STEFAN ZWEIG QUOTES

Austrian novelist, playwright & journalist (1881-1942)

Stefan Zweig quote

The instinct for self-deception in human beings makes them try to banish from their minds dangers of which at bottom they are perfectly aware by declaring them non-existent.

STEFAN ZWEIG

Beware of Pity

Tags: danger


If you are going to sell yourself, you should at least get a good price.

STEFAN ZWEIG

Beware of Pity


And so it was that the two of us, out of a shared and confused hatred, performed an act that looked like love, but while our bodies sought each other and came together we were both thinking and speaking of him all the time, of nothing but him.

STEFAN ZWEIG

Confusion


States of profound happiness, like all other forms of intoxication, are apt to befuddle the wits; intense enjoyment of the present always makes one forget the past.

STEFAN ZWEIG

Beware of Pity

Tags: happiness


You're going to tell me that poverty's nothing to be ashamed of. It's not true, though. If you can't hide it, then it is something to be ashamed of. There's nothing you can do, you're ashamed just the same, the way you're ashamed when you leave a spot on somebody's table. No matter if it's deserved or not, honorable or not, poverty stinks. Yes, stinks, stinks like a ground-floor room off an airshaft, or clothes that need changing. You smell it yourself, as though you were made of sewage. It can't be wiped away. It doesn't help to put on a new hat, any more than rinsing your mouth helps when you're belching your guts out. It's around you and on you and everyone who brushes up against you or looks at you knows it.

STEFAN ZWEIG

The Post Office Girl

Tags: poverty


The organic fundamental error of humanism was that it desired to educate the common people (on whom it looked down) from its lofty stance instead of trying to understand them and to learn from them.

STEFAN ZWEIG

Erasmus of Rotterdam


All the pale horses of the apocalypse have stormed through my life, revolution, starvation, devaluation of currency and terror, epidemics, emigration; I have seen the great ideologies of the masses grow and spread out before my eyes. Fascism in Italy, National Socialism in Germany, Bolshevism in Russia, and, above all, that archpestilence, nationalism, which poisoned our flourishing European culture.

STEFAN ZWEIG

The World of Yesterday

Tags: Apocalypse


The subject of a rumor is always the last to hear it.

STEFAN ZWEIG

The Post Office Girl

Tags: rumors


Only the person who has experienced light and darkness, war and peace, rise and fall, only that person has truly experienced life.

STEFAN ZWEIG

The World of Yesterday


Life is futile unless it be directed towards a definite goal.

STEFAN ZWEIG

Twenty-Four Hours in the Life of a Woman

Tags: life


Shaken to the depths of your soul, you know that day and night someone is waiting for you, thinking of you, longing and sighing for you -- a woman, a stranger. She wants, she demands, she desires you with every fiber of her being, with her body, with her blood. She wants your hands, your hair, your lips, your night and your day, your emotions, your senses, and all your thought and dreams. She wants to share everything with you, to take everything from you, and to draw it in with her breath. Henceforth, day and night, whether you are awake or asleep, there is somewhere in the world a being who is feverish and wakeful and who waits for you, and you are the centre of her waking and her dreaming. It is in vain that you try not to think of her, of her who thinks always of you, in vain that you seek to escape, for you no longer dwell in yourself, but in her. Of a sudden a stranger bears your image within her as though she were a moving mirror -- no, not a mirror, for that merely drinks in your image when you offer yourself willingly to it, whereas she, the woman, this stranger who loves you, she has absorbed you into her very blood.

STEFAN ZWEIG

Beware of Pity


In history as in human life, regret does not bring back a lost moment and a thousand years will not recover something lost in a single hour.

STEFAN ZWEIG

Stellar Moments in Human History

Tags: history


Whatever a woman's reason may say, her feelings tell her the truth.

STEFAN ZWEIG

Twenty-Four Hours in the Life of a Woman

Tags: women


As we grow old, we become aware that death is drawing near; his shadow falls across our path; the realities of life seem less crude than of yore, they touch our senses less intimately, and they lose much of their poignancy.

STEFAN ZWEIG

Twenty-Four Hours in the Life of a Woman

Tags: death


Nothing whets the intelligence more than a passionate suspicion, nothing develops all the faculties of an immature mind more than a trail running away into the dark.

STEFAN ZWEIG

The Burning Secret and Other Stories

Tags: suspicion


Isn't it confoundedly easy to think you're a great man if you aren't burdened with the slightest idea that Rembrandt, Beethoven, Dante or Napoleon ever lived?

STEFAN ZWEIG

Chess Story

Tags: genius


In some mysterious way, once one has gained an insight into human nature, that insight grows from day to day, and he to whom it has given to experience vicariously even one single form of earthly suffering acquires, by reason of this tragic lesson, an understanding of all its forms, even those most foreign to him, and apparently abnormal.

STEFAN ZWEIG

Beware of Pity

Tags: suffering


Pain is a coward. He flees when faced by the irresistible power of the will-to-live, which is more strongly rooted in the flesh than the intensest passion is rooted in the spirit.

STEFAN ZWEIG

Twenty-Four Hours in the Life of a Woman

Tags: pain


To grow old means to be rid of anxieties about the past.

STEFAN ZWEIG

Twenty-Four Hours in the Life of a Woman

Tags: old age


It is better to be the servant of God than the ruler of men.

STEFAN ZWEIG

Jeremiah: a drama in nine scenes

Tags: God