Follow posts tagged #doctor zhivago, #boris pasternak, and #omar sharif in seconds.

Sign up

“How wonderful to be alive," he thought. "But why does it always hurt?" ”

—Boris Pasternak, Doctor Zhivago

“Everything had changed suddenly―the tone, the moral climate; you didn't know what to think, whom to listen to. As if all your life you had been led by the hand like a small child and suddenly you were on your own, you had to learn to walk by yourself. There was no one around, neither family nor people whose judgment you respected. At such a time you felt the need of committing yourself to something absolute―life or truth or beauty―of being ruled by it in place of the man-made rules that had been discarded. You needed to surrender to some such ultimate purpose more fully, more unreservedly than you had ever done in the old familiar, peaceful days, in the old life that was now abolished and gone for good.”

—Boris Pasternak, Doctor Zhivago

“Reshaping life! People who can say that have never understood a thing about life—they have never felt its breath, its heartbeat—however much they have seen or done. They look on it as a lump of raw material that needs to be processed by them, to be ennobled by their touch. But life is never a material, a substance to be molded. If you want to know, life is the principle of self-renewal, it is constantly renewing and remaking and changing and transfiguring itself, it is infinitely beyond your or my obtuse theories about it.”

—Boris Pasternak, Doctor Zhivago

“They loved each other, not driven by necessity, by the ‘blaze of passion’ often falsely ascribed to love. They loved each other because everything around them willed it, the trees and the clouds and the sky over their heads and the earth under their feet.” 

Boris Pasternak, from Doctor Zhivago (Feltrinelli, 1957)

“I don't like people who have never fallen or stumbled. Their virtue is lifeless and of little value. Life hasn't revealed it's beauty to them.” ”

—Boris Pasternak, Doctor Zhivago

“And it seemed that the book in their hands knew what they were feeling and gave them its support and confirmation.”

—Boris Pasternak, Doctor Zhivago, trans. Max Hayward and Manya Harari (thanks, bleedingwordswordswords)

“I have the impression that if he didn’t complicate his life so needlessly, he would die of boredom.”

 -Boris Pasternak

“I don’t think I could love you so much if you had nothing to complain of and nothing to regret. I don’t like people who have never fallen or stumbled. Their virtue is lifeless and of little value. Life hasn’t revealed its beauty to them.”

— Boris Pasternak (Doctor Zhivago)
Loading more posts...