there is also a unicorn, a tree laden with garnet-colored fruit, and a large neon sign hanging above them both that reads: A Mon Suel Desir. If we look carefully we will notice that the park is surrounded by water on all sides—that is, this is an island. The story might well begin at any moment.
Julieta Campos