Pathos Quotes

On this page you will find all the quotes on the topic "Pathos". There are currently 122 quotes in our collection about Pathos. Discover the TOP 10 sayings about Pathos!
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  • We're all real people with moments of intense honesty and pathos and humanity. We all experience that, whether you're comedic or not.

    Honesty   Real   People  
    Source: www.salon.com
  • So many things suddenly made sense for the clowns, for the whole idea. I’d been going through a struggle, particularly after 9/11; I couldn’t figure out what I wanted to say. I still wanted the work to be the same kind of mixture – intense, with a nasty side or an ugly side, but also with a real pathos about the characters – and clowns have an underlying sense of sadness while they’re trying to cheer people up. Clowns are sad, but they’re also psychotically, hysterically happy.

    Cheer   Real   Struggle  
  • I really like the stuff that is very absurd and very real at the same time. I think Anton Chekhov is the greatest comedy writer of all time. I think he would make a great addition to The Office staff. If you look through Chekhov plays there is a lot of awkward pauses in there. His mixture of pathos, absurdity, truthfulness and whimsy is just mixed together perfectly.

    Real   Thinking   Play  
    Interview with David Hirschman, bigthink.com. November 11, 2010.
  • The Mathematician's Shiva is a brilliant and compelling family saga full of warmth, pathos, history, and humor, not to mention a cast of delightfully quirky characters, and a math lesson or two; all together, a winning equation! When Rojstaczer writes about mathematics, you'd think he was writing about poetry.

  • I meant to write a song of battle, for storied deeds of war inspire; I seemed to hear the cannon thunder, I seemed to see the smoke and fire. But oh, the pathos of the ending when brave men conquered in the fight, knelt, kissing yielded blood-stained colors!--my eyes are blurred, I cannot write.

    Song   War   Eye  
    Anne Reeve Aldrich (1893). “Nadine and Other Poems”
  • I guess what I always found funny was the human condition. There is a certain comedy and pathos to trouble and accidents. Like, when a driver has parked his car crookedly and then wonders why he has the bad luck of being hit.

    Country   Car   Luck  
  • Pathos truly is the mode for the pessimist. But tragedy requires a nicer balance between what is possible and what is impossible. And it is curious, although edifying, that the plays we revere, century after century, are the tragedies. In them, and in them alone, lies the belief-optimistic, if you will, in the perfectibility of man.

    Lying   Optimistic   Men  
    Arthur Miller (2016). “The Collected Essays of Arthur Miller”, p.10, Bloomsbury Publishing
  • Who can explain the secret pathos of Nature's loveliness? It is a touch of melancholy inherited from our mother Eve. It is an unconscious memory of the lost Paradise. It is the sense that even if we should find another Eden, we would not be fit to enjoy it perfectly nor stay in it forever.

    Love   Mother   Memories  
    Henry Van Dyke (2015). “Little Rivers”, p.125, eKitap Projesi
  • English is much drier. You can get away with a lot less. Pathos, lyricism, these are things you have to tone down if you want the English version of the book to work.

    Book   Want   Tone  
    Source: www.guernicamag.com
  • For a wonderful physical tie binds the parents to the children; and - by some sad, strange irony - it does not bind us children to our parents. For if it did, if we could answer their love not with gratitude but with equal love, life would lose much of its pathos and much of its squalor, and we might be wonderfully happy.

    E. M. Forster (2015). “Where Angels Fear to Tread”, p.109, Booklassic
  • Sometimes I wonder if the semi-conscious agenda of the media is to get between people and their souls. It is the the soul with its myriad tiny nerve endings that notices the neglected pathos, poignancy and practicality that lies at the heart of life. It's as if the media are somehow irritated and envious that anonymous people should have the quiet brilliance of their rich and sustainable inner lives.

    Lying   Heart   Media  
  • I always like to look on the optimistic side of life.

    "How to Be Like Walt : Capturing the Magic Every Day of Your Life". Book by Pat Williams, 2004.
  • Humour is but the faint terrestrial echo of the hideous laughter of the blind mad gods that squat leeringly and sardonically in caverns beyond the Milky Way. It is a hollow thing, sweet on the outside, but filled with the pathos of fruitless aspiration.

    Sweet   Laughter   Echoes  
    "Collected Essays, Volume 5: Philosophy" edited by S. T. Joshi, (p. 54), 2006.
  • The trend towards pure art betrays not arrogance, as is often thought, but modesty. Art that has rid itself of human pathos is a thing without consequence.

    Art   Arrogance   Trends  
  • I can tell it all in song: pathos, gladness, love, joy, unhappiness.

    Song   Joy   Unhappiness  
    "Biography / Personal Quotes". www.imdb.com.
  • Life is like a recycling center, where all the concerns and dramas of humankind get recycled back and forth across the universe. But what you have to offer is your own sensibility, maybe your own sense of humor or insider pathos or meaning. All of us can sing the same song, and there will still be four billion different renditions.

    Anne Lamott (2007). “Bird by Bird: Some Instructions on Writing and Life”, p.181, Anchor
  • The Germans have a wonderful combination of pathos, energy, and humor. They are like Californians with an education.

    Source: www.interviewmagazine.com
  • The crushing, pitiful, and frequently just plain risible pathos of an unsuccessful actor/performer's life is well charted.

    Crush   Actors   Life Is  
    "Auditions are hell, but I never thought that I would have to go through 'casting' to get on Newsnight - and fail" by Arabella Weir, www.theguardian.com. May 25, 2006.
  • Pathos activates the eyes and ears to see and hear. At times of pathos, illness opens doors to a reality which is closed to a healthy point of view.

    Health   Eye   Reality  
  • I always like junkyards. All this metal piled up - they're filled with pathos, those places. Much more pathos than most of the music I've heard. You look at it, and there's more feeling, even though it's depressing, than there is in a lot of music I hear these days. A junkyard is what it is, whereas listening to a record by, say, Styx, is something else.

  • Humor and pathos, tears and laughter are, in the highest expression of human character and achievement, inseparable.

    James Thurber (1961). “Lanterns & lances”
  • There is a form of poetic and esthetic and moral genius necessary to make philosophical issues truly incandesce for students, and even though I indeed had some world-class professors myself when I went through the curriculum, I rarely saw such gnosic or concretist/poetic passion among them. I am not speaking of broad histrionics or melodramatic delivery, but rather a moral investment of concern, of loving delight and pathos in exposing one's consciousness to the full horrific and magnificent implications of the materials.

  • German can take a lot more pathos than English can. When you say "pathetic" in English it's a disparaging term, but when you say "pathetisch" in German it's just a description, not necessarily negative. That says a lot already.

    Source: www.guernicamag.com
  • With 'The Office' and 'Extras' I've always snuck in a little bit of heart and pathos - and drama, which is fun.

    Fun   Drama   Heart  
  • There is more or less of pathos in all true beauty. The delight it awakens has an indefinable, and, as it were, luxurious sadness, which is perhaps one element of its might.

    Henry Theodore Tuckerman (1846). “Thoughts on the Poets”, p.275
  • I have this soft spot for have-nots. So, I was really inclined to portray their pain and pathos in 'Highway.'

    Pain   Spots   Pathos  
  • Some form of gnosis or immediacy is attached to all thinking as its root-form or primitive origination; every act of thinking has this passive derivation, this coming-into-being of thinking not out of nothing (as it likes to imagine) but out of some unthinkable something. But the most self-abstractivist or self-reductivist kind of thinking cannot tolerate even the notion (much less the traumatic experience or confrontation) of an incurable pathos, a weakness or blind-spot, within consciousness. The very idea is an insult to the autonomy or self-determinability of ego/will/reason.

  • I always like to look on the optimistic side of life, but I am realistic enough to know that life is a complex matter.

    "How to Be Like Walt : Capturing the Magic Every Day of Your Life". Book by Pat Williams, 2004.
  • People talk of the pathos and failure of plain women; but it is a more terrible thing that a beautiful woman may succeed in everything but womanhood.

    Beautiful   People   May  
    Gilbert K. Chesterton (2013). “The Essential Gilbert K. Chesterton”, p.287, Simon and Schuster
  • All the pathos and irony of leaving one's youth behind is thus implicit in every joyous moment of travel: one knows that the first joy can never be recovered, and the wise traveller learns not to repeat successes but tries new places all the time.

    Wise   Travel   Joy  
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