"I have not spoken of poor mamma for some time; but it would be a mistake to think that I also forgot her. I never ceased to think of her and to long to find her again, not only to satisfy the needs of existence, but still more those of my heart. My devotion to her, lively and tender as it was, did not prevent me from loving others, but not in the same way. All alike owed my tenderness to their charms; but, whereas in the case of others these were the only cause of it, and it would have disappeared with them, mamma might have grown old and ugly, and I should have loved her as fondly as ever. My heart had completely transferred to her person the homage which it at first rendered to her beauty; and, whatever change she might have suffered, my feelings towards her could never have changed, provided that she had still remained herself. I knew very well that I owed her my gratitude; but in reality I did not think of that. Whatever she might have done for me or not, it would always have been the same. I loved her neither from a feeling of duty or self-interest, nor from motives of convenience; I loved her because I was born to love her. When I fell in love with any other woman, I admit that it distracted my attention, and I thought of her less frequently; but I thought of her with the same feelings of pleasure, and, whether in love or not, I never occupied my thoughts with her without feeling that there could never be any real happiness for me in life, as long as I was separated from her."
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
Imported from EN Wikiquote
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Confessions_(Rousseau)
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
Confessions (Rousseau)
153 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by Confessions (Rousseau) →
Related Quotes
"I know nothing which exercises a more powerful influence upon my heart than an act of courage, performed at an opport…"
"I can understand how it is that the inhabitants of cities, who see nothing but walls, streets and crimes, have so lit…"
"I have learned to doubt whether a man, who is the possessor of a large fortune, whoever he may be, can be sincerely f…"
"An enemy to everything that comes under the denomination of party, faction, and cabal, I have never expected any good…"
"So difficult is it to manage the irritable amour-propre of literary men, and such great care is necessary, in paying …"
"It is in the country that one learns to love and serve humanity; one only learns to despise it in cities."
"for the first time since the existence of the world, an author permits himself, by a single stroke of the pen, to mak…"
"I might have thrown myself entirely into the most lucrative path, and, instead of lowering my pen to copying, I might…"
"It is too difficult to think nobly, when one thinks only in order to live. In order to be able and to venture to utte…"
"There is no soul so vile, no heart so barbarous, that it is not susceptible of some kind of attachment."