“ No man can cease to have a regard for his own honour without at the same time ceasing to feel the respect due to the principle of honour. ”
George Sand, Mauprat (1837). copy citation
Author | George Sand |
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Source | Mauprat |
Topic | respect honour |
Date | 1837 |
Language | English |
Reference | |
Note | Translated by John Oliver Hobbes |
Weblink | https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Mauprat_(Heinemann) |
Context
“The spirit of resistance and the sense of human dignity, dulled in me and paralyzed, as it were, by grief, suddenly awoke again, and in this hour I realized that man is not made for that selfish concentration of despair which is known as resignation or stoicism. No man can cease to have a regard for his own honour without at the same time ceasing to feel the respect due to the principle of honour. If it is grand to sacrifice personal glory and life to the mysterious decrees of conscience, it is cowardly to abandon both to the fury of an unjust persecution. I felt that I had risen in my own estimation, and I passed the rest of this momentous night in devising means of vindicating myself, with as much persistence as I had previously displayed in abandoning myself to fate.”
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