Van gogh ...there is nothing more truly artistic than to love p
Found 1812 results for van gogh ...there is nothing more truly artistic than to love p
Perhaps the feelings that we experience when we are in love represent a normal state. Being in love shows a person who he should be.
Anton Chekhov
Never pretend to a love which you do not actually feel, for love is not ours to command.
Alan Watts
When you have seen as much of life as I have, you will not underestimate the power of obsessive love.
J. K. Rowling
When love is in excess it brings a man no honor nor worthiness.
Euripides
Before I met my husband, I'd never fallen in love, though I'd stepped in it a few times.
Rita Rudner
Age does not protect you from love. But love, to some extent, protects you from age.
Jeanne Moreau
Friendship marks a life even more deeply than love. Love risks degenerating into obsession, friendship is never anything but sharing.
Elie Wiesel
Between a man and his wife nothing ought to rule but love. Authority is for children and servants, yet not without sweetness.
William Penn
Love cures people - both the ones who give it and the ones who receive it.
Anonymous
If I take my whole, passionate, spiritual and physical love to the woman who in return loves me, that is how I serve God. And my hymn and my game of joy is my work.
D.H. Lawrence
Life has taught us that love does not consist of gazing at each other, but in looking together in the same direction.
Antoine de Saint-Exupery
Love is the exchange of two fantasies and the contact of two skins.
Chamfort
Love is the only element that really illuminates the darkenss.
Antonio Gala
We cannot really love anybody with whom we never laugh.
Agnes Repplier
Love is not primarily a relationship to a specific person; it is an attitude, an orientation of character which determines the relatedness of a person to the world as a whole, not towards one 'object' of love.
Erich Fromm
Love gives beauty to everything it touches. Not greed and utility; they produce offices, but not dwelling houses. To be able to love material things, to clothe them with tender grace, and yet not be attached to them, this is a great service. Providence expects that we should make this world our own, and not live in it as though it were a rented tenement. We can only make it our own through some service, and that service is to lend it love and beauty from our soul. Your own experience shows you the difference between the beautiful, the tender, the hospitable, and the mechanically neat and monotonously useful.
Rabindranath Tagore