Quotes about Struggle
As long as there are misérables there will be a cloud on the horizon that can become a phantom and a phantom that can become Marat.
— Victor Hugo
It is the same with wretchedness as with everything else. It ends by becoming bearable.
— Victor Hugo
It sometimes happens that, even contrary to principles, even contrary to liberty, equality, and fraternity, even contrary to the universal vote, even contrary to the government, by all for all, from the depths of its anguish, of its discouragements and its destitutions, of its fevers, of its distresses, of its miasmas, of its ignorances, of its darkness, that great and despairing body, the rabble, protests against, and that the populace wages battle against, the people. Beggars
— Victor Hugo
The galleys make the convict what he is; reflect upon that, if you please.
— Victor Hugo
A harmony established contrary to sense is often more onerous than a war.
— Victor Hugo
Peoples, like planets, possess the right to an eclipse. And all is well, provided that the light returns and that the eclipse does not degenerate into night.
— Victor Hugo
He saw nothing of all this. People who are crushed do not look behind them. They know but too well the evil fate which follows them.
— Victor Hugo
with the exception of wars of liberation, everything that armies do is by foul means.
— Victor Hugo
There is one thing sadder than having no money to buy bread; that is having nothing with which to buy medicine.
— Victor Hugo
The devil may visit us, but God lives here.
— Victor Hugo
Aren't we living in a world where heedless men only desire decapitated women?
— Milan Kundera
He was down and out, the Catholics took him in, and before he knew it, he had faith. So it was gratitude that decided the issue, most likely. Human decisions are terribly simple.
— Milan Kundera