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  • #1
    Nick Harkaway
    “The tree of nonsense is watered with error, and from its branches swing the pumpkins of disaster.”
    Nick Harkaway

  • #2
    Nick Harkaway
    “Society is based on discontent: people wanting more and more and more, being continually dissatisfied with their homes, their bodies, their decor, their clothes, everything.”
    Nick Harkaway

  • #3
    Ian Sansom
    “[L]ibrarians, like ministers of religion, and poets, and people with mental health disorders, can make people nervous.”
    Ian Sansom

  • #4
    Gregory Maguire
    “Science, my dears, is the systematic dissection of nature, to reduce it to working parts that more or less obey universal laws. Sorcery moves in the opposite direction. It doesn't rend, it repairs. It is synthesis rather than analysis. It builds anew rather than revealing the old. In the hands of someone truly skilled,...it is Art.”
    Gregory Maguire, Wicked: The Life and Times of the Wicked Witch of the West

  • #5
    Gregory Maguire
    “I never use the words HUMANIST or HUMANITARIAN, as it seems to me that to be human is to be capable of the most heinous crimes in nature.”
    Gregory Maguire, Wicked: The Life and Times of the Wicked Witch of the West

  • #6
    Gregory Maguire
    “Always the bridesmaid , never the bride."
    Always the godfather, never the god".”
    Gregory Maguire, Wicked: The Life and Times of the Wicked Witch of the West

  • #7
    Gregory Maguire
    “The body apologizes to the soul for its errors, and the soul asks forgiveness for squatting in the body without invitation.”
    Gregory Maguire, Wicked: The Life and Times of the Wicked Witch of the West

  • #8
    David Wroblewski
    “Life was a swarm of accidents waiting in the treetops, descending upon any living thing that passed, ready to eat them alive. You swam in a river of chance and coincidence. You clung to the happiest accidents- the rest you let float by.”
    David Wroblewski, The Story of Edgar Sawtelle
    tags: life

  • #9
    Josh Bazell
    “Ah, youth. It's like heroin you've smoked instead of snorted. Gone so fast you can't believe you still have to pay for it.”
    Josh Bazell, Beat the Reaper

  • #10
    Josh Bazell
    “The fucking beef industry and the fucking HMO industry,' Friendly says. 'Al-Cowda and HMOsama.”
    Josh Bazell, Beat the Reaper

  • #11
    Patrick O'Brian
    “...I have had such a sickening of men in masses, and of causes, that I would not cross this room to reform parliament or prevent the union or to bring about the millennium. I speak only for myself, mind - it is my own truth alone - but man as part of a movement or a crowd is indifferent to me. He is inhuman. And I have nothing to do with nations, or nationalism. The only feelings I have - for what they are - are for men as individuals; my loyalties, such as they may be, are to private persons alone.”
    Patrick O'Brian, Master & Commander

  • #12
    Patrick O'Brian
    “There is a systematic flocci-nauci-nihili-pilification of all other aspects of existence that angers me.”
    Patrick O'Brian, Master & Commander

  • #13
    Patrick O'Brian
    “Hatred the only moving force, a petulant unhappy striving - childhood the only happiness, and that unknowing; then the continual battle that cannot ever possibly be won; a losing fight against ill-health - poverty for nearly all. Life is a long disease with only one termination and its last years are appalling: weak, racked by the stone, rheumatismal pains, senses going, friends, family, occupation gone, a man must pray for imbecility or a heart of stone. All under sentence of death, often ignominious,frequently agonizing: and then the unspeakable levity with which the faint chance of happiness is thrown away for some jealousy, tiff, sullenness, private vanity, mistaken sense of honour, that deadly, weak and silly notion.”
    Patrick O'Brian, Post Captain

  • #14
    Patrick O'Brian
    “I am opposed to authority, that egg of misery and oppression; I am opposed to it largely for what it does to those who exercise it.”
    Patrick O'Brian, Post Captain

  • #15
    Patrick O'Brian
    “All your sea-omens are of disaster; and of course, with man in his present unhappy state, huddled together in numbers far too great and spending all his surplus time and treasure beating out his brother's brains, any gloomy foreboding is likely to be fulfilled; but your corpse, your parson, your St Elmo's fire is not the cause of the tragedy.”
    Patrick O'Brian, H.M.S. Surprise

  • #16
    Patrick O'Brian
    “Authority is a solvent of humanity: look at any husband, any father of a family, and note the absorption of the person by the persona, the individual by the role. Then multiply the family, and the authority, by some hundreds and see the effect upon a sea-captain, to say nothing of an absolute monarch. Surely man in general is born to be oppressed or solitary, if he is to be fully human; unless it so happens that he is immune to the poison.”
    Patrick O'Brian, H.M.S. Surprise

  • #17
    Patrick O'Brian
    “Good only for destruction - has destroyed all that was valuable in the monarchy - is destroying France with daemonic energy - this tawdry, theatrical empire - a deeply vulgar man - nothing French about him - insane ambition - the whole world one squalid tyranny. His infamous treatment of the Pope!”
    Patrick O'Brian, The Mauritius Command

  • #18
    Patrick O'Brian
    “Not that I mean the least fling against men who have won a great fleet action - it is right and proper that THEY should be peers - but when you look at the mass of titles, tradesmen, dirty politicians, moneylenders...why, I had as soon be plain Jack Aubrey - Captain Jack Aubrey, for I am as proud as Nebuchadnezzar of my service rank, and if ever I hoist my flag, I shall paint HERE LIVES ADMIRAL AUBREY on the front of Ashgrove Cottage in huge letters.”
    Patrick O'Brian, The Mauritius Command

  • #19
    Patrick O'Brian
    “Sure, it is weak and illiberal to speak slightingly of any considerable body of men; yet it so happens that the only judges I have known have been froward companions, and it occurs to me that not only are they subjected to the evil influence of authority but also to that of righteous indignation, which is even more deleterious. Those who judge and sentence criminals address them with an unbridled, vindictive righteousness that would be excessive in an archangel and that is indecent to the highest degree in one sinner speaking to another, and he defenceless. Righteous indignation every day, and publicly applauded!”
    Patrick O'Brian, Desolation Island

  • #20
    Patrick O'Brian
    “Oh, the odious wench. How I wish I were rid of her. I have always loathed women, from clew to earring; hook, line and sinker; root and branch. I always said this would happen, you remember; I was against it from the start. Damn it for a flibbertigibbet, the hussy.”
    Patrick O'Brian, Desolation Island

  • #21
    Patrick O'Brian
    “Oh for women at sea to obviate the eternal crosscat-harpings,' he said to himself, 'to do away with the grumlinfuttocks, and to inject a little civilization, even of an equivocal nature, even at the risk of moral deviation.”
    Patrick O'Brian, The Fortune of War

  • #22
    Patrick O'Brian
    “He considered old age and its mutilations and wondered what it would do for him: examples presented themselves to his mind, not only of mental decay, physical weakness, gout, stone and rheumatism, but of boastful mendacious garrulity, intense and peevish selfishness; timidity if not cowardice, dirt, concupiscence, avarice.”
    Patrick O'Brian, The Fortune of War

  • #23
    Patrick O'Brian
    “If men were to consider what they were at - if if they were to look around them, and reflect upon the cost of life in a universe where prisons, brothels, madhouses, and regiments of men armed and trained to kill other men are so very common - why, I doubt we should see many of these poor mewling little larval victims, so often a present misery to their parents and a future menace to their kind.”
    Patrick O'Brian, The Surgeon's Mate

  • #24
    Patrick O'Brian
    “Physically he was tired and his body relaxed throughout its entire length; his mind was in much the same state, floating free, detached, as though he had taken his old favourite, the tincture of laudanum. He felt no particular anxiety. The attempt must either succeed or fail: he hoped with all his heart for success, but 'all his heart' did not amount to a great deal now that some essential part of its core seemed to have died. Yet on the other hand he felt more able to command success in that it meant no less to him - to command it with a strength that arose not from a fundamental indifference to his own fate but from something resembling it that he could not define; it had a resemblance to despair, but a despair long past, with the horror taken out of it.”
    Patrick O'Brian, The Surgeon's Mate

  • #25
    Patrick O'Brian
    “Because, sir, teaching young gentlemen has a dismal effect upon the soul.It exemplifies the badness of established, artificial authority. The pedagogue has almost absolute authority over pupils: he often beats them and insensibly he loses the sense of respect due to them as fellow human beings.He does them harm, but the harm they do him is far greater. He may easily become the all-knowing tyrant, always right, always virtuous; in any event he perpetually associates with his inferiors, the king of his company; and in a surprising short time alas this brands him with the mark of Cain. Have you ever known a schoolmaster fit to associate with grown men?”
    Patrick O'Brian, The Ionian Mission

  • #26
    Patrick O'Brian
    “Well, damme, William, I am sorry: I am very sorry, indeed I am. But injustice is a rule of the service, as you know very well; and since you have to have a good deal of undeserved abuse, you might just as well have it from your friends.”
    Patrick O'Brian, The Ionian Mission

  • #27
    Patrick O'Brian
    “Yet,'said Maturin, pursuing his own thought, 'there is a quality in dogs, I must confess, rarely to be seen elsewhere and that is affection: I do not mean the violent possessive protective love for their owner but rather that mild, steady attachment to their friends that we see quite often in the best sort of dog. And when you consider the rarity of plain disinterested affection among our own kind, once we are adult, alas - when you consider how immensely it enhances daily life and how it enriches a man's past and future, so that he can look backward and forward with complacency - why, it is a pleasure to find it in brute creation.”
    Patrick O'Brian, Treason's Harbour

  • #28
    Patrick O'Brian
    “Martin was a thoroughly amiable man, a man of wide reading, but when he came to write he mounted upon a pair of stilts, unusually lofty stilts, and staggered along at a most ungracious pace, with an occasional awkward lurch into colloquialism, giving a strikingly false impression of himself.”
    Patrick O'Brian, The Far Side of the World

  • #29
    Patrick O'Brian
    “He sat on as the sun's rays came slowly down through the trees, lower and lower, and when the lowest reached a branch not far above him it caught a dewdrop poised upon a leaf. The drop instantly blazed crimson, and a slight movement of his head made it show all the colours of the spectrum with extraordinary purity, from a red almost too deep to be seen through all the others to the ultimate violet and back again.”
    Patrick O'Brian, The Reverse of the Medal

  • #30
    Patrick O'Brian
    “I do not say that all lawyers are bad, but I do maintain that the general tendency is bad: standing up in a court for whichever side has paid you, affecting warmth and conviction, and doing everything you can to win the case, whatever your private opinion may be, will soon dull any fine sense of honour. The mercenary soldier is not a valued creature, but at least he risks his life, whereas these men merely risk their next fee.”
    Patrick O'Brian, The Reverse of the Medal



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