Jared Wilwerding > Jared's Quotes

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  • #1
    Steven Erikson
    “Children are dying."
    Lull nodded. "That's a succinct summary of humankind, I'd say. Who needs tomes and volumes of history? Children are dying. The injustices of the world hide in those three words.”
    Steven Erikson, Deadhouse Gates

  • #2
    Steven Erikson
    “Self-righteous wrath had planted more corpses in the ground than an empire could lay claim to,”
    Steven Erikson, Gardens of the Moon

  • #3
    Steven Erikson
    “What are gods, after all, if not the perfect victims?”
    Steven Erikson, Gardens of the Moon

  • #4
    Steven Erikson
    “I’m sure they were good men, the ones you lost.” “Good at dying,” he said.”
    Steven Erikson, Gardens of the Moon

  • #5
    Steven Erikson
    “The lesson of history is that no one learns.”
    Steven Erikson, Deadhouse Gates

  • #6
    Steven Erikson
    “[T]he unnamed soldier is a gift. The named soldier--dead, melted wax--demands a response among the living...a response no-one can make. Names are no comfort, they're a call to answer the unanswerable. Why did she die, not him? Why do the survivors remain anonymous--as if cursed--while the dead are revered? Why do we cling to what we lose while we ignore what we still hold?

    Name none of the fallen, for they stood in our place, and stand there still in each moment of our lives. Let my death hold no glory, and let me die forgotten and unknown. Let it not be said that I was one among the dead to accuse the living.”
    Steven Erikson, Deadhouse Gates

  • #7
    Steven Erikson
    “We are all lone souls. It pays to know humility, lest the delusion of control, of mastery, overwhelms. And, indeed, we seem a species prone to that delusion, again and ever again."
    ~Fiddler, pg. 558”
    Steven Erikson, Deadhouse Gates

  • #8
    Steven Erikson
    “How does a mortal make answer to what his or her kind are capable of? Does each of us, soldier or no, reach a point when all that we’ve seen, survived, changes us inside? Irrevocably changes us. What do we become, then? Less human, or more human? Human enough, or too human?”
    Steven Erikson, Deadhouse Gates

  • #9
    Steven Erikson
    “Land, domination, pre-emptive attacks - all just excuses, mundane justifications that do nothing but disguise the simple distinction. They are not us. We are not them.”
    Steven Erikson, Deadhouse Gates
    tags: war

  • #10
    Steven Erikson
    “Kallor shrugged. '[...] I have walked this land when the T'lan Imass were but children. I have commanded armies a hundred thousand strong. I have spread the fire of my wrath across entire continents, and sat alone upon tall thrones. Do you grasp the meaning of this?'

    'Yes,' [said Caladan Brood.] 'You never learn.”
    Steven Erikson, Memories of Ice

  • #11
    Steven Erikson
    “First in , Last out.


    Motto of the bridgeburners”
    Steven Erikson, Memories of Ice

  • #12
    Steven Erikson
    “We humans do not understand compassion. In each moment of our lives, we betray it. Aye, we know of its worth, yet in knowing we then attach to it a value, we guard the giving of it, believing it must be earned, T’lan Imass. Compassion is priceless in the truest sense of the word. It must be given freely. In abundance.”
    Steven Erikson, Memories of Ice

  • #13
    Steven Erikson
    “War has its necessities...and I have always understood that. Always known the cost. But, this day, by my own hand, I have realized something else. War is not a natural state. It is an imposition, and a damned unhealthy one. With its rules, we willingly yield our humanity. Speak not of just causes, worthy goals. We are takers of life.”
    Steven Erikson, Memories of Ice

  • #14
    Steven Erikson
    “The heart of wisdom is tolerance.”
    Steven Erikson, Memories of Ice

  • #15
    Steven Erikson
    “Death and dying makes us into children once again, in truth, one last time, there in our final wailing cries. More than one philosopher has claimed that we ever remain children, far beneath the indurated layers that make up the armour of adulthood.”
    Steven Erikson, Memories of Ice

  • #16
    Steven Erikson
    “Innocence is only a virtue, lass, when it is temporary. You must pass from it to look back and recognize its unsullied purity. To remain innocent is to twist beneath invisible and unfathomable forces all your life, until one day you realize that you no longer recognize yourself, and it comes to you that innocence was a curse that had shackled you, stunted you, defeated your every expression of living.”
    Steven Erikson, House of Chains

  • #17
    Steven Erikson
    “When I began this journey, I was young. I believed in one thing. I believed in glory. I know now, 'Siballe, that glory is nothing. Nothing. This is what I now understand.'
    'What else do you now understand, Karsa Orlong?'
    'Not much. Just one other thing. The same cannot be said for mercy.”
    steven erikson, House of Chains

  • #18
    Steven Erikson
    “Karsa shrugged. ‘The Malazan soldiers in Genabaris said the Seven Cities was going to rebel against their occupiers. This is why the Teblor do not make conquests. Better that the enemy keeps its land, so that we may raid again and again.’

    ‘Not the imperial way,’ the Daru responded, shaking his head. ‘Possession and control, the two are like insatiable hungers for some people. Oh, no doubt the Malazans have thought up countless justifications for their wars of expansion. It’s well known that Seven Cities was a rat’s warren of feuds and civil wars, leaving most of the population suffering and miserable and starving under the heels of fat warlords and corrupt priest-kings. And that, with the Malazan conquest, the thugs ended up spiked to the city walls or on the run. And the wilder tribes no longer sweep down out of the hills to deliver mayhem on their more civilized kin. And the tyranny of the priesthoods was shattered, putting an end to human sacrifice and extortion. And of course the merchants have never been richer, or safer on these roads. So, all in all, this land is rife for rebellion.”
    Steven Erikson, House of Chains

  • #19
    Steven Erikson
    “Is that all we mortals are? The victims of tortured irony to amuse an insane murder of gods?

    A murder of crows, a murder of gods-I like that, lass.”
    Steven Erikson, House of Chains

  • #20
    Steven Erikson
    “What matter the colour of the collar around a man’s neck, if the chains linked to them were identical?”
    Steven Erikson, House of Chains

  • #21
    Steven Erikson
    “Wise words are like arrows flung at your forehead. What do you do? Why, you duck of course.”
    Steven Erikson, House of Chains

  • #22
    Steven Erikson
    “Tell me, Tool, what dominates your thoughts?'
    The Imass shrugged before replying.
    'I think of futility, Adjunct.'
    'Do all Imass think about futility?'
    'No. Few think at all.'
    'Why is that?'
    The Imass leaned his head to one side and regarded her.
    'Because Adjunct, it is futile.”
    Steven Erikson, Gardens of the Moon

  • #23
    Steven Erikson
    “Soldiers are issued armour for their flesh and bones, but they must fashion their own for their souls. Piece by piece. (Itkovian)”
    Steven Erikson

  • #24
    Ian C. Esslemont
    “When you do not recognize the wrongs of the past, the future takes its revenge. -Author forgotten”
    Ian C. Esslemont, Stonewielder

  • #25
    Steven Erikson
    “Silence!” Korbolo snapped. He eyed Duiker. “You are the historian who rode with Coltaine.”

    The historian faced him. “I am.”

    “You are a soldier.”

    “As you say.”

    “I do, and so you shall die with these soldiers, in a manner no different-“

    “You mean to slaughter ten thousand unarmed men and women, Korbolo Dom?”

    “I mean to cripple Tavore before she even sets foot on this continent. I mean to make her too furious to think. I mean to crack that façade so she dreams of vengeance day and night, poisoning her every decision.”

    “You always fashioned yourself as the Empire’s harshest Fist, didn’t you, Korbolo Dom? As if cruelty’s a virtue…”
    Steven Erikson, Deadhouse Gates

  • #26
    Steven Erikson
    “People of civilized countenance made much of exposing the soft underbellies of their psyche - effete and sensitive were the brands of finer breeding. It was easy for them, safe, and that was the whole point, after all: a statement of coddled opulence that burned the throats of the poor more than any ostentatious show of wealth.”
    Steven Erikson, Deadhouse Gates

  • #27
    Steven Erikson
    “What makes a Malazan soldier so dangerous? They’re allowed to think.”
    Steven Erikson, Deadhouse Gates

  • #28
    Steven Erikson
    “The more civilized a nation, the more conformed its population, until that civilization's last age arrives, when multiplicity wages war with conformity. The former grows ever wilder, ever more dysfunctional in its extremities; whilst the latter seeks to increase its measure of control, until such efforts acquire diabolical tyranny.'
    - Traveller”
    Steven Erikson

  • #29
    Steven Erikson
    “You have learned much, Karsa Orlong."
    "I have, T'lan Imass. As you shall witness.”
    Steven Erikson, House of Chains

  • #30
    Steven Erikson
    “A civilization can easily drown in what it knows as in what doesn't know. Consider,' he continued, Gotho's Folly. Gotho's curse was in being too aware - of everything. Every permutation, every potential. Enough to poison every scan he cast on the world. It availed him naught, and worse, he was aware of even that.”
    Steven Erikson, Deadhouse Gates



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