Top 14 Gabriel Brunsdon Quotes
#1. Sometimes when deep magic is before you, it can be taken as something quite ordinary. Only when looking back does one question what had just taken place, and make note that it had been queer or unusual. The deeper a magic is, the more normal it can appear.
Gabriel Brunsdon
#2. Independence' is a magic word, because nowhere in the Cosmos does it actually exist.
Gabriel Brunsdon
#3. When the demons of criticism have fled the thoughts, the Angels of beauty preside - oh cheerful sweet world exorcised!
Gabriel Brunsdon
#4. When someone from Faerie ever tells you something, you can see it - you can feel it - you believe it. For the true value of enchantment and its glamour, is in the imparting of a truth - by truth's own persuasion it makes itself real.
Gabriel Brunsdon
#6. For all beings within this universal kingdom, their magnetic north rests in genuine mirth.
Gabriel Brunsdon
#7. Symbology and ritual, at best, can only mimic the Truth ... and cannot, and never has had, any mastery over the manifestations of Divinity.
Gabriel Brunsdon
#8. The thoughts of Man build future worlds, whilst the emotions of the Fey build up this, our Natural World.
Gabriel Brunsdon
#9. Heaven itself is just a little less than perfect: for perfection, by self-definition, is a static condition, and anything truly static has deceased its purpose.
Gabriel Brunsdon
#10. True passion motivates the life forces and brings forth all things good.
... desire is the poor cousin to passion, ever hungry and with no real result.
Gabriel Brunsdon
#11. Some things are so natural they are effortless ... and loving is one of them.
Gabriel Brunsdon
#12. For the purity of first light is bliss
and surely the whole point of faith
is just in this: -
Not that we believe
but that we ask of He
to have faith in us.
Gabriel Brunsdon
#13. The word 'weird' is never spoken or thought of by the Fey, as to them there is nothing very strange when you take it as it is.
Gabriel Brunsdon
#14. Between the borders of Faerie and the physical world stands an ancient forest where the trees are exceedingly tall; and although no longer visible to men, their roots go deep into its earth.
Gabriel Brunsdon
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