Words matter. These are the best Ella Maillart Quotes, and they’re great for sharing with your friends.
Only when one is able to grasp wideness can one possess it.
Humanity is made up of an infinity of different individuals. Each of us travels for motives exclusively his own.
One travels to escape from it all, but that is the great illusion: It cannot be done, since one travels with one’s mind.
You do not travel if you are afraid of the unknown, you travel for the unknown, that reveals you with yourself.
One travels so as to learn once more how to marvel at life in the way a child does. And blessed be the poet, the artist who knows how to keep alive his sense of wonder.
Travel can also be the spirit of adventure somewhat tamed, for those who desire to do something they are a bit afraid of.
When I look at something, it is certain that for an instant I am one with what I see.
The timelessness of a concept has to be woven into the running warp of dying time, vertical power has to be wedded to the horizontal earth.
The usual channels of university studies or secretarial work did not appeal to me. I cherished difficult dreams through confidence in myself.
You can feel as brave as Columbus starting for the unknown the first time you enter a Chinese lane full of boys laughing at you, or when you risk climbing down in a Tibetan pub for a meal of rotten meat.
The benefits of the accomplished journey cannot be weighed in terms of perfect moments, but in terms of how this journey affects and changes our character.
I gained direct knowledge of the life of the poor in big towns: I have lived the narrowing mechanism of its conditioning and feared it.
We want to feel that this earth is all ours, like our parents’ house when we were children.
I refuse to imprison our acts in the rigid mould of sentences.
It is always our own self that we find at the end of the journey. The sooner we face that self, the better.
Certain travellers give the impression that they keep moving because only then do they feel fully alive.
The true traveller is the one urged to move about for physical, aesthetic, intellectual as well as spiritual reasons.
One of the main points about travelling is to develop in us a feeling of solidarity, of that oneness without which no better world is possible.
We must develop a deeper interest and greater understanding of the people we meet here or abroad. Like us, they are passengers on board that mysterious ship called life.
When the heart speaks, its language is the same under all latitudes.
Shall we ever see the 10 million things of the universe simultaneously in order to be the all? I am convinced that to live is to travel towards the world’s end.
Every time I took a long leave from home, I felt as if I were going to conquer the world. Or rather, take possession of what is my birthright, my inheritance.
Others are keen to see if natives other than us live better than we do, without heat in pipes, ice in boxes, sunshine in bulbs, music on disks, or images gliding over a pale screen.
That idea of escapism… these words could sum up my life.
From the beginning, I wanted to live my own life, and patiently I shored up that desire against wind and tide.
The state of minds vary according to the angle under which one examines them.
When I crossed Asia with my friend Peter Fleming, we spoke to no one but each other during many months, and we covered exactly the same ground. Nevertheless my journey differed completely from his.
I wanted to learn a few foreign languages, and therefore I had to go abroad.
One travels to run away from routine, that dreadful routine that kills all imagination and all our capacity for enthusiasm.
I had to live in the desert before I could understand the full value of grass in a green ditch.
There is only one valid species of voyage, which is walk towards the men.
I did not want to be depressed by the gap existing between my weakness and my ambition.
The sooner we learn to be jointly responsible, the easier the sailing will be.