Book: Essays In Love
Quotes of Book: Essays In Love
The difference could be grouped into categories of mature and immature love. Preferable in almost every way, the philosophy of mature love is marked by an active awareness of the good and bad within each person, it is full of temperance, it resists idealization, it is free of jealousy, masochism, or obsession, it is a form of friendship with a sexual dimension, it is pleasant, peaceful, and reciprocated {and perhaps explains why most people who have known the wilder shores of desire would refuse its painlessness the title of love}. Immature love on the other hand {though it has little to do with age} is a story of chaotic lurching between idealization and disappointment, an unstable state where feelings of ecstasy and beatitude combine with impressions of drowning and fatal nausea, where the sense that one has finally found the answer comes together with the feeling that one has never been so lost. The logical climax of immature {because absolute} love comes in death, symbolic or real. The climax of mature love comes in marriage, and the attempt to avoid death via routine {the Sunday papers, trouser presses, remote-controlled appliances}. For immature love accepts no compromise, and once we refuse compromise, we are on the road to some kind of cataclysm. 6. book-quote