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Thomas Mann quotes - page 5
Only indifference is free. What is distinctive is never free, it is stamped with its own seal, conditioned and chained.
Thomas Mann
This was Venice, the flattering and suspect beauty - this city, half fairy tale and half tourist trap, in whose insalubrious air the arts once rankly and voluptuously blossomed, where composers have been inspired to lulling tones of somniferous eroticism.
Thomas Mann
How else is the famous short story ‘A study in Abjection' to be understood but as an outbreak of disgust against an age indecently undermined by psychology.
Thomas Mann
Beer, tobacco, and music,” he went on. "Behold the Fatherland.
Thomas Mann
Love as a force contributory to disease.
Thomas Mann
They sang their mysterious duo, sang of their nameless hope, their death-in-love, their union unending, lost forever in the embrace of night's magic kingdom. O sweet night, everlasting night of love! Land of blessedness whose frontiers are infinite!
Thomas Mann
Six months at most after they get here, these young people - and they are mostly young who come - have lost every idea they had, except flirtation and temperature.
Thomas Mann
Paradox is the poisonous flower of quietism, the iridescent surface of the rotting mind, the greatest depravity of all.
Thomas Mann
Was it an intellectual consequence of this ‘rebirth,' of this new dignity and rigor, that, at about the same time, his sense of beauty was observed to undergo an almost excessive resurgence, that his style took on the noble purity, simplicity and symmetry that were to set upon all his subsequent works that so evident and evidently intentional stamp of the classical master.
Thomas Mann
It is a cruel atmosphere down there, cruel and ruthless.
Thomas Mann
This conflict between the powers of love and chastity ... it ended apparently in the triumph of chastity. Love was suppressed, held in darkness and chains, by fear, conventionality, aversion, or a tremulous yearning to be pure.... But this triumph of chastity was only an apparent, a pyrrhic victory. It would break through the ban of chastity, it would emerge - if in a form so altered as to be unrecognizable.
Thomas Mann
I, for one, have never in my life come across a perfectly healthy human being.
Thomas Mann
I met the New Passion, then, as democracy, as political enlightenment and the humanitarianism of happiness. I understood its efforts to be toward the politicization of everything ethos; its aggressiveness and doctrinary intolerance consisted – I experienced them personally – in its denial and slander of every nonpolitical ethos. "Mankind” as humanitarian internationalism; "reason” and "virtue” as the radical republic; intellect as a thing between a Jacobin club and Freemasonry; art as social literature and maliciously seductive rhetoric in the service of social "desirability”; here we have the New Passion in its purest political form as I saw it close up. I admit that this is a special, extremely romanticized form of it.
Thomas Mann
He was all for catharsis and purification, he dreamed of an aesthetic consecration that should cleanse society of luxury, the greed of gold and all unloveliness.
Thomas Mann
What they, in their innocence, cannot comprehend is that a properly constituted, healthy, decent man never writes, acts, or composes.
Thomas Mann
What a glorious gift is imagination, and what satisfaction it affords!
Thomas Mann
Two principles, according to the Settembrinian cosmogony, were in perpetual conflict for possession of the world: force and justice, tyranny and freedom, superstition and knowledge; the law of permanence and the law of change, of ceaseless fermentation issuing in progress.
Thomas Mann
The intellect longs for the delights of the non-intellect, that which is alive and beautiful dans sa stupidité.
Thomas Mann
With astonishment Aschenbach noticed that the boy was entirely beautiful. His countenance, pale and gracefully reserved, was surrounded by ringlets of honey-colored hair, and with its straight nose, its enchanting mouth, its expression of sweet and divine gravity, it recalled Greek sculpture of the noblest period.
Thomas Mann
My aversion from music rests on political grounds.
Thomas Mann
Extraordinary creature! So close a friend, and yet so remote.
Thomas Mann
It is not good when people no longer believe in war. Pretty soon they no longer believe in many other things which they absolutely must believe in if they are to be decent men.
Thomas Mann
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