Lera > Lera's Quotes

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  • #1
    George R.R. Martin
    “A reader lives a thousand lives before he dies, said Jojen. The man who never reads lives only one.”
    George R.R. Martin, A Dance with Dragons

  • #2
    George R.R. Martin
    “What was he now? Only Bran the broken boy, Brandon of House Stark, prince of a lost kingdom, lord of a burned castle, heir to ruins.”
    George R.R. Martin, A Dance with Dragons

  • #3
    George R.R. Martin
    “No ruler can make a people good.”
    George R.R. Martin, A Dance with Dragons

  • #4
    George R.R. Martin
    “I want to live forever in a land where summer lasts a thousand years. I want a castle in the clouds where I can look down over the world. I want to be six-and-twenty again. When I was six-and-twenty I could fight all day and fuck all night. What men want does not matter.
    Winter is almost upon us, boy. And winter is death. I would sooner my men die fighting for the Ned's little girl than alone and hungry in the snow, weeping tears that freeze upon their cheeks. No one sings songs of men who die like that. As for me, I am old. This will be my last winter. Let me bathe in Bolton blood before I die. I want to feel it spatter across my face when my axe bites deep into a Bolton skull. I want to lick it off my lips and die with the taste of it on my tongue.”
    George R.R. Martin, A Dance with Dragons

  • #5
    George R.R. Martin
    “She wants fire, and Dorne sent her mud.
    You could make a poultice out of mud to cool a fever. You could plant seeds in mud and grow a crop to feed your children. Mud would nourish you, where fire would only consume you, but fools and children and young girls would choose fire every time.”
    George R.R. Martin, A Dance with Dragons

  • #6
    George R.R. Martin
    “Cunt again? It was odd how men like Suggs used that word to demean women when it was the only part of a woman they valued.”
    George R. R. Martin

  • #7
    George R.R. Martin
    “You are the Lady Asha of House Greyjoy, unless I am mistaken."
    "I am Asha of House Greyjoy, aye. Opinions differ on whether I am a lady.”
    George R.R. Martin, A Dance with Dragons

  • #8
    George R.R. Martin
    “Proud men might shout that they would sooner die free than live as slaves, but pride was cheap. When the steel struck the flint, such men were rare as dragon's teeth; elsewise the world would not have been so full of slaves. There has never been a slave who did not choose to be a slave, the dwarf reflected. Their choice may be between bondage and death, but the choice is always there.”
    George R.R. Martin, A Dance with Dragons

  • #9
    George R.R. Martin
    “You kill men for the wrongs they have done, not the wrongs that they may do someday.”
    George R.R. Martin, A Dance with Dragons

  • #10
    Piper Kerman
    “We have a racially based justice system that overpunishes, fails to rehabilitate, and doesn't make us safer.”
    Piper Kerman, Orange Is the New Black

  • #11
    Piper Kerman
    “Nothing about the daily workings of the prison system focuses its inhabitants’ attention on what life back on the outside, as a free citizen, will be like. The life of the institution dominates everything. This is one of the awful truths of incarceration, the fact that the horror and the struggle and the interest of your immediate life behind prison walls drives the “real world” out of your head. That makes returning to the outside difficult for many prisoners.”
    Piper Kerman, Orange Is the New Black: My Year in a Women's Prison

  • #12
    Piper Kerman
    “In the federal system alone there were 90,000 prisoners locked up for drug offenses, compared with about 40,000 for violent crimes. A federal prisoner costs at least $30,000 a year to incarcerate, and females actually cost more.”
    Piper Kerman, Orange Is the New Black

  • #13
    Piper Kerman
    “Our current criminal justice system has no provision for restorative justice, in which an offender confronts the damage they have done and tries to make it right for the people they have harmed. Instead, our system of "corrections" is about arm's-length revenge and retribution, all day and all night.”
    Piper Kerman, Orange Is the New Black

  • #14
    J.K. Rowling
    “I hope you're pleased with yourselves. We could all have been killed - or worse, expelled. Now if you don't mind, I'm going to bed.”
    J.K. Rowling, Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone

  • #15
    J.K. Rowling
    “It does not do to dwell on dreams and forget to live.”
    J.K. Rowling, Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone

  • #16
    J.K. Rowling
    “Call him Voldemort, Harry. Always use the proper name for things. Fear of a name increases fear of the thing itself.”
    J.K. Rowling, Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone

  • #17
    J.K. Rowling
    “As much money and life as you could want! The two things most human beings would choose above all - the trouble is, humans do have a knack of choosing precisely those things that are worst for them.”
    J.K. Rowling, Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone

  • #18
    Anne Frank
    “As long as this exists, this sunshine and this cloudless sky, and as long as I can enjoy it, how can I be sad?”
    Anne Frank, The Diary of a Young Girl

  • #19
    George Orwell
    “Don’t you see that the whole aim of Newspeak is to narrow the range of thought? In the end we shall make thoughtcrime literally impossible, because there will be no words in which to express it.”
    George Orwell, 1984
    tags: 1984

  • #20
    George Orwell
    “Until they become conscious they will never rebel, and until after they have rebelled they cannot become conscious.”
    George Orwell, 1984

  • #21
    George Orwell
    “How could you tell how much of it was lies? It might be true that the average human being was better off now than before the Revolution. The only evidence to the contrary was the mute protest in your own bones, the instinctive feeling that the conditions you lived in were intolerable and that at some other time they must have been different. It struck him that the truly characteristic thing about modern life was not its cruelty and insecurity, but simply its bareness, its dinginess, its listlessness. Life, if you looked about you, bore no resemblance not only to the lies that streamed out of the telescreens, but even to the ideals that the Party was trying to achieve. Great areas of it, even for a party member, were neutral and nonpolitical, a matter of slogging through dreary jobs, fighting for a place on the Tube, darning a worn-out sock, cadging a saccharine tablet, saving a cigarette end. The ideal set up by the Party was something huge, terrible, and glittering--a world of steel and concrete, of monstrous machines and terrifying weapons--a nation of warriors and fanatics, marching forward in perfect unity, all thinking the same thoughts and shouting the same slogans, perpetually working, fighting, triumphing, persecuting--three hundred million people all with the same face.”
    George Orwell, 1984

  • #22
    George Orwell
    “For, after all, how do we know that two and two make four? Or that the force of gravity works? Or that the past is unchangeable? If both the past and the external world exist only in the mind, and if the mind itself is controllable – what then?”
    George Orwell, 1984

  • #23
    George Orwell
    “Who cares?' she said impatiently, 'it's always one bloody war after another, and one knows the news is all lies anyway.”
    George Orwell, 1984

  • #24
    George Orwell
    “The essential act of war is destruction, not necessarily of human lives, but of the products of human labour. War is a way of shattering to pieces, or pouring into the stratosphere, or sinking in the depths of the sea, materials which might otherwise be used to make the masses too comfortable, and hence, in the long run, too intelligent.”
    George Orwell, 1984

  • #25
    George Orwell
    “The best books... are those that tell you what you know already.”
    George Orwell, 1984

  • #26
    George Orwell
    “The invention of print, however, made it easier to manipulate public opinion, and the film and the radio carried the process further. With the development of television, and the technical advance which made it possible to receive and transmit simultaneously on the same instrument, private life came to an end. Every citizen, or at least every citizen important enough to be worth watching, could be kept for twenty-four hours a day under the eyes of the police and in the sound of official propaganda, with all other channels of communication closed. The possibility of enforcing not only complete obedience to the will of the State, but complete uniformity of opinion on all subjects, now existed for the first time.”
    George Orwell, 1984

  • #27
    George Orwell
    “Past events, it is argued, have no objective existence, but survive only in written records and in human memories. The past is whatever the records and the memories agree upon.”
    George Orwell, 1984

  • #28
    George Orwell
    “Reality exists in the human mind, and nowhere else.”
    George Orwell, 1984

  • #29
    George Orwell
    “Nothing exists except through human consciousness”
    George Orwell, 1984

  • #30
    George Orwell
    “To die hating them, that was freedom.”
    George Orwell, 1984



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