A Study in Brimstone Quotes

Rate this book
Clear rating
A Study in Brimstone A Study in Brimstone by G.S. Denning
4,544 ratings, 3.71 average rating, 821 reviews
Open Preview
A Study in Brimstone Quotes Showing 1-15 of 15
“If Grogssson's got the case, you might as well rifle the body, rob the place and draw a moustache on the corpse; he wouldn't mind.”
G.S. Denning, A Study in Brimstone
“And who is this new face?” “Tell him nothing, Watson!” Warlock urged, struggling to reclaim his balance. “And for God’s sake, John, don’t let him learn your name!” Moran smiled. I sighed and shook my head. Then, since it seemed I had nothing to lose by it, I extended my hand and said, “Dr. John Watson, at your service.”
G.S. Denning, A Study in Brimstone
“One of the peculiarities of London’s police force is that they are all recruited from areas of Britain where folk use no h’s at all, or far too many. I”
G.S. Denning, A Study in Brimstone
“Watson," he cried, "if anyone calls and says they are the physical embodiment of Amon-Ra, I am not in!”
G.S. Denning, A Study in Brimstone
“In what way is a howling, demon-filled void preferable to a schnauzer?”
G.S. Denning, A Study in Brimstone
“Despite what I believed to be true about my world, despite all my medical knowledge, I was forced to admit that the room certainly appeared to contain an ogre, a vampire, a warlock and a dead man. Oh, and myself, of course.”
G.S. Denning, A Study in Brimstone
“The fundamental basis of scientific thought is that an observed truth that undermines one’s understanding is yet the truth. If the observation is not flawed, one’s previous understanding must be. To the open mind, this is not a crisis; it is an opportunity to form a new, more perfect understanding of the world.”
G.S. Denning, A Study in Brimstone
“I gasped. I suppose I may have shed a tear then, for England and her empire. What hope was there for us? Against a people who would destroy the stately majesty of our favorite breakfast treat; a people who had actually industrialized the crumpet—how could we compete? The decline of our empire was thus presaged to me—as plain as a hole in a crumpet. “Monstrous,” I muttered.”
G.S. Denning, A Study in Brimstone
“There is something malicious about November drizzle in London. It is always cold, unwelcome and delivered at the most fiendishly inconvenient times.”
G.S. Denning, A Study in Brimstone
“Eliminate the impossible and whatever remains, however improbable, must be the truth.”
G.S. Denning, A Study in Brimstone
“Suddenly, mankind’s policy of intolerance—which I had always obeyed but never much considered—made itself clear to me. How total. How cruel.”
G.S. Denning, A Study in Brimstone
“I have told you before that our realm is a virtual paradise to the beings of other realities. That is not to say we have no demons of our own. The greater ones are so dominant that they are perceived by mortal men not as monsters, but as fundamental qualities of reality. They are gone beyond entities; they are physics.”
G.S. Denning, A Study in Brimstone
“The dominion of man is drawing to a close. The age of demons is upon us. This, I recognize, is largely my fault and let me take just a moment to apologize for my part in it. I am very sorry I doomed the world.
Really, just...absolutely, horribly sorry.”
G.S. Denning, A Study in Brimstone
“There is nothing so intoxicating to the scientific mind as the weird and unfamiliar. The”
G.S. Denning, A Study in Brimstone
“No. It ain’t. It’s the bestest, most perfect donut what ever there was. I named her Lucy an’ I love her an’ that’s all there is to it,” Jefferson Hope insisted.”
G.S. Denning, A Study in Brimstone