“That the very next day I would no longer possess those swooning eyes, those devouring lips, the nightly renewed miracle of that body with its divine contours and savage embraces; and, after long spasms as powerful as sin and as deep as death, that naive stammering, those little laughs, those little tears, those languid little songs of a child or a bird—was it possible! And I would lose all that was more necessary for breathing than my lungs; more necessary for thinking than my brain; more necessary for nourishing my veins with warm blood than my heart! Impossible! I belonged to Clara like the coal belongs to the fire which devours and consumes it. Both to her and me, a separation had seemed so inconceivable and so insanely fantastic, so totally contrary to the laws of nature and life, that we had never spoken of it.”
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
Author
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