FastSaying

Under each formula lies a corpse.

Emile M. Cioran

Emile M. Cioran

CorpseEachFormulaLies

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The beauty of flames lies in their strange play, beyond all proportion and harmony. Their diaphanous flare symbolizes at once grace and tragedy, innocence and despair, sadness and voluptuousness. The burning transcendence has something of the lightness of great purifications. I wish the fiery transcendence would carry me up and throw me into a sea of flames, where, consumed by their delicate and insidious tongues, I would die an ecstatic death. The beauty of flames creates the illusion of a pure, sublime death similar to the light of dawn. Immaterial, death in flames is like a burning of light, graceful wings. Do only butterflies die in flames? What about those devoured by the flames within them?
— Emile M. Cioran
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Each concession we make is accompanied by an inner diminution of which we are not immediately conscious.
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Impossible to spend sleepless nights and accomplish anything: if, in my youth, my parents had not financed my insomnias, I should surely have killed myself.
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We die in proportion to the words we fling around us.
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Intelligence flourishes only in the ages when belief withers.
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