Life and Writings of Maurice Maeterlinck
Chapter VII of "L'Evolution du Mystère" in _Le Temple Enseveli_.
[4] In the _Buried Temple_, Chapter XXI, Maeterlinck says: "Nature rejects renunciation in all its forms, except that of maternal love."
[5] Cf. Chapter XXI of L'Inquiétude de notre Morale (in _L'Intelligence des Fleurs_): "We are no longer chaste, now that we have recognised that the work of the flesh, cursed during twenty centuries, is natural and legitimate. We no longer go out in search of resignation, of mortification, of sacrifice; we are no longer humble in heart nor poor in spirit."
[6] "Man is created to live in harmony with others; it is in society and not in solitude that he finds numerous opportunities of practising Christian charity to his neighbours."--Swedenborg.
[7] In "Portrait de Femme" (_Le double Jardin_) Maeterlinck distinguishes between virtue and vice: they are the same forces, he says ... a virtue is only a vice that rises instead of falling.
[8] _Verhaeren_, p. 298.
[9] _Les Heures d'après-midi_.
[10] _Wisdom and Destiny_, Chapter I.
[11] Verhaeren, "La Foule" (_Les Visages de la Vie_).