Theodore Dreiser

The Titan

  • Tamara Eidelmanhas quoted4 years ago
    looked strangely replete for a man of thirty-six—suave, steady, incisive, with eyes as fine as those of a Newfoundland or a Collie and as innocent and winsome. They were wonderful eyes, soft and spring-like at times, glowing with a rich, human understanding which on the instant could harden and flash lightning. Deceptive eyes, unreadable, but alluring alike to men and to women in all walks and conditions of life.
  • Vlad Shvetshas quoted2 years ago
    The world is dosed with too much religion. Life is to be learned from life, and the professional moralist is at best but a manufacturer of shoddy wares. At the ultimate remove, God or the life force, if anything, is an equation, and at its nearest expression for man—the contract social—it is that also. Its method of expression appears to be that of generating the individual, in all his glittering variety and scope, and through him progressing to the mass with its problems. In the end a balance is invariably struck wherein the mass subdues the individual or the individual the mass—for the time being. For, behold, the sea is ever dancing or raging.
  • Vlad Shvetshas quoted2 years ago
    How strange are realities as opposed to illusion!
  • Vlad Shvetshas quoted2 years ago
    In times of great opportunity and contest for privilege life always sinks to its lowest depths of materialism and rises at the same time to its highest reaches of the ideal. When the waves of the sea are most towering its hollows are most awesome.
  • Vlad Shvetshas quoted2 years ago
    One must create one's own career, carve it out, or remain horribly dull or bored, dragged along at the chariot wheels of others.
  • Vlad Shvetshas quoted2 years ago
    Say what one will, the wish buried deep in every woman's heart is that her lover should be a hero. Some, out of the veriest stick or stone, fashion the idol before which they kneel, others demand the hard reality of greatness; but in either case the illusion of paragon-worship is maintained.
  • Vlad Shvetshas quoted2 years ago
    So great is the influence of past customs of devotion that they linger long past the hour when the act ceases to become valid.
  • Vlad Shvetshas quoted2 years ago
    He said to himself over and over, "Well, I can live without her if I must," but at this stage the mere thought was an actual stab in his vitals. What, after all, was life, wealth, fame, if you couldn't have the woman you wanted—love, that indefinable, unnamable coddling of the spirit which the strongest almost more than the weakest crave? At last he saw clearly, as within a chalice-like nimbus, that the ultimate end of fame, power, vigor was beauty, and that beauty was a compound of the taste, the emotion, the innate culture, passion, and dreams of a woman like Berenice Fleming. That was it: that was it. And beyond was nothing save crumbling age, darkness, silence.
  • Vlad Shvetshas quoted2 years ago
    life must be lived and the ambitious must inherit wealth or gather it wisely
  • Vlad Shvetshas quoted2 years ago
    of all men none are so proud or vainglorious over the minor trappings of materialism as those who have but newly achieved them
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