Augustine Talburt > Augustine's Quotes

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  • #1
    Karl Braungart
    “We have three sets of passports. Two are Egyptian with false names.”
    Karl Braungart, Fatal Identity

  • #2
    A.R. Merrydew
    “     Illicit flight Alfa Bravo Charlie quickly reached a predetermined altitude and stopped dead. The passengers on board screamed the way people do on fairground rides. The shuttle hesitated momentarily and then shot forward accelerating rapidly to reach a blistering 145,222 miles per hour. They were in a Mach 22 situation. The cries from on-board could not be heard from the ground. Neither did anyone in the great metropolis of Llar witness the bright blue vapour trail the craft left behind in its wake. It was after all overcast and raining heavily.”
    A.R. Merrydew, Our Blue Orange

  • #3
    Max Nowaz
    “Are you really a reporter?” asked Brown.
“You already asked me that. Come back to Levita, take the pardon.”
 “I doubt I’ll live long enough to get there,” said Brown bitterly.
“I hope you survive. You are a fighter. And we have the antidote for your habit on
Levita. I suggest you take a vacation. There’s nothing much that’s going to happen here.”
With that she left, leaving Brown more confused than ever.
He was a father, he had a son. And, the Levitians had a cure for his drug-addled body.”
    Max Nowaz, The Arbitrator

  • #4
    “Life is so outrageous I could not have imagined it, made all the
    sweeter because it cannot last. It is all about today. Today is the
    best day ever because tomorrow might not happen.”
    Hendri Coetzee, Living the Best Day Ever

  • #5
    Rainer Maria Rilke
    “It is spring again. The earth is like a child that knows poems by heart.”
    Rainer Maria Rilke

  • #6
    Maya Angelou
    “History, despite its wrenching pain cannot be unlived, but if faced with courage need not be lived again.”
    Maya Angelou

  • #7
    “It’s time to fight.”
    Pittacus Lore, The Revenge of Seven

  • #8
    Tim O'Brien
    “Sometimes the bravest thing in the world was to sit through the night and feel the cold in your bones.”
    Tim O'Brien, The Things They Carried

  • #9
    Irène Némirovsky
    “When you love someone as much as that, you don't believe they can die. You think your love protects them. Even if he doesn't come back, even if he gets lost in the snow or is hit by a stray bullet, she'll wait for him.”
    Irène Némirovsky, The Wine of Solitude

  • #10
    Edwin A. Abbott
    “All faults or defects, from the slightest misconduct to the most flagitious crime, Pantocyclus attributed to some deviation from perfect Regularity in the bodily figure, caused perhaps (if not congenital) by some collision in a crowd; by neglect to take exercise, or by taking too much of it; or even by a sudden change of temperature, resulting in a shrinkage or expansion in some too susceptible part of the frame. Therefore, concluded that illustrious Philosopher, neither good conduct nor bad conduct is a fit subject, in any sober estimation, for either praise or blame. For why should you praise, for example, the integrity of a Square who faithfully defends the interests of his client, when you ought in reality rather to admire the exact precision of his right angles? Or again, why blame a lying, thievish Isosceles when you ought rather to deplore the incurable inequality of his sides?

    Theoretically, this doctrine is unquestionable; but it has practical drawbacks. In dealing with an Isosceles, if a rascal pleads that he cannot help stealing because of his unevenness, you reply that for that very reason, because he cannot help being a nuisance to his neighbours, you, the Magistrate, cannot help sentencing him to be consumed - and there's an end of the matter. But in little domestic difficulties, where the penalty of consumption, or death, is out of the question, this theory of Configuration sometimes comes in awkwardly; and I must confess that occasionally when one of my own Hexagonal Grandsons pleads as an excuse for his disobedience that a sudden change of the temperature has been too much for his perimeter, and that I ought to lay the blame not on him but on his Configuration, which can only be strengthened by abundance of the choicest sweetmeats, I neither see my way logically to reject, nor practically to accept, his conclusions.

    For my own part, I find it best to assume that a good sound scolding or castigation has some latent and strengthening influence on my Grandson's Configuration; though I own that I have no grounds for thinking so. At all events I am not alone in my way of extricating myself from this dilemma; for I find that many of the highest Circles, sitting as Judges in law courts, use praise and blame towards Regular and Irregular Figures; and in their homes I know by experience that, when scolding their children, they speak about "right" or "wrong" as vehemently and passionately as if they believed that these names represented real existences, and that a human Figure is really capable of choosing between them.”
    Edwin A. Abbott, Flatland: A Romance of Many Dimensions

  • #11
    Larada Horner-Miller
    “Every year, Grandma Dickerson, my mom’s mother, made all the traditional sweets for Christmas time, but she made something not exactly “Christmasy” that became my favorite. Popcorn balls. She always prepared all those goodies before we arrived, so I never got to make them with her, and I never found out how she made them.”
    Larada Horner-Miller, Hair on Fire: A Heartwarming & Humorous Christmas Memoir

  • #12
    Hanna  Hasl-Kelchner
    “Expecting fairness at work isn’t being petty – it’s being human.”
    Hanna Hasl-Kelchner

  • #13
    “If your world is out there and you are in here then the only things that will gather within these walls are time and bitterness. Eventually, that bitterness will eat away at you and leave nothing behind but resentment and hate.”
    R.D. Ronald, The Zombie Room

  • #14
    A.R. Merrydew
    “We might even make this after all,’ he hollered, but the craft didn’t reply.”
    A.R. Merrydew, Inara

  • #15
    Sheridan  Brown
    “When Booker first started working for her a few years ago and was living in their home, she saw him cower with apprehension every time she snapped a new order or made him redo tasks more than once, twice, or three times. Now, she knew that he understood her ways better, her need for order, cleanliness, and strict attention to details. She felt he was beginning to realize just what this fifty-seven-year-old Yankee schoolteacher expected of her thirteen-year-old house servant and pupil. He began to appreciate the books from which she taught him after his morning chores were completed. She gave him a few to start his own library and found he stored them in old dry goods boxes in his bedroom.”
    Sheridan Brown, The Viola Factor

  • #16
    John Fowles
    “The truth about any artist, however terrible, is better than the silence.... I know many writers fight fanatically to keep their published self separate from their private reality.... But I've always thought of that as something out of our social, time-serving side; not our true artistic ones. I don't see how the "lies" we write and the "lies" we live can or should be divided. They are seamless, one canvas, for me. While we live we can keep them apart, but not command the future to do the same. The outrage some Thomas Hardy fans have shown over all the revelations about the private man seems to me hypocritical in the extreme. They hugely enrich our understanding of him.... I have had to convince a number of friends and relatives that the kindest act to the [writer] is remembering them - and that all art comes from a human being, not out of mysterious thin air.

    (Letter to Jo Jones, September 15, 1980, arguing for the preservation of John Collier's personal papers)”
    John Fowles

  • #17
    Lewis Carroll
    “But then, shall I never get any older than I am now? That'll be a comfort, one way -- never to be an old woman -- but then -- always to have lessons to learn!”
    Lewis Carroll, Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland / Through the Looking-Glass
    tags: humor

  • #18
    John Ajvide Lindqvist
    “Real love is to offer your life at the feet of another.”
    John Ajvide Lindqvist, Let the Right One In
    tags: love

  • #19
    Spencer Johnson
    “Integrity is telling myself the truth. And honesty is telling the truth to other people.”
    Spencer Johnson

  • #20
    Homer
    “Here, therefore, huge and mighty warrior though you be, here shall you die.”
    Homer, Iliad



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