Deborah > Deborah's Quotes

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  • #1
    Charles Addams
    “Normal is an illusion. What is normal for the spider is chaos for the fly.”
    Charles Addams

  • #2
    Tad Williams
    “God shapes us with a hammer of pain on an anvil of duty. I cannot imagine what shape we will be when He is finished.”
    Tad Williams, To Green Angel Tower, Part 2

  • #3
    William Blake
    “I was walking among the fires of Hell, delighted with the enjoyments of Genius; which to Angels look like torment and insanity.”
    William Blake

  • #4
    Deepak Chopra
    “When you make a choice, you change the future.”
    Deepak Chopra

  • #5
    Tad Williams
    “Never make your home in a place. Make a home for yourself inside your own head. You'll find what you need to furnish it- memory, friends you can trust, love of learning, and other such things. That way it will go with you wherever you journey.”
    Tad Williams

  • #6
    Tad Williams
    “God gives us all youth, and the takes it away again. What have you gained to offset that loss? Patience? Perhaps a little wisdom? Then be patient, and perhaps you'll also be wise. (Miriamele)”
    Tad Williams, The Witchwood Crown

  • #7
    Tad Williams
    “Has everyone gone mad?”

    “Everyone was mad already, my lady,” Cadrach said with a strange, sorrowful smile. “It is merely that the times have brought it out in them.”
    Tad Williams, The Dragonbone Chair

  • #8
    Tad Williams
    “He who is certain he knows the ending of things when he is only beginning them is either extremely wise or extremely foolish; no matter which is true, he is certainly an unhappy man, for he has put a knife in the heart of wonder.”
    Tad Williams, The Dragonbone Chair

  • #9
    Tad Williams
    “A piece of writing is a trap,” he said cheerily, “and the best kind. A book, you see, is the only kind of trap that keeps its captive—which is knowledge—alive forever.”
    Tad Williams, The Dragonbone Chair

  • #10
    Tad Williams
    “Books are a form of magic—” the doctor lifted the volume he had just laid on the stack, “—because they span time and distance more surely than any spell or charm.”
    Tad Williams, The Dragonbone Chair

  • #11
    Tad Williams
    “Ah? A small aversion to menial labor?" The doctor cocked an eyebrow. "Understandable, but misplaced. One should treasure those hum-drum tasks that keep the body occupied but leave the mind and heart unfettered.”
    Tad Williams, The Dragonbone Chair

  • #12
    Tad Williams
    “If you wish to carry a hungry weasel in your pocket, it is your choice.”
    Tad Williams, The Dragonbone Chair

  • #13
    Tad Williams
    “When it falls on your head, then you are knowing it is a rock.”
    Tad Williams, The Dragonbone Chair

  • #14
    Tad Williams
    “Piercing My Hearte there is A Golden Dagger; That is God

    Piercing God's Hearte there is a Golden Needle; That is me”
    Tad Williams, The Dragonbone Chair

  • #15
    Tad Williams
    “But that is enough of such worrying. The river is waiting, and our hearts must be light, so we can faster travel.”
    Tad Williams, The Dragonbone Chair

  • #16
    Tad Williams
    “If your enemy comes to speak bearing a sword, open your door to him and speak, but keep your own sword at hand. If he comes to you empty-handed, greet him the same way. But if he comes to you bearing gifts, stand on your walls and cast stones down on him.”
    Tad Williams, The Dragonbone Chair

  • #17
    Tad Williams
    “A man whose wisdom is true does not sit in waiting for the world to come at him piece by piece for proving its existence!”
    Tad Williams, The Dragonbone Chair

  • #18
    Tad Williams
    “Do you listen to the wolves, Seoman?” Jiriki asked. “It’s hard n-not to.” “They sing such fierce songs.” The Sitha shook his head. “They are like your mortal kind. They sing of where they have been, and what they have seen and scented. They tell each other where the elk are running, and who has taken whom to mate, but mostly they are merely crying ‘I am! Here I am!’ ”
    Tad Williams, The Dragonbone Chair

  • #19
    Tad Williams
    “He led them around the base of a great fallen tree whose exposed roots resembled more than anything else a huge broom - a broom that would have fired the imagination of Rachel the Dragon toward heroic, legendary feats of sweeping.”
    Tad Williams, The Dragonbone Chair

  • #20
    Tad Williams
    “But remember this lesson, Simon, one fit for kings... or the sons of kings. Nothing is without cost. There is a price to all power, and it is not always obvious.”
    Tad Williams, The Dragonbone Chair

  • #21
    Tad Williams
    “No existe lo que se llama "falta de temor", Simón, a menos que un hombre esté loco.

    Doctor Morgenes”
    Tad Williams, The Dragonbone Chair

  • #22
    Tad Williams
    “Los valientes y los locos a menudo viven en la misma cueva, decimos nosotros.

    Binabik”
    Tad Williams, The Dragonbone Chair

  • #23
    Tad Williams
    “A veces ser el que ostenta el mando significa poseer menos libertad que la que tiene el menor de los siervos.

    Jarnauga”
    Tad Williams, The Dragonbone Chair

  • #24
    Tad Williams
    “They reached the eastern outskirts of the Dimmerskog on the afternoon of the next day. Although the forest was covered in a thick blanket of white snow, it nevertheless seemed, as Binabik had named it, a place of shadows. The company did not pass beneath its eaves, and might have chosen not to even had their path lain that way, so thick with foreboding was the wood’s atmosphere. The trees, despite their size—and some of them were huge indeed—seemed dwarfish and twisted, as though they squirmed bitterly beneath their burden of needled branches and snow. The open spaces between the contorted trunks seemed to bend away crazily like tunnels dug by some huge and drunken mole, leading at last to dangerous, secretive depths. Passing in near silence, his horse’s hooves crunching softly in the snow, Simon imagined following the gaping pathways into the bark-pillared, white-roofed halls of Dimmerskog, coming at last to—who could guess? Perhaps to the dark, malicious heart of the forest, a place where the trees breathed together and passed endless rumors with the scaly rub of branch on branch, or the malicious exhalation of wind through twigs and frozen leaves. They camped that night in the open again, even though the Dimmerskog crouched only a short distance away like a sleeping animal. None of them wanted to spend a night beneath the forest’s branches—especially Sludig, who had been raised on stories of the ghastly things that stalked the wood’s pale corridors. The Sithi did not seem to care, but Jiriki spent part of the evening oiling his dark witchwood sword. Again the company huddled around a naked fire, and the east wind razored past them all the long evening, sending great powdery spouts of snow whirling all around, and sporting among the Dimmerskog’s upper reaches. When they lay down that night to sleep it was to the sound of the forest creaking, and the wind-ridden branches sawing one against the other.”
    Tad Williams, The Dragonbone Chair

  • #25
    Tad Williams
    “When you were old, did your memories crowd out your other thoughts? Or did you lose them—your childhood, your hated enemies, your friends?”
    Tad Williams, The Dragonbone Chair

  • #26
    Tad Williams
    “When you stopped to think about it, he reflected, there weren’t many things in life one truly needed. To want too much was worse than greed: it was stupidity—a waste of precious time and effort. The”
    Tad Williams, The Dragonbone Chair

  • #27
    Tad Williams
    “A book, you see, is the only kind of trap that keeps its captive—which is knowledge—alive forever.”
    Tad Williams, The Dragonbone Chair

  • #28
    Tad Williams
    “He who is certain he knows the ending of things when he is only beginning them is either extremely wise or extremely foolish; no matter which is true, he is certainly an unhappy man, for he has put a knife in the heart of wonder.” More”
    Tad Williams, The Dragonbone Chair

  • #29
    Tad Williams
    “In the midst of such industry, gawky Simon was the fabled grasshopper in the nest of ants. He knew he would never amount to much: many people had told him so, and nearly all of them were older—and presumably wiser—than he. At an age when other boys were clamoring for the responsibilities of manhood, Simon was still a muddler and a meanderer. No matter what task he was given to do, his attention soon wandered, and he would be dreaming of battles, and giants, and sea voyages on tall, shining ships ... and somehow, things would get broken, or lost, or done wrong.”
    Tad Williams, The Dragonbone Chair

  • #30
    Tad Williams
    “A wolf is clever-clever-clever, and they are as faithful as a debt unpaid.”
    Tad Williams, The Dragonbone Chair



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