Quotes about Existence
For the philosopher is right who says that nothing is thicker than a knife's blade separates happiness from melancholy
— Virginia Woolf
Youth so apt for pleasure that pleasure, one thought, must exist
— Virginia Woolf
Here are the dead poets, still musing, still pondering, still questioning the meaning of existence.
— Virginia Woolf
What is the meaning of life? That was all—a simple question; one that tended to close in on one with years.
— Virginia Woolf
All mists curl off the roof of my being.
— Virginia Woolf
He did not blame her; he blamed nothing, nobody; he saw the truth. He saw the dun-colored race of waters and the blank shore. But life is vigorous; the body lives, and the body, no doubt, dictated the reflection, which now urged him to movement, that one may cast away the forms of human beings, and yet retain the passion which seemed inseparable from their existence in the flesh.
— Virginia Woolf
What she liked was simply life. 'That's what I do it for', she said, speaking aloud, to life.
— Virginia Woolf
How could any Lord have made this world? she asked. With her mind she had always seized the fact that there is no reason, order, justice: but suffering, death, the poor.
— Virginia Woolf
But if there are no stories, what end can there be, or what beginning?
— Virginia Woolf
Great indeed is the sublimity of the Creative, to which all beings owe their beginning and which permeates all heaven.
— Lao Tzu
All things in the world come from being. And being comes from non-being.
— Lao Tzu
The Eternal generates the One. The One generates the Two. The Two generates the Three. The Three generates all things.
— Lao Tzu