PHILOSOPHICAL QUOTES, EXTRACTS OF POEMS AND A COMMENT ON THE BREVITY OF LIFE.
Right: Marcus Aurelius, a roman emperor and philosopher of the 2nd Century, gave us some of the most beautiful reflexions on life's short span.
The brevity of life is one of the more common themes of human existential thought. There is authentic poetry in many ancient reflexions on this brevity, and the inevitability of death and nothingness.
As for man, his days are as grass: as a flower of the field, so he flourishes. But the wind passes over, and soon all disappears; and his place will no more exist.
PSamls, Bible
Insignificant mortals, who are as leaves are, and now flourish and grow warm with life, and feed on what the ground gives, but soon fade away and are dead.
Homer, Century IX b.C., Greek poet, Iliad
Having glimpsed a small part of life, men rise up and disappear as smoke, knowing only what each one has learned.
Empedocles, 483-430 b. C., Greek Philosopher, in On Nature, of Sextus Empiricus.
Time is a violent torrent; no sooner is a thing brought to sight than it is swept by, and another takes its place, before this too will be swept away.
Marcus Aurelius
Every instant of time is a pinprick of eternity. All things are insignificant, easily changed, vanishing away.
Marcus Aurelius
Our existence is a short circuit of light between two eternities of darkness.
Vladimir Nabokov, 1889-1977, Russian writer, Na outra margem da memória
Life’s short span forbids us to enter on far reaching hopes.
Horace, 65-8 b. C., roman poet, Odes
Necessary, since every moment in our lives is marked by death, like a shadow from another realm, it appear to us like a vanishing point for everything.
Andre Comte-Sponville, French philosopher, The Little Book of Philosophy
How can one meditate on live without meditating too on its brevity, its precariousness, its fragility?
Andre Comte-Sponville, French philosopher, The Little Book of Philosophy
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