"Trust firmly in your luck, cling to your happiness, and dare to take risks."
About Rene Char
Rene Char was a significant French poet whose work is deeply intertwined with the themes of freedom and resistance. His experiences during World War II, particularly as a member of the French Resistance, shaped his poetic voice and worldview. Char's poetry often reflects the tension between oppression and the indomitable human spirit, as seen in his assertion that 'The poet is a man who speaks to the world.' This highlights his belief in the poet's duty to articulate the struggles and aspirations of humanity. Char's writing is marked by a unique blend of surreal imagery and philosophical depth, challenging conventional norms and exploring the complexities of existence. In his poem 'The Return of the Soldier,' he delves into the emotional aftermath of war, illustrating the profound impact of conflict on individuals and society. His assertion that 'The word is a bridge' encapsulates his belief in the power of language to connect people and convey shared experiences. Today, Char's quotes resonate with readers, offering insights into the enduring struggle for freedom and the resilience of the human spirit. His work continues to inspire those who seek to understand the deeper meanings of life and the importance of standing against tyranny.
Quote collection
17 quotes — follow a thought to its full quote page.
"Trust firmly in your luck, cling to your happiness, and dare to take risks."
"What comes into the world to disturb nothing merits neither attention nor patience"
"Why did I become a writer? A bird's feather on my windowpane in winter and all at once there arose in my heart a battle of embers never to subside again."
"Each act is virgin, even the repeated ones."
"Man is able to do what he is unable to imagine. His head trails a wake through the galaxy of the absurd."
"A poet should leave traces of his passage, not proofs. Traces alone engender dreams."
"Be gful to the man who cares nothing for your remorse. You are his equal."
"How did writing come to me? Like bird’s down on my windowpane, in winter. Just then there rose in the heart a struggle of firebrands, which has, still now, not ended."
"What can be seductive about the eternal nothing is that the finest day is indifferently this one or any other like it."
"How can we live without the unknown before us?"
"Develop your legitimate strangeness."
"Imagination consists in expelling from reality several incomplete persons, and then using the magic and subversive powers of desire to bring them back in the form of one entirely satisfying presence."
"I believe in the magic and authority of words."
"A poem is the realization of love. . . ."
"To be a poet is to have an appetite for a certain anxiety which, when tasted among the swirling sum of things existent or forfeit, causes, as the taste dies, joy."
"With my teethI have seized lifeUpon the knife of my youth.With my lips today,With my lips alone..."
"For an inheritance to be really great, the hand of the defunct must not be seen."