PRINCE ZILAH

By Jules Claretie

A man's life belongs to his duty, and
not to his happiness
All defeats have their geneses
An hour of rest between two ordeals, a
smile between two sobs
Anonymous, that velvet mask of scandal-
mongers
At every step the reality splashes you
with mud
Bullets are not necessarily on the side
of the right
Does one ever forget?
Foreigners are more Parisian than the
Parisians themselves
History is written, not made.
"I might forgive," said Andras; "but I
could not forget"
If well-informed people are to be
believe
Insanity is, perhaps, simply the ideal
realized
It is so good to know nothing, nothing,
nothing
Let the dead past bury its dead!
Life is a tempest
Man who expects nothing of life except
its ending
Nervous natures, as prompt to hope as
to despair
No answer to make to one who has no
right to question me
Not only his last love, but his only
love
Nothing ever astonishes me
One of those beings who die, as they
have lived, children
Pessimism of to-day sneering at his
confidence of yesterday
Playing checkers, that mimic warfare of
old men
Poverty brings wrinkles
Sufferer becomes, as it were, enamored
of his own agony
Superstition which forbids one to
proclaim his happiness
Taken the times as they are
The Hungarian was created on horseback
There were too many discussions, and
not enough action
Unable to speak, for each word would
have been a sob
What matters it how much we suffer
Why should I read the newspapers?
Willingly seek a new sorrow
Would not be astonished at anything
You suffer? Is fate so just as that

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