"[Russia's God] cannot prevent or improve all things; he can only represent closeness and intimacy for all time . . . This all-pervasive sense of security, this omnipresence, leads to a confidence in the surroundings, whatever they may be, and it presupposes an untorn integration with one’s childhood, within the unity of the womb. It was exactly that childlike purity and the primitiveness in basic outlook on life (so characteristic of the Russian spirit) that captured the imagination of the poet and was released in his language. It made possible the return to a kind of familiar divinity in mankind, as if Rilke were suddenly presented with the gift of the primal home and childhood he had been deprived of. Kindle pp. 33-4."
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/Lou_Andreas-Salom%C3%A9
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
Lou Andreas-Salomé
67 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by Lou Andreas-Salomé →
Related Quotes
"As truly as I'd love a friend, I always have loved you, riddling life, whether I've laughed with you or wept, whether…"
"I can neither live according to models, nor shall I ever be able to provide a model for anyone else. On the contrary,…"
"You also write: you had always thought that such complete devotion to purely intellectual goals was only meant to be …"
"Let us see whether the vast majority of the so-called "insurmountable barriers" that the world draws are not harmless…"
"Conversing with Nietzsche is uncommonly lovely . . . The content of a conversation of ours really exists in what is n…"
"The optimistic nature finds joy in the very feeling for life; the pessimistic nature finds a feeling for life only in…"
"What does not engage our feelings does not long engage our thoughts either."
""The grave is not the end. From the graves of those we love most and where, with those we love most, are buried all o…"
"Once upon a time, everything was based on trust, free from worry or care; now everything stands in doubt. One upon a …"
"A genuine Nietzsche study would require the psychology of religion that would spotlight the meaning of his being, his…"