Zweig Quotes
Collection of top 98 famous quotes about Zweig
Zweig Quotes & Sayings
Happy to read and share the best inspirational Zweig quotes, sayings and quotations on Wise Famous Quotes.
All I know is that I shall be alone again. There is nothing more terrible than to be alone among human beings.
— Stefan Zweig
Dostoevsky was the first to reveal to us this teeming multiplicity of emotions, this complexity of our spiritual universe.
— Stefan Zweig
The great masses always and at once respond to the force of gravity in the direction of the powers that be.
— Stefan Zweig
One goes wherever one is still admitted. Someone told me that I might be able to get a visa for Haiti or San Domingo here.
— Stefan Zweig
The alluring, long-shot chance of a huge gain is the grease that lubricates the machine of innovation.
— Jason Zweig
Fate is never too generous even to its favorites. Rarely do the gods grant a mortal more than one immortal deed.
— Stefan Zweig
But I see nothing miraculous about it. Nothing makes one as healthy as happiness, and there is no greater happiness than making someone else happy.
— Stefan Zweig
To me, the "tape" is the final arbiter of any investment decision. I have a cardinal rule: Never fight the tape!
— Martin Zweig
The shadow disguises itself in our projections, when we react intensely to a trait in others that we fail to see in ourselves.
— Connie Zweig
The idea is to buy when the probability is greatest that the market is going to advance.
— Martin Zweig
There is nothing more vindictive, nothing more underhanded, than a little world that would like to be a big one.
— Stefan Zweig
The free, independent spirit who commits himself to no dogma and will not decide in favor of any party has no homestead on earth.
— Stefan Zweig
It is better to be the servant of God than the ruler of men.
— Stefan Zweig
Everything in life that deviates from the straight and, so to speak, normal line, makes people first curious and then indignant.
— Stefan Zweig
A human being will accept the strictest disciplinary measures with a better grace if he knows that they will fall with equal severity on his neighbor.
— Stefan Zweig
All office workers are afraid of being late for work.
— Stefan Zweig
To sin is to be off the mark, that is, to inhibit development, contracting backward into regression rather than expanding forward into growth.
— Connie Zweig
When they are preparing for war, those who rule by force speak most copiously about peace until they have completed the mobilization process.
— Stefan Zweig
Truth to tell, we are all criminals if we remain silent ...
— Stefan Zweig
But spite is a wonderful thing for keeping people alive.
— Stefan Zweig
Each of us wrestles with the dark giant in our own way.
— Connie Zweig
In history as in human life, regret does not bring back a lost moment and a thousand years will not recover something lost in a single hour.
— Stefan Zweig
Never have I experienced in a people and in myself so powerful a surge of life as at that period when our very existence and survival were at stake.
— Stefan Zweig
As each layer of shadow is mined from the darkness, as each fear is faced and each projection reclaimed, the gold shines through.
— Connie Zweig
The longest voyage of discovery, the boldest adventure in the records of our race, had begun.
— Stefan Zweig
Formerly man had only a body and a soul. Now he needs a passport as well for without it he will not be treated like a human being.
— Stefan Zweig
A word is nothing unless it has values and an atmosphere, unless you grasp its historical significance.
— Stefan Zweig
Through suffering we have endured the assaults of time; reverses have ever been our beginning; and out of the depths God has gathered us to his heart.
— Stefan Zweig
the ruin insufficiently ruined,
— Stefan Zweig
Often the presence of mind and energy of a person remote from the spotlight decide the course of history for centuries to come.
— Stefan Zweig
I measure what's going on, and I adapt to it. I try to get my ego out of the way. The market is smarter than I am so I bend.
— Martin Zweig
No one would have pity on the foolish slave of his own pity.
— Stefan Zweig
Hairdressers are professional gossips; when only the hands are busy, the tongue is seldom still.
— Stefan Zweig
Health alone does not suffice. To be happy, to become creative, man must always be strengthened by faith in the meaning of his own existence.
— Stefan Zweig
But society is always most cruel to those who betray its secretes, showing where it's dishonesty commits a crime against nature.
— Stefan Zweig
That is how our arch-adventurer likes to live, moving on from explosion to explosion of fortune and misfortune.
— Stefan Zweig
For tradition also and always means inhibition.
— Stefan Zweig
Long-protracted suffering is apt to exhaust not only the invalid, but the compassion of others; violent emotions cannot be prolonged endlessly.
— Stefan Zweig
Every wave, regardless of how high and forceful it crests, must eventually collapse within itself.
— Stefan Zweig
You don't run amok for long with impunity, you're bound to be struck down in the end ...
— Stefan Zweig
To grow old means to be rid of anxieties about the past.
— Stefan Zweig
In medicine the use of the knife is often the kinder course.
— Stefan Zweig
All things considered, he stuck to his basic attitude of enjoying wealth by knowing that he had it, rather than by making a great display of it.
— Stefan Zweig
Only the misfortune of exile can provide the in-depth understanding and the overview into the realities of the world.
— Stefan Zweig
the natural animosity between those who slept and those who were stirring in the sleeping city.
— Stefan Zweig
But since those days in Vienna I had been aware that Austria was lost, not yet suspecting, to be sure, how much I had lost thereby.
— Stefan Zweig
One can run away from anything but oneself
— Stefan Zweig
Once more my pity had been stronger than my will.
— Stefan Zweig
and it was the pride and ambition of the Jewish people to co-operate in the front ranks to carry on the former glory of the fame of Viennese culture.
— Stefan Zweig
The subject of a rumor is always the last to hear it.
— Stefan Zweig
The idea of Jewish unity, of a plan, an organization, unfortunately exists only in the brains of Hitler and Streicher.
— Stefan Zweig
Art can bring us consolation as individuals," he said, "but it is powerless against reality.
— Stefan Zweig
Happy people are poor psychologists.
— Stefan Zweig
It is never until one realizes that one means something to others that one feels there is any point or purpose in one's own existence.
— Stefan Zweig
ever since he discovered that all his millions could not bring him back his wife, he has learned to despise money.
— Stefan Zweig
intelligence, its tenets those of division, regression, hatred, violence and persecution. In
— Stefan Zweig
Happiness would prevail where trees were planted.
— Stefan Zweig
soothing silence instead of an oppressive one.
— Stefan Zweig
Memory is so corrupt that you remember only what you want to; if you want to forget about something, slowly but surely you do.
— Stefan Zweig
Gradually, we have become each other's weather.
— Paul Zweig
Confidences are always risky: a secret entrusted to a stranger make him less of one. You've given away something of yourself, given him the advantage.
— Stefan Zweig
In history, the moments during which reason and reconciliation prevail are short and fleeting.
— Stefan Zweig
Only the person who has experienced light and darkness, war and peace, rise and fall, only that person has truly experienced life.
— Stefan Zweig
The dressmaker doesn't have problems unless the dress has to hide rather than reveal.
— Stefan Zweig
His jest implies: Anybody who wants to be a real musician must be able to set even a menu to music.
— Stefan Zweig
The rewards are profound. Shadow-work enables us to alter our self-sabotaging behavior so that we can achieve a more self-directed life.
— Connie Zweig
Shadow-making happens in families and makes us who we are. It leads to shadow-work, which makes us who we can become.
— Connie Zweig
Nationalism is the sworn enemy of civilization, whether past, present or future, its malodorous presence thwarting the development of intelligence,
— Stefan Zweig
She could be lively only in the midst of life; in isolation she dwindled to a shadow.
— Stefan Zweig
For vanity, too, inebriates; gratitude, too, intoxicates; tenderness, too, can blissfully confuse the senses.
— Stefan Zweig
It's OK to be wrong; it's unforgivable to stay wrong.
— Martin Zweig