"... but death is the expected of old age — we anticipate its approach even before we know what it is ; the full of years seems but to have fulfilled his destiny. Sorrow is subdued by strong necessity ; there is no cause why life should be lengthened for our love ; and we feel that the worn and the decrepit do but go down into that grave which had received youth, health, beauty, — all that made existence precious — long before. But when the blow comes down in the fulness of expectation ; when the bough is smitten while green, and the flower cut down in its spring; when the young and lovely perish, while the eyes, full of light, were fixed on the future, — then, indeed, is the visitation heavy to bear."
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/Francesca_Carrara
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
Francesca Carrara
318 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by Francesca Carrara →
Related Quotes
"We talk of the influence of education — in what does it consist ? Here were two with the same blood flowing in their …"
"That certain sign of intense selfishness — he never gave any one credit for a good motive, for he believed no one bet…"
"There are some moments, the hues of which are like those on the wing of a butterfly — a touch brushes them away."
"There are words to paint the misery of love, but none to paint its happiness ; that childish, glad, and confiding tim…"
"THE history of a minute — why, it would give a bird's-eye view of every possible variety in human existence. Wonderfu…"
"... — for nothing is more mournful than man's work and man's skill going to ruin for want of man's care — ..."
"[From Sir Robert Evelyn]: Opinion should guide in public affairs, not feeling. Opinion is grounded on circumstance, o…"
"Perhaps there is no moment when beloved objects are so much beloved, as on the return from a long absence. … Assuredl…"
"It is wonderful how some words ever were invented, for they express what does not exist—confidence is among the numbe…"
"Who has not observed in the daily intercourse of domestic life, that the very subject we have been striving to avoid,…"