"Death. The certain prospect of death could..." - Quote by Friedrich Nietzsche
Death. The certain prospect of death could sweeten every life with a precious and fragrant drop of levity- and now you strange apothecary souls have turned it into an ill-tasting drop of poison that makes the whole of life repulsive.
More by Friedrich Nietzsche
“Those who are bent on revolutionizing society may be divided into those who seek something for themselves thereby and those who seek something for their children and grandchildren.”
“The man who sees little always sees less than there is to see; the man who hears badly always hears something more than there is to hear.”
“Strideth over all mountains, and laugheth at all tragedies”
More on Death
“The joy in life is to be used for a purpose. I want to be used up when I die.”
“Man is like the foam of the sea, that floats upon the surface of the water. When the wind blows, it vanishes, as if it had never been. Thus are our lives blown away by Death.”
“Nothing is more annoying than to be obscurely hanged.”
More on Life
“Going from--toward; it is the history of every one of us.”
“What does it profit a 78-year-old woman to sit around the pool in a bikini if she cannot feed herself?”
“By all implies marry if you get a great wife/husband, you are going to be pleased. If you get a bad a single, you are going to become a philosopher.”