“In the ancient recipe the three antidotes for dullness or boredom are sleep drink and travel. It is rather feeble. From sleep you wake up from drink you become sober and from travel you come home again. And then where are you? No the two sovereign remedies for dullness are love or a crusade.”
D. H. Lawrence“Do not allow to slip away from you freedoms the people who came before you won with such hard knocks.”
D. H. Lawrence“There is no such thing as liberty. You only change one sort of domination for another. All we can do is to choose our master.”
D. H. Lawrence“Ethics and equity and the principles of justice do not change with the calendar.”
D. H. Lawrence“Men are freest when they are most unconscious of freedom. The shout is a rattling of chains, always was.”
D. H. Lawrence“Men always do leave off really thinking, when the last bit of wild animal dies in them.”
D. H. Lawrence“They say geniuses mostly have great mothers. They mostly have sad fates.”
D. H. Lawrence“I can't bear art that you can walk round and admire. A book should be either a bandit or a rebel or a man in the crowd.”
D. H. Lawrence“The essential function of art is moral. But a passionate, implicit morality, not didactic. A morality which changes the blood, rather than the mind.”
D. H. Lawrence“Oh literature, oh the glorious Art, how it preys upon the marrow in our bones. It scoops the stuffing out of us, and chucks us aside. Alas!”
D. H. Lawrence