1
" As soon as the child is born, the mother who has just brought him into the world must console him, quiet his crying, and lighten the burden of the existence she has given him. And one of the principal duties of good parents in the childhood and early youth of their children is to comfort them, to encourage them to live,1 because sorrows and ills and passions are at that age much heavier than they are to those who through long experience, or simply because they have lived longer, are used to suffering. And in truth it is only fitting that the good father and the good mother, in trying to console their children, correct as best they can, and ease, the damage they have done by procreating them. Good God! Why then is man born? And why does he procreate? To console those he has given birth to for having been born? "
― Giacomo Leopardi , Zibaldone
2
" In all our actions, including those that appear selfless, we are in search of some kind of pleasure, even if it is only the pleasure of self-esteem. But while our desire for pleasure is infinite, our mental and physical organs are capable only of limited and temporary pleasures; and this mismatch between desire and capacity dooms us to perpetual dissatisfaction. There is no pleasure big or total enough to quench, even momentarily, our thirst for pleasure. But since the absence of pleasure is pain, it follows that we are always in pain, even when we might believe otherwise. And if life is nothing but an unbroken experience of pain, it would be better for every human being never to have been born. "
― Giacomo Leopardi , Zibaldone
4
" It is a property of works of genius that, even when they represent vividly the nothingness of things, even when they clearly show and make you feel the inevitable unhappiness of life, even when they express the most terrible despair, nevertheless to a great soul that finds itself in a state of extreme dejection, disenchantment, nothingness, boredom and discouragement about life, or in the most bitter and deathly misfortune, such works always bring consolation, and rekindle enthusiasm, and, though they treat and represent nothing but death, they restore, albeit momentarily, the life that it had lost. "
― Giacomo Leopardi , Zibaldone
8
" No one thing shows the greatness and power of the human intellect or the loftiness and nobility of man more than his ability to know and to understand fully and feel strongly his own smallness. When, in considering the multiplicity of worlds, he feels himself to be an infinitesimal part of a globe which itself is a negligible part of one of the infinite number of systems that go to make up the world, and in considering this is astonished by his own smallness, and in feeling it deeply and regarding it intently, virtually blends into nothing, and it is as if he loses himself in the immensity of things, and finds himself as though lost in the incomprehensible vastness of existence, with this single act of thought he gives the greatest possible proof of the nobility and immense capability of his own mind, which, enclosed in such a small and negligible being, has nonetheless managed to know and understand things so superior to his own nature, and to embrace and contain this same intensity of existence and things in his thought. "
― Giacomo Leopardi , Zibaldone
9
" Everything that is ended, everything that is last, naturally awakens in man a feeling of sorrow and melancholy. At the same time, it excites a pleasurable feeling, pleasurable in that very sorrow, and that is because of the infiniteness of the idea that is contained in the words ended, last, etc. ( Thus by their nature such words are, and always will be, poetic, however ordinary and common they are, in whatever language and style.) "
― Giacomo Leopardi , Zibaldone
13
" Nominando i nostri antenati, sogliamo dire, i buoni antichi, i nostri buoni antichi. Tutto il mondo ha opinione che gli antichi fossero migliori di noi, tanto i vecchi che perciò gli lodano, quanto i giovani che perciò li disprezzano. Il certo è che il mondo in questo non s'inganna: il certo è che, senza però pensarvi, egli riconosce e confessa tutto giorno il suo deterioramento. E ciò non solamente con questa frase, ma in cento altri modi; e tuttavia neppur gli viene in pensiero di tornare indietro, anzi non crede onorevole se non l'andare sempre più avanti, e per una delle solite contraddizioni, si persuade e tiene per indubitato, che avanzando migliorerà, e non potrà migliorare se non avanzando; e stimerebbe di esser perduto retrocedendo. "
― Giacomo Leopardi , Zibaldone