Antoine de Saint-Exupéry

The Little Prince

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  • chyhas quoted2 days ago
    is so as not to forget it. It's sad to forget a friend. Not everyone has had a friend.

    forgetting a friend is equivalent to forgetting those shared memories. but not quite everyone has had a friend but despite that, we still treasure those moments we had to some peers who treat us well with sincerity, which our fond memories of them deeply engraved in our hearts that is very hard to forget

  • chyhas quoted2 days ago
    But, of course, we who understand life, we make fun of the numbers!
  • chyhas quoted2 days ago
    Children should be very lenient towards adults.
  • chyhas quoted2 days ago
    Grown-ups never understand anything on their own, and it is tiring for children to always have to give them explanations.
  • milagrosbareiro843has quoted2 months ago
    "The baobabs, before growing, it starts off being small.
  • milagrosbareiro843has quoted2 months ago
    Big people like the numbers. When you tell them about a new friend, they never question you about the basics. They never tell you, "What is the sound of his voice?" What games does he prefer? Does he collect butterflies? They ask, "How old is he?" How many brothers? How much does he weigh ? How much does his father earn? Then they only think they know him. If you say to the grown-ups: "I saw a beautiful pink brick house, with geraniums on the windows and doves on the roof ..." they can not imagine this house.
  • Linh Nguyễnhas quotedlast year
    But I was not reassured. I remembered the fox. We risk crying a little if we let ourselves tame...
  • Linh Nguyễnhas quotedlast year
    The words of the little prince danced in my memory:
  • Linh Nguyễnhas quotedlast year
    Here is my secret. It is very simple: one sees only with the heart. What is essential is invisible to the ey
  • Linh Nguyễnhas quotedlast year
    It would have been better to return at the same hour," said the fox. If you come, for example, at four o'clock in the afternoon, at three o'clock I shall begin to be happy. The more time will come, the more happy I will feel. At four o'clock I shall be agitated and worried; I shall discover the price of happiness! But if you come anytime, I will never know what time to dress my heart ... it takes rites.
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