Friedrich Nietzsche Quotes About Love
-
Of all that is written, I love only what a person hath written with his blood.
→ -
Thoughts are the shadows of our feelings - always darker, emptier and simpler.
→ -
You know these things as thoughts, but your thoughts are not your experiences, they are an echo and after-effect of your experiences: as when your room trembles whe na carriage goes past. I however am sitting in the carriage, and often I am the carriage itself. Ina man who thinks like this, the dichotomy between thinking and feeling, intellect and passion, has really disappeared. He feels his thoughts. He can fall in love with an idea. An idea can make him ill.
→ -
The enormous expectation having to do with sexual love and the shame involved in this expectation degrades all a woman's perspectives from the start.
→ -
In every form of womanly love something of motherly love also comes to light.
→ -
Just as soon as we notice that someone has to force himself to pay attention when dealing and talking with us, we have a valid demonstration that he does not love us or that he does not love us anymore.
→ -
In revenge and in love, woman is more barbarous than man.
→ -
There is always some madness in love.
→ -
Whatever we have words for, that we have already got beyond.
→ -
Love is a state in which a man sees things most decidedly as they are not.
→ -
We love life, not because we are used to living but because we are used to loving.
→ -
What else is love but understanding and rejoicing in the fact that another person lives acts and experiences otherwise than we do?
→ -
Sometimes it just takes stronger eyeglasses to cure those who are in love--and someone with the ability to imagine a face or a figure twenty years older might perhaps pass through life quite undisturbed.
→ -
He who cannot give anything away cannot feel anything either.
→ -
To discover he is loved in return ought really to disenchant the lover with the beloved.
→ -
What is it that you love in others?--My hopes.
→ -
This is the hardest of all: to close the open hand out of love, and keep modest as a giver.
→ -
Marriage marks the end of many short follies - being one long stupidity.
→ -
I devote myself to what I love the most, and for this very reason I hesitate to designate it with lofty words: I do not want to risk believing that it is a sublime compulsion, a law, which I obey: I love what I love the most too much to wish to appear to it as one compelled.
→ -
Out of damp and gloomy days, out of solitude, out of loveless words directed at us, conclusions grow up in us like fungus: one morning they are there, we know not how, and they gaze upon us, morose and gray. Woe to the thinker who is not the gardener but only the soil of the plants that grow in him.
→ -
What is done out of love always occurs beyond good and evil.
→ -
I love those who do not know how to live for today.
→ -
It is not a lack of love, but a lack of friendship that makes unhappy marriages.
→ -
Nothing on earth consumes a man more quickly than the passion of resentment.
→ -
The apprentice and the master love the master in different ways.
→ -
Untroubled, scornful, outrageous - that is how wisdom wants us to be: she is a woman and never loves anyone but a warrior.
→ -
Marriage: that I call the will of two to create the one who is more than those who created it.
→ -
When marrying, ask yourself this question: Do you believe that you will be able to converse well with this person into your old age? Everything else in marriage is transitory.
→ -
I feel all those human beings to be pernicious who can no longer oppose what they love: they thereby ruin the best things and people.
→ -
Today I love myself as I love my god: who could charge me with a sin today? I know only sins against my god; but who knows my god?
→