About Stendhal

Marie-Henri Beyleand La Chartreuse de Parme (The Charterhouse of Parma, 1839), he is highly regarded for the acute analysis of his characters’ psychology and considered one of the early and foremost practitioners of realism.

More about the author

More quotes from Stendhal

Love has always been the most important business in my life, I should say the only one.

Stendhal

19th century French writer

All religions are founded on the fear of the many and the cleverness of the few.

Stendhal

19th century French writer

Logic is neither an art nor a science but a dodge.

Stendhal

19th century French writer

I think no woman I have had ever gave me so sweet a moment, or at so light a price, as the moment I owe to a newly heard musical phrase.

Stendhal

19th century French writer

The shepherd always tries to persuade the sheep that their interests and his own are the same.

Stendhal

19th century French writer

It is the nobility of their style which will make our writers of 1840 unreadable forty years from now.

Stendhal

19th century French writer

Women are always eagerly on the lookout for any emotion.

Stendhal

19th century French writer

Far less envy in America than in France, and far less wit.

Stendhal

19th century French writer

The man of genius is he and he alone who finds such joy in his art that he will work at it come hell or high water.

Stendhal

19th century French writer

If you think of paying court to the men in power, your eternal ruin is assured.

Stendhal

19th century French writer

The more a race is governed by its passions, the less it has acquired the habit of cautious and reasoned argument, the more intense will be its love of music.

Stendhal

19th century French writer

To be loved at first sight, a man should have at the same time something to respect and something to pity in his face.

Stendhal

19th century French writer

The pleasures of love are always in proportion to our fears.

Stendhal

19th century French writer

The great majority of men, especially in France, both desire and possess a fashionable woman, much in the way one might own a fine horse – as a luxury befitting a young man.

Stendhal

19th century French writer

God’s only excuse is that he does not exist.

Stendhal

19th century French writer

A novel is a mirror carried along a main road.

Stendhal

19th century French writer

A very small degree of hope is sufficient to cause the birth of love.

Stendhal

19th century French writer

Mathematics allows for no hypocrisy and no vagueness.

Stendhal

19th century French writer

Pleasure is often spoiled by describing it.

Stendhal

19th century French writer

In love, unlike most other passions, the recollection of what you have had and lost is always better than what you can hope for in the future.

Stendhal

19th century French writer

Power, after love, is the first source of happiness.

Stendhal

19th century French writer

She had caprices of a marvellous unexpectedness, and how is any one to imitate a caprice?

Stendhal

19th century French writer

Our true passions are selfish.

Stendhal

19th century French writer

The French are the wittiest, the most charming, and up to the present, at all events, the least musical race on Earth.

Stendhal

19th century French writer

The Russians imitate French ways, but always at a distance of fifty years.

Stendhal

19th century French writer

One can acquire everything in solitude except character.

Stendhal

19th century French writer

What is really beautiful must always be true.

Stendhal

19th century French writer

People happy in love have an air of intensity.

Stendhal

19th century French writer

A forty-year-old woman is only something to men who have loved her in her youth.

Stendhal

19th century French writer

People who have been made to suffer by certain things cannot be reminded of them without a horror which paralyses every other pleasure, even that to be found in reading a story.

Stendhal

19th century French writer

Nothing is so hideous as an obsolete fashion.

Stendhal

19th century French writer

This is the curse of our age, even the strangest aberrations are no cure for boredom.

Stendhal

19th century French writer

To describe happiness is to diminish it.

Stendhal

19th century French writer

True love makes the thought of death frequent, easy, without terrors; it merely becomes the standard of comparison, the price one would pay for many things.

Stendhal

19th century French writer

Never had he found himself so close to those terrible weapons of feminine artillery.

Stendhal

19th century French writer

The first qualification for a historian is to have no ability to invent.

Stendhal

19th century French writer

The more one pleases everybody, the less one pleases profoundly.

Stendhal

19th century French writer

Life is too short, and the time we waste in yawning never can be regained.

Stendhal

19th century French writer

Politics in a literary work, is like a gun shot in the middle of a concert, something vulgar, and however, something which is impossible to ignore.

Stendhal

19th century French writer

A wise woman never yields by appointment. It should always be an unforeseen happiness.

Stendhal

19th century French writer

If you don’t love me, it does not matter, anyway I can love for both of us.

Stendhal

19th century French writer

Only great minds can afford a simple style.

Stendhal

19th century French writer

Prudery is a kind of avarice, the worst of all.

Stendhal

19th century French writer

Friendship has its illusions no less than love.

Stendhal

19th century French writer