Quotes about Pleasure
The most important thing is to enjoy your life~to be happy~it's all that matters.
— Audrey Hepburn
God is well pleased when all our actions proceed from love, love to Himself, and love to immortal souls.
— George Whitefield
A sensual and intemperate youth hands over a worn-out body to old age.
— Cicero
Eating with the fullest pleasure - pleasure, that is, that does not depend on ignorance - is perhaps the profoundest enactment of our connection with the world. In this pleasure we experience and celebrate our dependence and our gratitude, for we are living from mystery, from creatures we did not make and powers we cannot comprehend.
— Wendell Berry
To have the two of them there, at opposite corners of the table, with their long endurance in their faces, and their present affection and pleasure, was a blessing of another kind.
— Wendell Berry
It (the talking, the telling) seemed (to him, to Quentin) to partake of that logic- and reason-flouting quality of a dream which the sleeper knows must have occurred, stillborn and complete, in a second, yet the very quality upon which it must depend to move the dreamer (verisimilitude) to credulity _horror or pleasure or amazement_ depends as completely upon a formal recognition of and acceptance of elapsed and yet-elapsing time as music or a printed tale.
— William Faulkner
Only he is successful in his business who makes that pursuit which affords him the highest pleasure sustain him.
— Henry David Thoreau
Entertainment is the devil's substitute for joy.
— Leonard Ravenhill
If one cannot enjoy reading a book over and over again, there is no use in reading it at all.
— Oscar Wilde
Intellectual ''work'' is misnamed; it is a pleasure, a dissipation, and is its own highest reward.
— Mark Twain
I never thought of achievement. I just did what came along for me to do - the thing that gave me the most pleasure.
— Eleanor Roosevelt
A man's delight in looking forward to and hoping for some particular satisfaction is a part of the pleasure flowing out of it, enjoyed in advance. But this is afterward deducted, for the more we look forward to anything the less we enjoy it when it comes.
— Arthur Schopenhauer