The Saint of Bright Doors Quotes
The Saint of Bright Doors
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Vajra Chandrasekera7,168 ratings, 3.65 average rating, 1,460 reviews
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The Saint of Bright Doors Quotes
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“Remember, son,” Mother-of-Glory says, compensating with pomposity for her deficits of piety or affection. “The only way to change the world is through intentional, directed violence.”
― The Saint of Bright Doors
― The Saint of Bright Doors
“Every time I led him to the right place at the right time, I first quietly eliminated all the places and times that were wrong. Luck is only someone else’s labour.”
― The Saint of Bright Doors
― The Saint of Bright Doors
“Status is a rainbow on a proud soap bubble, inflated to its uttermost.”
― The Saint of Bright Doors
― The Saint of Bright Doors
“Lessons learned in childhood leave deep roots and are not easily plucked out by adult reasoning.”
― The Saint of Bright Doors
― The Saint of Bright Doors
“That’s not how laws work, son,” she says. “A visible law is a ploy, a little play. A mummery in waiting, waiting for you to become interesting. Never give them a reason to care who you are.”
― The Saint of Bright Doors
― The Saint of Bright Doors
“There is no such thing as devils. They are the people of lost histories. We see them only in translation.”
― The Saint of Bright Doors
― The Saint of Bright Doors
“Kingsfaction stalwarts in various editorial teams. Fame, she says, is how a ruling class conditions artists to docility and incorporates their work to lesser ends. Sedition, unrest, and even revolution are useful to political actors currently out of power.”
― The Saint of Bright Doors
― The Saint of Bright Doors
“The Perfect and Kind shrugs. His eyes are on me, not Fetter. He turns slowly to track my ever-freer passage in the thickening night. I circle at a distance outside the pyres, unwilling to be caught in their overlapping light. Afraid to get closer.”
― The Saint of Bright Doors
― The Saint of Bright Doors
“Fetter smiles at this woman who was nearly a mother, entirely a stranger.”
― The Saint of Bright Doors
― The Saint of Bright Doors
“You make the same mistake again and again,’ Ordinary says. ‘The sin of metonymy. I say people and you hear the people. I say power and you think of thrones and parliaments.”
― The Saint of Bright Doors
― The Saint of Bright Doors
“Her gravitational field does not have a crisp boundary but only weakens with distance; in theory, it has no end.”
― The Saint of Bright Doors
― The Saint of Bright Doors
“Luck is only someone else’s labour.”
― The Saint of Bright Doors
― The Saint of Bright Doors
“His eyes are on me, not Fetter.”
― The Saint of Bright Doors
― The Saint of Bright Doors
“I try to avoid dualities,” the Perfect and Kind says,”
― The Saint of Bright Doors
― The Saint of Bright Doors
“It’s because none of them can see the devils, he thinks. That’s why they’re all so optimistic about worldly law.”
― The Saint of Bright Doors
― The Saint of Bright Doors
“Perhaps that distinction is finer than he’d thought. It means there’s no such thing as ordinary people.”
― The Saint of Bright Doors
― The Saint of Bright Doors
“Either way, the email in triplicate teaches that he must deal with it three times over.”
― The Saint of Bright Doors
― The Saint of Bright Doors
“I hoped to build a systematic engine for the salvation of billions, but at this point, the Path Above is essentially a massive umbrella coalition of imitation poperies, strange cults, and personal development seminars, dispersed across a wide territory. I see it clearly.”
― The Saint of Bright Doors
― The Saint of Bright Doors
“The people follow the throne,” Salyut says. “As they always have.” “This is the lie princes tell themselves,” Ordinary says. “Power is in people.” “You think this uprising will win?”
― The Saint of Bright Doors
― The Saint of Bright Doors
“I have been an absent father,” the Perfect and Kind says. “Though self, identity, predication, time, fatherhood, and absence are all constructs whose meanings dissolve under scrutiny. There are two levels to every utterance. Do you understand? There is surface, and then there is depth.”
― The Saint of Bright Doors
― The Saint of Bright Doors
“Systems are nothing to the systematic,”
― The Saint of Bright Doors
― The Saint of Bright Doors
“First Unforgivable. It’s not too late—you haven’t failed yet. One down, four to go. Do you remember what comes after matricide? Now you say it.” “Heresy leading to factionalism, sancticide of votaries who have reached the fourth level of awakening, patricide, and the assassination of the Perfect and Kind,” Fetter recites, the words scooped out with a jagged trowel from”
― The Saint of Bright Doors
― The Saint of Bright Doors
“a prophet of peace, for that was what he was becoming: he truly believed that peace could come from the ideological subjugation of all peoples of the world into an organized system of life, one that”
― The Saint of Bright Doors
― The Saint of Bright Doors
“The sea looks onto the backs of buildings, as if the entire city is turned away in a sulk.”
― The Saint of Bright Doors
― The Saint of Bright Doors
“Luriati military is called out and the newcomers shepherded into camps outside the city proper. The camps were occasional at first, Koel once remarked in group, and then seasonal, but now there are permanent camps, ever-growing, holding in quarantine those suspected of bearing plague or rebellion.”
― The Saint of Bright Doors
― The Saint of Bright Doors
“a riot is a pogrom, and that when a monk of the Path Behind is on TV calling for peace from both sides, that it means that the Path Behind is once again attempting to cull the hinterlands of the pathless, and of the races and castes that they consider low and other:”
― The Saint of Bright Doors
― The Saint of Bright Doors
