Shadow of the Moon Quotes

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Shadow of the Moon Shadow of the Moon by M.M. Kaye
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Shadow of the Moon Quotes Showing 1-6 of 6
“Common sense will nearly always stand you in better stead than a slavish adherence to the conventions.”
M.M. Kaye, Shadow of the Moon
“There is no particular merit in fighting for your own skin when you know that it is fight or die, but there is considerable merit in being prepared to die when you know you can escape quite easily. Put at its lowest, there is a certain stubborn foolhardy heroism in that.”
M.M. Kaye, Shadow of the Moon
“Because men are sentimental over women they will throw away military advantages, and hesitate and weigh the chances of failure when attack is their best or only hope, and lose their opportunity because they "have to think of the women and children". Men who would otherwise not dream of surrendering will make terms with an enemy in return for the safety of a handful of women. If a man is killed, it is an accident of war; but if a woman or a child is killed it is a barbarous murder and a hundred lives - or a thousand - are sacrificed to avenge it. It is only a man like John Nicholson who has the courage to write, and mean it, that the safety of "women and children in some crises is such a very minor consideration that it ceases to be a consideration at all". If only more men thought like that you could all stay in Lunjore and be damned to you!”
M.M. Kaye, Shadow of the Moon
“It was an age of lavishness. Of enormous meals, enormous families, enormous spreading skirts and an enormous, spreading Empire. An age of gross living, grinding poverty, inconceivable prudery, insufferable complacency and incomparable enterprise.”
M.M. Kaye, Shadow of the Moon
tags: era
“We cannot prevail,' said Walayat Shah. 'The Jehad is dead. Those who slew the women and the babes have slain it also. To slay in battle or in hot blood, that is well. And to kill men, if they be unbelievers, is to achieve Paradise. But to slaughter captive women who have suffered the harshness of war and sorrow, and been robbed thereby of all strength and will, is a deed to blacken the sun! I will fight no more against the feringhis, since God can no longer be upon our side.”
M.M. Kaye, Shadow of the Moon
“Wars and riots and mutinies, famine, disaster and the crash of dynasties - the process of birth stopped for none of these things.”
M.M. Kaye, Shadow of the Moon