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Quotes about Metamorphosis

As with the butterfly, adversity is necessary to build character in people.
— Joseph Wirthlin
But I was thinking; feeling; living; those two lives that the two halves symbolized with the intensity, the muffled intensity, which a butterfly or moth feels when with its sticky tremulous legs and antennae it pushes out of the chrysalis and emerges and sits quivering beside the broken case for a moment; its wings still creased; its eyes dazzled, incapable of flight.
— Virginia Woolf
Brooding, she changed the pool into the sea, and made the minnows into sharks and whales, and cast vast clouds over this tiny world by holding her hand against the sun, and so brought darkness and desolation...to millions of ignorant and innocent creatures, and then took her hand away suddenly and let the sun stream down.
— Virginia Woolf
You think it more difficult to turn air into wine than to turn wine into blood?
— Graham Greene
And besides, look at elder flowers and bluebells-they are a sign that pure creation takes place - even the butterfly. But humanity never gets beyond the caterpillar stage -it rots in the chrysalis, it never will have wings.It is anti-creation, like monkeys and baboons.
— DH Lawrence
Agonies are one of my changes of garments.
— Walt Whitman
He who lives more lives than one More deaths than one must die.
— Oscar Wilde
I begin with an idea and then it becomes something else.
— Pablo Picasso
If we are to be transformed, the body must be transformed, and that is not accomplished by talking at it.
— Dallas Willard
The Holy Spirit wants to convert the words of Scripture into transformed personalities.
— David Jeremiah
Think of a caterpillar entering a cocoon. Once he does so, one of two things will happen: He will either transform into a butterfly, or he will die. But no matter what else happens, he will never climb out of the cocoon as a caterpillar. So it is with your protagonist.
— Steven James
The truth is, when we burn the paper, it will change into something else and will continue on in other forms—as ash, smoke, and heat, in our body and the universe. The heat is one of the next lives of the paper, as is the smoke rising to the sky. The ash will return to the earth and become part of the soil. So the sheet of paper, in its next life, might be a cloud and a rose at the same time.
— Thich Nhat Hanh