Mixture Of Frailties Quotes

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We kill, kill, kill. Flesh, spirit, whatever gets in our way. It's like our whole purpose is to extinguish life. And for those who live, there's memory, like a curse. We're such a mixture of frailty and cruelty.
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Douglas Clegg
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But the character of the music emphasized the tale as allegory--humorous, poignant, humane allegory--disclosing the metamorphosis of life itself, in which man moves from confident inexperience through the bitterness of experience, toward the rueful wisdom of self-knowledge.
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Robertson Davies (A Mixture of Frailties (Salterton Trilogy, #3))
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Wisdom may be rented...on the experience of other people, but we buy it at an inordinate price before we make it our own forever.
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Robertson Davies (The Salterton Trilogy: Tempest-Tost / Leaven of Malice / A Mixture of Frailties)
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His reply had that clarity, objectivity and reasonableness which is possible only to advisers who have completely missed the point.
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Robertson Davies (A Mixture of Frailties (Salterton Trilogy, #3))
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The second hugely seductive move is to signal that we view the other person with a mixture of tenderness and realism. It’s often imagined that it’ll be seductive to convey an air of adoration, to hint that the other strikes us as exceptionally attractive or accomplished. But surprisingly, it is deeply worrying to be obviously adored, because everyone, from the inside, knows very well that they don’t deserve intense acclaim, are often disappointing and sometimes quite simply pitiful. So seduction involves suggesting both that one likes the other person a lot – and yet can see their frailty quite clearly, that one cope with it and forgive it with gentle indulgence. One might, towards the end of the evening drop in a small warm tease that alludes to our understanding of some less than perfect side of them: β€˜I suppose you stayed under the duvet feeling a bit sorry for yourself after that?’ we might ask, with a benign smile. Such a gesture implies that we like another person not under a mistaken notion that they are flawless but with a full and unfrightened appreciation of their frailties. That ends up being powerfully seductive because it is, first and foremost, reassuring. It suggests the ideal way that we would like someone to view us within the testing conditions of a real relationship. We crave not admiration, but to be properly known and yet still liked and forgiven.
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Alain de Botton
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Wit and high spirits and a sense of fun- yes, they're wonderful things. But a sense of humour- a real one- is a rarity and can be utter hell. Because it's immoral, you know, in the real sense of the word: I mean, it makes its own laws; and it possesses the person who has it like a demon. Fools talk about it as though it were the same thing as a sense of balance, but believe me, it's not. It's a sense of anarchy, and a sense of chaos. Thank God it's rare.
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Robertson Davies (A Mixture of Frailties (Salterton Trilogy, #3))
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He came of a generation to which any girl, before she is married, is a kind of unexploded bomb.
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Robertson Davies (The Salterton Trilogy: Tempest-Tost / Leaven of Malice / A Mixture of Frailties)