The Delicate Dependency Quotes

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The Delicate Dependency: A Novel of the Vampire Life The Delicate Dependency: A Novel of the Vampire Life by Michael Talbot
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“We're still in the Dark Ages. The scared and the superstitious savage still lurks behind the mask of civilization and he will remain there for untold generations to come.”
Michael Talbot, The Delicate Dependency: A Novel of the Vampire Life
“It is a sad truth, but it is a truth, indeed, that the knowledge of the human species far surpasses their wisdom.”
Michael Talbot, The Delicate Dependency
“How disorienting and isolating immortality must be, and how strong he must be to weather it.”
Michael Talbot, The Delicate Dependency: A Novel of the Vampire Life
“I told you, knowledge is our Holy Grail, and I daresay the wisdom possessed by the vampire would boggle your imagination. You see, we don't have political allegiances to worry about, or religion, or differing mores. We all work together for one purpose: to further our achievements and our learning.”
Michael Talbot, The Delicate Dependency: A Novel of the Vampire Life
“Alas, but you do not recognize one thing, Monsieur le Docteur, one thing that you will find very difficult to comprehend. The twelfth century was quite different from today, different in a most special way. You see, the entire world believed in magic, and this affected things. It altered the world we perceived, everyone perceived, mortal and vampire alike. You will not be able to accept this, but it altered the very laws of physics. Magic was a little more real.”
Michael Talbot, The Delicate Dependency
“We are lucidly aware that achieving through mere physical force establishes the rules of a game from which there is no escape. When one grants oneself the moral justification to use force, one cannot logically deny it in one's enemies, for all moralities are relative. The dissimilarity between different human cultures alone suggests that one cannot establish universal goods and evils.”
Michael Talbot, The Delicate Dependency: A Novel of the Vampire Life
“We’re mentioned in the first English translation of the Bible, Lamentations 4:3, circa a.d. 1382, as ‘The cruel beestis cleped (or called) lamya . . .’ Oddly enough, in the King James version someone has changed all of the references to the lamya to ‘sea monsters.”
Michael Talbot, The Delicate Dependency
“...there is a loathing in the human heart for the vampire. It may lie dormant, but it is always there. Actually, it has nothing to do with the vampire, really. It is a loathing and fear that all humans seem to have for anything that is not exactly like them or the way they have been taught to be. If you visit one of your fine British schools you will discover even your children treat any child who is unusual or different with medieval cruelty. It does not matter if the child is different because he has been raised in a different world, or possesses some genius. If he does not fit into the pecking order of brutality and sadistic courage, he is judged an outcast. It is because human beings are such miserably insecure and frightened creatures. You may garb your world in decorum and social grace, but you are still just apes beneath your frock coats, territorial and fear-driven.”
Michael Talbot, The Delicate Dependency: A Novel of the Vampire Life