“Then I resolved that I would go back out there and somehow cope with the situation, despite the fact that I lacked a strategy and was frightened to the pit of my being.” MotivationalStressStrength Of CharacterStyron Book:Sophie’s Choice Source: Sophie’s Choice
“One of the things I cannnot grasp, though I have often written about them, trying to get them into some kind of bearable perspective," Steiner writes, "is the time relation." Steiner has just quoted descriptions of the brutal deaths of two Jews at the Treblinka extermination camp. "Precisely at the same hour in which Mehring and Langner were being done to death, the overwhelming plurality of human beings, two miles away on the Polish farms, five thousand miles away in New York, were sleeping or eating or going to a film or making love or worrying about the dentist. This is where my imagination balks. The two orders of simultaneous experience are so different, so irreconcilable to any common norm of human values, their coexistence is so hideous a paradox-Treblinka is both because some men have built it and almost all other men let it be-that I puzzle over time.” HolocaustWwiiWorld War TwoStyronGeorge SteinerSophie S Choice Book:Sophie’s Choice Source: Sophie’s Choice
“Are there, as science fiction and Gnostic speculation imply, different species of time in the same world, 'good time' and enveloping folds of inhuman time, in which men fall into the slow hands of the living damnation?” GenocideWorld War IiHolocaustWwiiStyronSteinerWilliam StyronGeorge SteinerSophie S Choice Book:Sophie’s Choice Source: Sophie’s Choice
“In De Rerum Natura, Lucretius pointed out a very central truth concerning the examined life. That is, that the man of science who concerns himself solely with science, who cannot enjoy and be enriched by art, is a misshapen man. An incomplete man.” ArtScienceLiteratureStyron Author:William Styron
“It was true that I had traveled great distances for one so young, but my spirit had remained landlocked, unacquainted with love and all but a stranger to death…I had absented myself in my smug and airless self-deprivation.” LonelinessTravelStyron Book:Sophie’s Choice Source: Sophie’s Choice
“The pain of severe depression is quite unimaginable to those who have not suffered it, and it kills in many instances because its anguish can no longer be borne.” DarknessDepressionVisibleWilliamStyronSevere DepressionMemoir Of Madness Author:William Styron