“How could I accept the fact that, after having been conquered— soul, body and brain—by this irrevocable, indissoluble and martyrizing love, I would have to immediately give it up? Madness! This love was a part of me, like my own flesh; it had taken the place of my blood and marrow; it possessed me entirely; it was I! To separate me from it meant to separate me from myself; it meant to kill me. Worse still! It meant the extravagant nightmare that my head was in Ceylon, my feet in China, separated by abysses of ocean, and that I would continue to live in these two stumps which could never be reunited!”
Quote by Octave Mirbeau
Book:The Torture Garden
Work
The Torture Garden
In 'The Torture Garden,' readers are transported to an enigmatic and malevolent garden where the line between beauty and horror blurs. The story delves into the depths of human psychology, exploring themes of obsession, desire, and the dark side of human nature. The narrative unfolds as the characters navigate through a twisted landscape of moral ambiguity and psychological manipulation. more
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