HONORÉ DE BALZAC QUOTES VII

French novelist and playwright (1799-1850)

Felix’s wife began to find monotony in an Eden so well arranged; the perfect happiness which the first woman found in her terrestrial paradise gave her at length a sort of nausea of sweet things, and made the countess wish, like Rivarol reading Florian, for a wolf in the fold. Such, judging by the history of ages, appears to be the meaning of that emblematic serpent to which Eve listened, in all probability, out of ennui.

HONORÉ DE BALZAC

A Daughter of Eve

Tags: happiness


Speed thy way through the luminous spheres; behold, admire, hasten! Flying thus thou canst pause or advance without weariness. Like other men, thou wouldst fain be plunged forever in these spheres of light and perfume where now thou art, free of thy swooning body, and where thy thought alone has utterance. Fly! enjoy for a fleeting moment the wings thou shalt surely win when Love has grown so perfect in thee that thou hast no senses left; when thy whole being is all mind, all love.

HONORÉ DE BALZAC

Seraphita

Tags: love


Nature knows nothing but solid bodies; your science deals only with combinations of surfaces. And so nature constantly gives the lie to all your laws; can you name one to which no fact makes an exception?

HONORÉ DE BALZAC

Seraphita

Tags: nature


The moment a wife decides to break her marriage vow she reckons her husband as everything or nothing.

HONORÉ DE BALZAC

Physiology of Marriage

Tags: marriage


Of all the miseries that civil war can bring upon a country the greatest lies in the appeal which one of the contestants always ends by making to some foreign government.

HONORÉ DE BALZAC

Physiology of Marriage

Tags: government


A young bride is like a plucked flower; but a guilty wife is like a flower that had been walked over.

HONORÉ DE BALZAC

Honorine


For my part, I like those long trials of the old-fashioned chivalry. That lout of a young lord, who took offence because his sovereign-lady sent him down among the lions to fetch her glove, was, in my opinion, very impertinent, and a fool too. Doubtless the lady had in reserve for him some exquisite flower of love, which he lost, as he well deserved—the puppy!

HONORÉ DE BALZAC

Letters of Two Brides

Tags: fool


God may seem to you incomprehensible and inexplicable, but you must admit Him to be, in all things purely physical, a splendid and consistent workman.

HONORÉ DE BALZAC

Seraphita


The fate of the home depends on the first night.

HONORÉ DE BALZAC

Physiology of Marriage

Tags: fate


We think, without fear of being deceived, that married people who have lived twenty years together may sleep in peace without fear of having their love trespassed upon or of incurring the scandal of a lawsuit for criminal conversation.

HONORÉ DE BALZAC

Physiology of Marriage

Tags: fear


All poetry like every work of art proceeds from a swift vision of things.

HONORE DE BALZAC

Louis Lambert

Tags: poetry


In sleep we are living corpses, we are the prey of an unknown power which seizes us in spite of ourselves, and shows itself in the oddest shapes.

HONORÉ DE BALZAC

Physiology of Marriage

Tags: power


She worshiped her children. They were so young that she could hide the disorders of her life from their eyes, and could win their love.

HONORÉ DE BALZAC

Gobseck

Tags: children


Thwarted passion and mortified vanity are great babblers.

HONORÉ DE BALZAC

Gobseck

Tags: passion


Singular creature, he had never cared to find out a single relative among four generations counted on the female side. The thought of his heirs was abhorrent to him; and the idea that his wealth could pass into other hands after his death simply inconceivable.

HONORÉ DE BALZAC

Gobseck

Tags: death


What husband will be able to sleep peacefully beside his young and beautiful wife while he knows that three celibates, at least, are on the watch; that if they have not already encroached upon his little property, they regard the bride as their destined prey, for sooner or later she will fall into their hands, either by stratagem, compulsive conquest or free choice?

HONORÉ DE BALZAC

Physiology of Marriage

Tags: choice


Love is a religion, and its rituals cost more than those of other religions. It goes by quickly and, like a street urchin, it likes to mark its passage by a trail of devastation.

HONORE DE BALZAC

Père Goriot

Tags: love


Woman is a delightful instrument of pleasure, but it is necessary to know its trembling strings, to study the position of them, the timid keyboard, the fingering so changeful and capricious which befits it.

HONORE DE BALZAC

Physiology of Marriage

Tags: women


Humble country pleasures will enliven the monotony of my future. It shall be my ambition to enlarge the oasis round my house, and to give it the lordly shade of fine trees. My turf, though Provencal, shall be always green.

HONORÉ DE BALZAC

Letters of Two Brides

Tags: ambition


Girls brought up as you were, in a very strait-laced and puritan fashion, always pant for liberty and happiness, and the happiness they have never comes up to what they imagined.

HONORÉ DE BALZAC

A Daughter of Eve

Tags: happiness