Dance Hall of the Dead Quotes
Dance Hall of the Dead
by
Tony Hillerman19,358 ratings, 4.06 average rating, 1,071 reviews
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Dance Hall of the Dead Quotes
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“that the only goal for man was beauty, and that beauty was found only in harmony, and that this harmony of nature was a matter of dazzling complexity.”
― Dance Hall of the Dead
― Dance Hall of the Dead
“Leaphorn had found that listening carefully to lies is sometimes very revealing of the truth.”
― Dance Hall of the Dead
― Dance Hall of the Dead
“I guess you’d say there’s an old law that takes precedence over the white man’s penal code.”
― Dance Hall of the Dead
― Dance Hall of the Dead
“When the dung beetle moves,” Hosteen Nashibitti had told him, “know that something has moved it. And know that its movement affects the flight of the sparrow, and that the raven deflects the eagle from the sky, and that the eagle’s stiff wing bends the will of the Wind People, and know that all of this affects you and me, and the flea on the prairie dog and the leaf on the cottonwood.” That had always been the point of the lesson. Interdependency of nature. Every cause has its effect. Every action its reaction. A reason for everything. In all things a pattern, and in this pattern, the beauty of harmony. Thus one learned to live with evil, by understanding it, by reading its cause. And thus one learned, gradually and methodically, if one was lucky, to always “go in beauty,” to always look for the pattern, and to find it.”
― Dance Hall of the Dead
― Dance Hall of the Dead
“By whiteman’s standards, Leaphorn thought, Bowlegs had a net worth of maybe one hundred dollars. The white world’s measure of his life. And what would the Navajo measure be? The Dinee made a harder demand—that man find his place in the harmony of things.”
― Dance Hall of the Dead
― Dance Hall of the Dead
“She looks tired and thin, Leaphorn was thinking. What the hell is she doing here with this hard bunch? She's too young. Why don't white people take care of their children? Then he thought of George Bowlegs. And why don't Navajos take care of their children?”
― Dance Hall of the Dead
― Dance Hall of the Dead
“with”
― Dance Hall of the Dead
― Dance Hall of the Dead
“and all the others who agree that Custer had it coming »1« Sunday, November 30, 5:18 P.M.”
― Dance Hall of the Dead
― Dance Hall of the Dead
“Ernesto Cata was dead but the Little Fire God lived. The Badger Clan had provided another of its sons to personify this eternal spirit.”
― Dance Hall of the Dead
― Dance Hall of the Dead
“In life, ritual dancing for the Zuñi is sort of a perfect expression of . . .” He paused, searching for the word. “Call it ecstasy, or joy, or life, or community unity. So what do you do when you’re beyond life, with no labors to perform? You spend your time dancing.”
― Dance Hall of the Dead
― Dance Hall of the Dead
“O’Malley was still talking. Leaphorn looked at him, wondering about this FBI policy. Where did they find so many O’Malleys? He had a sudden vision of an office in the Department of Justice building in Washington, a clerk sending out draft notices to all the male cheerleaders and drum majors at U.S.C., Brigham Young, Arizona State, and Notre Dame, ordering them to get their hair cut and report for duty. He suppressed a grin.”
― Dance Hall of the Dead
― Dance Hall of the Dead
“But would the man who hunted him still be here? Leaphorn considered this. The man would have known he had flushed his bird. He needed to be a fairly competent tracker to find George’s kill site. But once George was running, covering his tracks, he would have to be much better than that. He would have to be as good as Joe Leaphorn — and perhaps better than Leaphorn. As far as Leaphorn knew, there were no better trackers than himself. Certainly no Zuni, or white man.”
― Dance Hall of the Dead
― Dance Hall of the Dead
“It had occurred to Leaphorn earlier that Baker was not, in fact, an agent of the Federal Bureau of Investigation. He didn’t look like one. He had bad teeth, irregular and discolored, and an air of casual sloppiness, and something about him which suggested a quick, inquisitive, impatient intelligence. Leaphorn’s extensive experience with the FBI suggested that any of these three characteristics would prevent employment. The FBI people always seemed to be O’Malleys — trimmed, scrubbed, tidy, able to work untroubled by any special measure of intelligence. O’Malley was still talking. Leaphorn looked at him, wondering about this FBI policy. Where did they find so many O’Malleys? He had a sudden vision of an office in the Department of Justice building in Washington, a clerk sending out draft notices to all the male cheerleaders and drum majors at USC, Brigham Young, Arizona State, and Notre Dame, ordering them to get their hair cut and report for duty.”
― Dance Hall of the Dead
― Dance Hall of the Dead
“Leaphorn sat on a slab of sandstone and considered what these tracks told him. It wasn’t much.
He could guess that the killing hadn’t been premeditated — at least not completely. One who plans to carry a body a long distance uphill over rough ground does not wear moccasins if he has any respect for his feet.”
― Dance Hall of the Dead
He could guess that the killing hadn’t been premeditated — at least not completely. One who plans to carry a body a long distance uphill over rough ground does not wear moccasins if he has any respect for his feet.”
― Dance Hall of the Dead
“But where was home for this boy who had hunted heaven?”
― Dance Hall of the Dead
― Dance Hall of the Dead
“Full of mysticism—most of it nonsense and all muddled up—but something in him driving him to know more than a natural man is supposed to know.”
― Dance Hall of the Dead
― Dance Hall of the Dead
