Explore popular quotes and sayings by a Belgian writer Alexandra David-Neel.
Last updated on December 21, 2024.
Alexandra David-Néel was a Belgian–French explorer, spiritualist, Buddhist, anarchist, opera singer, and writer. She is most known for her 1924 visit to Lhasa, Tibet, when it was forbidden to foreigners. David-Néel wrote over 30 books about Eastern religion, philosophy, and her travels, including Magic and Mystery in Tibet, which was published in 1929. Her teachings influenced the beat writers Jack Kerouac and Allen Ginsberg, the popularisers of Eastern philosophy Alan Watts and Ram Dass, and the esotericist Benjamin Creme.
The wise expect nothing, hope for nothing, thus avoiding all disappointment and anxiety.
Very few of us are capable of being Free Thinkers, needing neither to adore nor to insult God, the insult often being an act of faith more profound than adoration.
Neglecting small things under the pretext of wanting to accomplish large ones is the excuse of a coward.
Who knows the flower best? - the one who reads about it in a book, or the one who finds it wild on the mountainside?
There is nothing truly serious in life. All words sound hollow when one listens to them carefully.
Why do you pray if you doubt you are heard?
Nature has a language of its own, or maybe those who have lived long in solitude read in it their own unconscious inner feelings and mysterious foreknowledge.
All things are aggregations of atoms that dance & by their movement produce sound. When the rhythm of the dance changes, the sound it produces also changes... Each atom perpetually sings its song, and the sound at every moment creates dense subtle forms.
"To fashion stars out of dog dung, that is the Great Work. To take a negative experience and, by comparing it to something worse, make it feel good, is the great skill."
Suffering raises up those souls that are truly great; it is only small souls that are made mean-spirited by it.
The unsuspected is the daily fare of the traveler in Thibet.
As a stoic I must despise injury or, rather, I must not feel it, must not be affected by it so that it cannot violate the freedom of my soul.
To the one who knows how to look and feel, every moment of this free wandering life is an enchantment.
Landscapes have a language of their own, expressing the soul of the things, lofty or humble, which constitute them, from the mighty peaks to the smallest of the tiny flowers hidden in the meadow's grass.
One must be very strong, or very stupid, or completely exhausted to face life with indifference.
Guard against idols -- yes, guard against all idols, of which surely the greatest is oneself.
Work cannot convey the almost voluptuous sweetness of the feelings experienced ... in solitude.