Jay > Jay's Quotes

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  • #1
    Ann Leckie
    “Translator Dlique was saying, very earnestly, “Eggs are so inadequate, don’t you think? I mean, they ought to be able to become anything, but instead you always get a chicken. Or a duck. Or whatever they’re programmed to be. You never get anything interesting, like regret, or the middle of the night last week.”
    Ann Leckie, Ancillary Sword

  • #2
    Ann Leckie
    “Luxury always comes at someone else’s expense. One of the many advantages of civilization is that one doesn’t generally have to see that, if one doesn’t wish. You’re free to enjoy its benefits without troubling your conscience.”
    Ann Leckie, Ancillary Justice

  • #3
    Ann Leckie
    “Falling didn't bother me. I could fall forever and not be hurt. It's stopping that's the problem.”
    Ann Leckie, Ancillary Justice

  • #4
    Ann Leckie
    “Ships have feelings.”
    Ann Leckie, Ancillary Justice

  • #5
    Ann Leckie
    “When they behave properly, you will say there is no problem. When they complain loudly, you will say they cause their own problems with their impropriety. And when they are driven to extremes, you say you will not reward such actions. What will it take for you to listen?”
    Ann Leckie, Ancillary Sword

  • #6
    Pat Barker
    “We are Craiglockhart's success stories. Look at us. We don't remember, we don't feel, we don't think - at least beyond the confines of what's needed to do the job. By any proper civilized standard (but what does that mean now?) we are objects of horror. But our nerves are completely steady. And we are still alive.”
    Pat Barker, The Ghost Road

  • #7
    Pat Barker
    “You know you're walking around with a mask on, and you desperately want to take it off and you can't because everybody else thinks it's your face.”
    Pat Barker, Regeneration

  • #8
    Pat Barker
    “A society that devours its own young deserves no automatic or unquestioning allegiance.”
    Pat Barker, Regeneration

  • #9
    Pat Barker
    “This reinforced Rivers’s view that it was prolonged strain, immobility and helplessness that did the damage, and not the sudden shocks or bizarre horrors that the patients themselves were inclined to point to as the explanation for their condition. That would help to account for the greater prevalence of anxiety neuroses and hysterical disorders in women in peacetime, since their relatively more confined lives gave them fewer opportunities of reacting to stress in active and constructive ways. Any explanation of war neurosis must account for the fact that this apparently intensely masculine life of war and danger and hardship produced in men the same disorders that women suffered from in peace.”
    Pat Barker, Regeneration

  • #10
    Patrick O'Brian
    “Perhaps there will be news from home waiting for us there. Lord, how I should love to know how things are going.’ ‘Oh so should I,’ cried Stephen. ‘Though it is not yet possible that there should be word of Diana and our daughter. Sometimes when I think of that little soul I grow quite lachrymose.’ ‘A few months of roaring and bawling and swaddling-clothes will soon cure you of that. You have to be a woman to bear babies.’ ‘So I have always understood,’ said Stephen.”
    Patrick O'Brian, The Thirteen-Gun Salute

  • #11
    Patrick O'Brian
    “Up and up they went, still a cable's length apart; but slowly, for the ape was footsore and despondent. As for Stephen, by the sixth-hundred step his calves and thighs were ready to burst, and at each rise now they forced themselves upon his attention. Up and up, up and up until the ridge was no great way off at last. But before they reached it, the path took another turn; and when he too came round the corner he was on top of the ape. She was sitting on a stone, resting her feet. He scarcely knew what to do; it seemed an intrusion. 'God be with you, ape.' he said in Irish, which in his confusion seemed more appropriate.”
    Patrick O'Brian

  • #12
    Paul Fussell
    “The day after the British entered the war Henry James wrote a friend:

    The plunge of civilization into this abyss of blood and darkness... is a thing that so gives away the whole long age during which we have supposed the world to be, with whatever abatement, gradually bettering, that to have to take it all now for what the treacherous years were all the while really making for and meaning is too tragic for any words.”
    Paul Fussell, The Great War and Modern Memory

  • #13
    Paul Fussell
    “The implicit optimism of the [field service post card] is worth noting—the way it offers no provision for transmitting news like “I have lost my left leg” or “I have been admitted into hospital wounded and do not expect to recover.” Because it provided no way of saying “I am going up the line again,” its users had to improvise. Wilfred Owen had an understanding with his mother that when he used a double line to cross out “I am being sent down to the base,” he meant he was at the front again. Close to brilliant is the way the post card allows one to admit to no state of health between being “quite” well, on the one hand, and, on the other, being so sick that one is in hospital.”
    Paul Fussell, The Great War and Modern Memory

  • #14
    Wilfred Owen
    “And you have fixed my life — however short. You did not light me: I was always a mad comet; but you have fixed me. I spun round you a satellite for a month, but I shall swing out soon, a dark star in the orbit where you will blaze.”
    Wilfred Owen, Selected Letters



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