QuoteProject
The way to love anything is to realize that it may be lost.
Gilbert K. Chesterton
ShareWTF𝕏

Interpretation

What this quote means

Cherishing love involves understanding its impermanence.

Gilbert K. Chesterton's quote emphasizes the importance of valuing and appreciating love by acknowledging its transient nature. This recognition fosters a deeper emotional connection, prompting individuals to express their affections more openly and profoundly, as the awareness of potential loss heightens the significance of the love we have.

Themes

LoveImpermanenceAppreciationLossConnection

In practice

Example use cases

A speaker at a wedding could use this quote to remind couples to treasure their relationship.

More from Gilbert K. Chesterton

Tradition does not mean a dead town; it does not mean that the living are dead but that the dead are alive. It means that it still matters what Penn did two hundred years ago or what Franklin did a hundred years ago; I never could feel in New York that it mattered what anybody did an hour ago.
Gilbert K. ChestertonRead
I owe my success to having listened respectfully to the very best advice, and then going away and doing the exact opposite.
Gilbert K. ChestertonRead
The good Bishop of Assisi expressed a sort of horror at the hard life which the Little Brothers lived at the Portiuncula, without comforts, without possessions, eating anything they could get and sleeping anyhow on the ground. St. Francis answered him with that curious and almost stunning shrewdness which the unworldly can sometimes wield like a club of stone. He said, 'If we had any possessions, we should need weapons and laws to defend them.
Gilbert K. ChestertonRead
The ordinary scientific man is strictly a sentimentalist. He is a sentimentalist in this essential sense, that he is soaked and swept away by mere associations.
Gilbert K. ChestertonRead
I suppose every one must have reflected how primeval and how poetical are the things that one carries in one's pocket; the pocket-knife, for instance, the type of all human tools, the infant of the sword. Once I planned to write a book of poems entirely about things in my pockets. But I found it would be too long; and the age of the great epics is past.
Gilbert K. ChestertonRead
Madness does not come by breaking out, but by giving in; by settling down in some dirty, little, self-repeating circle of ideas; by being tamed.
Gilbert K. ChestertonRead

Similar quotes

And patience flees my heart, And reason flees my mind. Oh, how drunk can I get to be, Without your love's security?
RumiRead
And the flavor of Pippa's kiss--bittersweet and strange--stayed with me all the way back uptown, swaying and sleepy as I sailed home on the bus, melting with sorrow and loveliness, a starry ache that lifted me up above the windswept city like a kite: my head in the rainclouds, my heart in the sky.
Donna TarttRead
I love thee to the depth and breadth and height my soul can reach.
Elizabeth Barrett BrowningRead
Love sometimes gets tired of speaking sweetly and wants to rip to shreds all your erroneous notions of the truth that make you fight within yourself, dear one, and with others, causing the world to weep on too many fine days... The Beloved sometimes wants to do us a great favor: Hold us upside down and shake all the nonsense out.
HafezRead
One frequently only finds out how really beautiful a beautiful woman is after considerable acquaintance with her.
Mark TwainRead
One half of me is yours, the other half is yours, Mine own, I would say; but if mine, then yours, And so all yours.
William ShakespeareRead

A little wisdom, now and then

Subscribe for the occasional hand-picked quote. No noise.

Quote by Gilbert K. Chesterton | QuoteProject