François Charles Mauriac was a French writer and a member of the Académie française. He was awarded the 1952 Nobel Prize in Literature "for the deep spiritual insight and the artistic intensity with which he has in his novels penetrated the drama of human life." Mauriac is acknowledged to be one of the greatest Roman Catholic writers of the 20th century.
“La muerte no nos roba los seres amados. Al contrario, nos los guarda y nos los inmortaliza en el recuerdo. La vida sí que nos los roba muchas veces y definitivamente.”
“I believe that only poetry counts ... A great novelist is first of all a great poet.”
“The sin against nature [is] - compulsory celibacy”
“By the time dusk fell, he was back in his room. The last of the daylight lay like fine ashes on the roof-tops. He did not light his lamp, but sat by the fireplace in the dark, seeking in the far distance of his past some vague memory of a love-affair, some recollection of a friendship, with which to soften the hard tyranny of isolation.”
“We know well only what we are deprived of.”
“Observe that for the novelist who has remained Christian, like myself, man is someone creating himself or destroying himself. He is not an immobile being, fixed, cast in a mold once and for all. This is what makes the traditional psychological novel so different from what I did or thought I was doing. The human being as I conceive him in the novel is a being caught up in the drama of human salvation, even if he doesn’t know it.”
“I write whenever it suits me. During a creative period I write every day; a novel should not be interrupted.”
“Il giorno in cui voi non brucerete più d'amore, molti altri moriranno di freddo.”
“To love someone is to see a miracle invisible to others.”
“ ‘Tell me what you read and I’ll tell you who you are’ is true enough, but I’d know you better if you told me what you reread.”
“No love, no friendship, can cross the path of our destiny without leaving some mark on it forever.”
“If you would tell me the heart of a man, tell me not what he reads, but what he rereads.”