Quotes about transience
Omar Khayyám - Rubáiyát of Omar Khayyám
I sometimes think that never blows so redThe Rose as where some buried Caesar bledThat every Hyacinth the Garden wearsDropt in its Lap from some once lovely Head.
John Keats - The Complete Poems
Life is but a dayA fragile dew-drop on its perilous wayFrom a tree’s summit.
Paulo Coelho -
Anyone who has lost something they thought was theirs forever finally comes to realise that nothing really belongs to them.
Frederic Manning -
We are here in a wood of little beeches: And the leaves are like black lace Against a sky of nacre. One bough of clear promise Across the moon. It is in this wise that God speaketh unto me. He layeth hands of healing upon my flesh, Stilling it in an eternal peace, Until my soul reaches out myriad and infinite hands Toward him, And is eased of its hunger. And I know that this passes: This implacable fury and torment of men, As a thing insensate and vain: And the stillness hath said unto me, Over
Ahmed Mostafa -
Momentary happiness is worse than permanent misery.
Virginia Woolf - Orlando
The flower bloomed and faded. The sun rose and sank. The lover loved and went. And what the poets said in rhyme, the young translated into practice.
Eckhart Tolle -
What will be left of all the fearing and wanting associated with your problematic life situation that every day takes up most of your attention? A dash, one or two inches long, between the date of birth and date of death on your gravestone.
Yoshida Kenkō - Essays in Idleness - The Tsurezuregusa of Kenko
Are we to look at cherry blossoms only in full bloom, the moon only when it is cloudless? To long for the moon while looking on the rain, to lower the blinds and be unaware of the passing of the spring - these are even more deeply moving. Branches about to blossom or gardens strewn with flowers are worthier of our admiration.
Ursula K. Le Guin - The Dispossessed
You shall not go down twice to the same river, nor can you go home again. That he knew; indeed it was the basis of his view of the world. Yet from that acceptance of transience he evolved his vast theory, wherein what is most changeable is shown to be fullest of eternity, and your relationship to the river, and the river's relationship to you and to itself, turns out to be at once more complex and more reassuring than a mere lack of identity. You can go home again, the General Temporal Theory as
Marty Rubin -
The beauty of this day doesn't depend on its lasting forever.
William Wordsworth - Lyrical Ballads
The pleasure-house is dust:—behind, before,This is no common waste, no common gloom;But Nature, in due course of time, once moreShall here put on her beauty and her bloom.She leaves these objects to a slow decay,That what we are, and have been, may be known;But at the coming of the milder day,These monuments shall all be overgrown.
Michael Connelly - The Brass Verdict
Los Angeles was the kind of place where everybody was from somewhere else and nobody really droppped anchor. It was a transient place. People drawn by the dream, people running from the nightmare. Twelve million people and all of them ready to make a break for it if necessary. Figuratively, literally, metaphorically -- any way you want to look at it -- everbody in L.A. keeps a bag packed. Just in case.
George Sterling - The Thirst of Satan: Poems of Fantasy and Terror
A little while, their hunger unfulfilled,The mothlike worlds flit 'round the guttering sun.("Ephemera")
Prince - 1999 (Piano/Vocal/Guitar)
But life is just a party, and parties weren't meant to last.
Wendell Berry -
As I age in the world it will rise and spread,and be for this place horizonand orison, the voice of its winds.I have made myself a dream to dreamof its rising, that has gentled my nights.Let me desire and wish well the lifethese trees may live when Ino longer rise in the morningsto be pleased with the green of themshining, and their shadows on the ground, and the sound of the wind in them.
Anna Akhmatova - The Complete Poems of Anna Akhmatova
Flowers, cold from the dew,And autumn's approaching breath,I pluck for the warm, luxuriant braids,Which haven't faded yet.In their nights, fragrantly resinous,Entwined with delightful mystery,They will breathe in her springlikeExtraordinary beauty.But in a whirlwind of sound and fire,From her shing head they will flutterAnd falland before herThey will die, faintly fragrant still.And, impelled by faithful longing,My obedient gaze will feast upon themWith a reverent hand,Love will gather their r
Ernest Dowson - The Poems and Prose of Ernest Dowson
Ah, Lalage! while life is ours, Hoard not thy beauty rose and white, But pluck the pretty fleeing flowers That deck our little path of light: For all too soon we twain shall tread The bitter pastures of the dead: Estranged, sad spectres of the night.
Ovid - Metamorphoses
As wave is driven by wave And each, pursued, pursues the wave ahead, So time flies on and follows, flies, and follows, Always, for ever and new. What was before Is left behind; what never was is now; And every passing moment is renewed.
Ernest Dowson - The Poems and Prose of Ernest Dowson
They are not long, the days of wine and roses:Out of a misty dreamOur path emerges for awhile, then closesWithin a dream.
Salman Rushdie -
When he was young, he told her, each phase of his life, each self he tried on, had seemed reassuringly temporary. Its imperfections didn't matter, because he could easily replace one moment by the next, one Saladin by another.
Ikkyu -
Like vanishing dew,a passing apparitionor the sudden flashof lightning -- already gone --thus should one regard one's self.
Ilyas Kassam -
To know yourself you must know the transience of your self.
Wisława Szymborska - Monologue of a Dog
I am who I am.A coincidence no less unthinkablethan any other.I could have had differentancestors, after all.I could have flutteredfrom another nestor crawled bescaledfrom under another tree.Nature's wardrobeholds a fair supply of costumes:spider, seagull, field mouse.Each fits perfectly right offand is dutifully worninto shreds.
Juan Ramon Jimenez -
A permanent state of transition is man's most noble condition.
Richard Hooker -
Change is not made without inconvenience even from worse to better.
Anonymous -
All things are subject to change and we change with them. (Omnia mutantur nos et mutamur in illis.)
Giuseppe di Lampedusa -
If you want things to stay as they are things will have to change.
Ralph Waldo Emerson -
The days come and go like muffled and veiled figures sent from a distant friendly party but they say nothing and if we do not use the gifts they bring they carry them as silently away.
Alphonse Karr -
The more things change the more they stay the same. (Plus ca change plus c'est la meme chose.)
Thomas Hood -
There are three things which the public will always clamor for sooner or later: namely novelty novelty novelty.
Heraclitus -
There is nothing permanent except change.
Heraclitus -
You can't step into the same river twice.
T. S. Eliot -
What is actual is actual only for one time. And only for one place.
Noel Coward -
As one gets older one discovers everything is going to be exactly the same with different hats on.
Anatole France -
All changes even the most longed for have their melancholy for what we leave behind us is apart of ourselves we must die to one life before we can enter into another.
Gertrude Stein -
When you get there there isn't any there there.
Evan Shute -
Change must be measured from a known base line.
Samuel Butler -
I can generally bear the separation but I don't like the leave-taking.
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow -
All things must change to something new to something strange.
Eric Hoffer -
Every new adjustment is a crisis in self-esteem.
Finley Peter Dunne -
I see gr-reat changes takin' place ivry day but no change at all ivry fifty years.
Bertrand Russell -
'Change' is scientific 'progress' is ethical change is indubitable whereas progress is a matter of controversy.
Ramsay Clark -
Turbulence is life force. It is opportunity. Let's love turbulence and use it for change.
The Talmud -
Would that life were like the shadow cast by a wall or a tree but it is like the shadow of a bird in flight.
Marty Rubin -
Seize the day, then let it go.
Rainer Maria Rilke - Duino Elegies
And these thingsthat keep alive on departure know that you praise them; transient,they look to us, the most transient, to be their rescue.They want us to change them completely, in our invisible hearts,into -- O endlessly -- us! Whoever, finally, we may be.
Marty Rubin -
I believe in the brief eternity of the rose.
Simon Reynolds - Retromania: Pop Culture's Addiction to Its Own Past
Time wounds all wholes. To exist in Time is to suffer through an endless exile, a successive severing from those precious few moments of feeling at home in the world.
Margaret Atwood - The Handmaid's Tale
It can't last forever. Others have thought such things, in bad times before this, and they were always right, they did get out one way or another, and it didn't last forever. Although for them it may have lasted all the forever they had.
Marty Rubin -
Passing pleasures, like passing clouds, are all we have.
Marty Rubin -
Pleasure, like the sparrow, never sits on any one branch too long.
Samuel Johnson - Prince of Abissinia
Pleasure, in itself harmless, may become mischievous, by endearing to us a state which we know to be transient and probatory, and withdrawing our thoughts from that of which every hour brings us nearer to the beginning, and of which no length of time will bring us to the end. Mortification is not virtuous in itself, nor has any other use, but that it disengages us from the allurements of sense. In the state of future perfection, to which we all aspire, there will be pleasure without danger, and