All sins tend to be addictive, and the terminal point of addiction is damnation.
Meaning of the quote
When you do bad things, it can become a habit that is hard to break. The more you do these bad things, the more you want to keep doing them. Eventually, this addiction can lead to a terrible fate or result.
About W. H. Auden
W.H. Auden was a renowned British-American poet known for his stylistic and technical achievements, as well as his engagement with politics, morals, love, and religion. His diverse body of work, including famous poems on love, politics, culture, and religion, has had a lasting impact on literature and earned him critical acclaim.
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More quotes from W. H. Auden
You owe it to all of us all get on with what you’re good at.
British-American poet (1907-1973)
Sob, heavy world Sob as you spin, Mantled in mist Remote from the happy.
British-American poet (1907-1973)
Murder is commoner among cooks than among members of any other profession.
British-American poet (1907-1973)
Perhaps there is only one cardinal sin: impatience. Because of impatience we were driven out of Paradise, because of impatience we cannot return.
British-American poet (1907-1973)
A poet is a professional maker of verbal objects.
British-American poet (1907-1973)
Choice of attention – to pay attention to this and ignore that – is to the inner life what choice of action is to the outer. In both cases, a man is responsible for his choice and must accept the consequences, whatever they may be.
British-American poet (1907-1973)
To save your world you asked this man to die; would this man, could he see you now, ask why?
British-American poet (1907-1973)
I’ll love you, dear, I’ll love you till China and Africa meet and the river jumps over the mountain and the salmon sing in the street.
British-American poet (1907-1973)
Good can imagine Evil; but Evil cannot imagine Good.
British-American poet (1907-1973)
The center that I cannot find is known to my unconscious mind.
British-American poet (1907-1973)
No human being is innocent, but there is a class of innocent human actions called Games.
British-American poet (1907-1973)
Learn from your dreams what you lack.
British-American poet (1907-1973)
One cannot walk through an assembly factory and not feel that one is in Hell.
British-American poet (1907-1973)
Thousands have lived without love, not one without water.
British-American poet (1907-1973)
Death is the sound of distant thunder at a picnic.
British-American poet (1907-1973)
Murder is unique in that it abolishes the party it injures, so that society has to take the place of the victim and on his behalf demand atonement or grant forgiveness; it is the one crime in which society has a direct interest.
British-American poet (1907-1973)
If equal affection cannot be, let the more loving be me.
British-American poet (1907-1973)
It takes little talent to see what lies under one’s nose, a good deal to know in what direction to point that organ.
British-American poet (1907-1973)
Music is the best means we have of digesting time.
British-American poet (1907-1973)
Some books are undeservedly forgotten; none are undeservedly remembered.
British-American poet (1907-1973)
If time were the wicked sheriff in a horse opera, I’d pay for riding lessons and take his gun away.
British-American poet (1907-1973)
Between friends differences in taste or opinion are irritating in direct proportion to their triviality.
British-American poet (1907-1973)
Of all possible subjects, travel is the most difficult for an artist, as it is the easiest for a journalist.
British-American poet (1907-1973)
My face looks like a wedding-cake left out in the rain.
British-American poet (1907-1973)
All works of art are commissioned in the sense that no artist can create one by a simple act of will but must wait until what he believes to be a good idea for a work comes to him.
British-American poet (1907-1973)
You know there are no secrets in America. It’s quite different in England, where people think of a secret as a shared relation between two people.
British-American poet (1907-1973)
‘Healing,’ Papa would tell me, ‘is not a science, but the intuitive art of wooing nature.’
British-American poet (1907-1973)
May it not be that, just as we have to have faith in Him, God has to have faith in us and, considering the history of the human race so far, may it not be that “faith” is even more difficult for Him than it is for us?
British-American poet (1907-1973)
A verbal art like poetry is reflective; it stops to think. Music is immediate, it goes on to become.
British-American poet (1907-1973)
Before people complain of the obscurity of modern poetry, they should first examine their consciences and ask themselves with how many people and on how many occasions they have genuinely and profoundly shared some experience with another.
British-American poet (1907-1973)
All sins tend to be addictive, and the terminal point of addiction is damnation.
British-American poet (1907-1973)
Some writers confuse authenticity, which they ought always to aim at, with originality, which they should never bother about.
British-American poet (1907-1973)
The countenances of children, like those of animals, are masks, not faces, for they have not yet developed a significant profile of their own.
British-American poet (1907-1973)
A poet is, before anything else, a person who is passionately in love with language.
British-American poet (1907-1973)
God bless the USA, so large, so friendly, and so rich.
British-American poet (1907-1973)
It’s a sad fact about our culture that a poet can earn much more money writing or talking about his art than he can by practicing it.
British-American poet (1907-1973)
The ear tends to be lazy, craves the familiar and is shocked by the unexpected; the eye, on the other hand, tends to be impatient, craves the novel and is bored by repetition.
British-American poet (1907-1973)
In a world of prayer, we are all equal in the sense that each of us is a unique person, with a unique perspective on the world, a member of a class of one.
British-American poet (1907-1973)
Men will pay large sums to whores for telling them they are not bores.
British-American poet (1907-1973)
Art is our chief means of breaking bread with the dead.
British-American poet (1907-1973)
Hemingway is terribly limited. His technique is good for short stories, for people who meet once in a bar very late at night, but do not enter into relations. But not for the novel.
British-American poet (1907-1973)
Evil is unspectacular and always human, and shares our bed and eats at our own table.
British-American poet (1907-1973)
We are all here on earth to help others; what on earth the others are here for I don’t know.
British-American poet (1907-1973)
A tremendous number of people in America work very hard at something that bores them. Even a rich man thinks he has to go down to the office everyday. Not because he likes it but because he can’t think of anything else to do.
British-American poet (1907-1973)
History is, strictly speaking, the study of questions; the study of answers belongs to anthropology and sociology.
British-American poet (1907-1973)
When I find myself in the company of scientists, I feel like a shabby curate who has strayed by mistake into a room full of dukes.
British-American poet (1907-1973)
Now is the age of anxiety.
British-American poet (1907-1973)
Health is the state about which medicine has nothing to say.
British-American poet (1907-1973)
I don’t get acting jobs because of my looks.
British-American poet (1907-1973)
Among those whom I like or admire, I can find no common denominator, but among those whom I love, I can: all of them make me laugh.
British-American poet (1907-1973)
A poet can write about a man slaying a dragon, but not about a man pushing a button that releases a bomb.
British-American poet (1907-1973)
A professor is someone who talks in someone else’s sleep.
British-American poet (1907-1973)
In relation to a writer, most readers believe in the Double Standard: they may be unfaithful to him as often as they like, but he must never, never be unfaithful to them.
British-American poet (1907-1973)
For who can bear to feel himself forgotten?
British-American poet (1907-1973)
The class distinctions proper to a democratic society are not those of rank or money, still less, as is apt to happen when these are abandoned, of race, but of age.
British-American poet (1907-1973)
Every American poet feels that the whole responsibility for contemporary poetry has fallen upon his shoulders, that he is a literary aristocracy of one.
British-American poet (1907-1973)
Almost all of our relationships begin and most of them continue as forms of mutual exploitation, a mental or physical barter, to be terminated when one or both parties run out of goods.
British-American poet (1907-1973)
It’s frightening how easy it is to commit murder in America. Just a drink too much. I can see myself doing it. In England, one feels all the social restraints holding one back. But here, anything can happen.
British-American poet (1907-1973)
What the mass media offers is not popular art, but entertainment which is intended to be consumed like food, forgotten, and replaced by a new dish.
British-American poet (1907-1973)
No good opera plot can be sensible, for people do not sing when they are feeling sensible.
British-American poet (1907-1973)
Like everything which is not the involuntary result of fleeting emotion but the creation of time and will, any marriage, happy or unhappy, is infinitely more interesting than any romance, however passionate.
British-American poet (1907-1973)
Art is born of humiliation.
British-American poet (1907-1973)
Fame often makes a writer vain, but seldom makes him proud.
British-American poet (1907-1973)
Geniuses are the luckiest of mortals because what they must do is the same as what they most want to do.
British-American poet (1907-1973)
No hero is mortal till he dies.
British-American poet (1907-1973)
A real book is not one that we read, but one that reads us.
British-American poet (1907-1973)
All that we are not stares back at what we are.
British-American poet (1907-1973)
We all have these places where shy humiliations gambol on sunny afternoons.
British-American poet (1907-1973)
No poet or novelist wishes he were the only one who ever lived, but most of them wish they were the only one alive, and quite a number fondly believe their wish has been granted.
British-American poet (1907-1973)
When I am in the company of scientists, I feel like a shabby curate who has strayed by mistake into a drawing room full of dukes.
British-American poet (1907-1973)
It is a sad fact about our culture that a poet can earn much more money writing or talking about his art than he can by practicing it.
British-American poet (1907-1973)
Music can be made anywhere, is invisible and does not smell.
British-American poet (1907-1973)
Every autobiography is concerned with two characters, a Don Quixote, the Ego, and a Sancho Panza, the Self.
British-American poet (1907-1973)
In times of joy, all of us wished we possessed a tail we could wag.
British-American poet (1907-1973)
The words of a dead man are modified in the guts of the living.
British-American poet (1907-1973)