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Author

Mikhail Bulgakov

/mikhail-bulgakov-quotes-and-sayings

44 Quotes
5 Works

Author Summary

About Mikhail Bulgakov on QuoteMust

Mikhail Bulgakov currently has 44 indexed quotes and 5 linked works on QuoteMust. This page is the canonical destination for that author archive.

Works

Books and titles linked to this author

Heart of a Dog Morphine The Life of Monsieur de Moliere The Master and Margarita The White Guard

Quotes

All quote cards for Mikhail Bulgakov

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If you__e been exiled, why don__ you send me word of yourself? People do send word. Have you stopped loving me? No, for some reason I don__ believe that. It means you were exiled and died _ Release me, then, I beg you, give me freedom to live, finally, to breathe the air! _ Margarita Nikolaevna answered for him herself: __ou are free _ am I holding you?_ Then she objected to him: __o, what kind of answer is that? No, go from my memory, then I__l be free _

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Mikhail Bulgakov

The Master and Margarita

"

Ruin, therefore, is not caused by lavatories but it's something that starts in people's heads. So when these clowns start shouting "Stop the ruin!" - I laugh!' 'I swear to you, I find it laughable! Every one of them needs to hit himself on the back of the head and then when he has knocked all the hallucinations out of himself and gets on with sweeping out backyards - which is his real job - all this "ruin" will automatically disappear

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A book is open in front of me and this is what it has tosay about the symptoms of morphine withdrawal:'... morbid anxiety, a nervous depressed condition,irritability, weakening of the memory, occasionalhallucinations and a mild impairment of consciousness...'I have not experienced any hallucinations, but I canonly say that the rest of this description is dull, pedestrianand totally inadequate.'Depressed condition' indeed!Having suffered from this appalling malady, I hereby enjoinall doctors to be more compassionate toward theirpatients. What overtakes the addict deprived of morphinefor a mere hour or two is not a 'depressed condition': it isslow death. Air is insubstantial, gulping it down is useless... there is not a cell in one's body that does not crave... but crave what? This is something which defies analysisand explanation. In short, the individual ceases to exist:he is eliminated. The body which moves, agonises andsuffers is a corpse. It wants nothing, can think of nothingbut morphine. To die of thirst is a heavenly, blissful deathcompared with the craving for morphine. The feeling mustbe something like that of a man buried alive, clawing at theskin on his chest in the effort to catch the last tiny bubblesof air in his coffin, or of a heretic at the stake, groaning andwrithing as the first tongues of flame lick at his feet.Death. A dry, slow death. That is what lurks behindthat clinical, academic phrase 'a depressed condition'.

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I believe you!' the artiste exclaimed finally and extinguishes his gaze. 'I do! These eyes are not lying! How many times have I told you that your basic error consists in underestimating the significance of the human eye. Understand that the tongue can conceal the truth, but the eyes - never! A sudden question is put to you, you don't even flinch, in one second you get hold of yourself and know what you must say to conceal the truth, and you speak quite convincingly, and not a wrinkle on your face moves, but - alas - the truth which the question stirs up from the bottom of your soul leaps momentarily into your eyes, and it's all over! They see it, and you're caught!