A Horrible Aristocracy

He divided the inhabitants of this world into two groups, into those who had loved and those who had not. It was a horrible aristocracy, apparently, for those who had no capacity for love (or rather for suffering in love) could not be said to be alive and certainly would not live again after their death. They were a kind of straw population, filling the world with their meaningless laughter and tears and chatter and disappearing still lovable and vain into thin air.

—Uncle Pio, in Thornton Wilder, The Bridge of San Luis Rey, p183.

A. Ransom

You have shown me more wonders than are known in the whole of heaven.

—C.S. Lewis, Out of the Silent Planet, Chapter 21.