Théodore Guérin Quote

Nothing troubled the charm and silence of this solitude. Making the most serious reflections on what we behold, and on our present position, I said to myself: Thus does life also pass away, now calm, now agitated, but at last the end is attained. Happy, ah, thrice happy they who can then look out to the never-ending future with calm and confidence, who can cast themselves on the bosom of God, the Center of our felicity.


First Journal of Travel (1840)


Nothing troubled the charm and silence of this solitude. Making the most serious reflections on what we behold, and on our present position, I said...

Nothing troubled the charm and silence of this solitude. Making the most serious reflections on what we behold, and on our present position, I said...

Nothing troubled the charm and silence of this solitude. Making the most serious reflections on what we behold, and on our present position, I said...

Nothing troubled the charm and silence of this solitude. Making the most serious reflections on what we behold, and on our present position, I said...