SH'DYNASTY > SH'DYNASTY's Quotes

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  • #1
    John Steinbeck
    “I am happy to report that in the war between reality and romance, reality is not the stronger.”
    John Steinbeck, Travels with Charley: In Search of America

  • #2
    John Steinbeck
    “The candle aimed its spark of light at heaven, like an artist who consumes himself to become divine.”
    John Steinbeck, Tortilla Flat

  • #3
    John Steinbeck
    “Two gallons is a great deal of wine, even for two paisanos. Spiritually the jugs maybe graduated thus: Just below the shoulder of the first bottle, serious and concentrated conversation. Two inches farther down, sweetly sad memory. Three inches more, thoughts of old and satisfactory loves. An inch, thoughts of bitter loves. Bottom of the first jug, general and undirected sadness. Shoulder of the second jug, black, unholy despondency. Two fingers down, a song of death or longing. A thumb, every other song each one knows. The graduations stop here, for the trail splits and there is no certainty. From this point anything can happen.”
    John Steinbeck, Tortilla Flat

  • #4
    John Steinbeck
    “[Cannery Row's] inhabitants are, as the man once said, 'whores, pimps, gamblers, and sons of bitches,' by which he meant everybody. Had the man looked through another peephole he might have said, 'saints and angels and martyrs and holy men,' and he would have meant the same thing.”
    John Steinbeck, Cannery Row

  • #5
    Augusten Burroughs
    “Should I just sit down, right here at carousel seven, and shake until somebody's arms are around me and they're saying, 'It's okay, I'm here, I'm here, come with me to the institute.”
    Augusten Burroughs, Dry

  • #6
    Friedrich Nietzsche
    “They're so cold, these scholars!
    May lightning strike their food
    so that their mouths learn how
    to eat fire!”
    Friedrich Nietzsche

  • #7
    Orhan Pamuk
    “Try to discover who I am from my choice of words and colors, as attentive people like yourselves might examine footprints to catch a thief.”
    Orhan Pamuk, My Name Is Red

  • #8
    Alojzije Stepinac
    “I seek no mercy; my conscience is clear.”
    Alojzije Stepinac

  • #9
    Tristan Tzara
    “Art needs an operation”
    Tristan Tzara, Seven Dada Manifestos and Lampisteries

  • #10
    Tristan Tzara
    “The summit sings what is being spoken in the depths.”
    Tristan Tzara, Seven Dada Manifestos and Lampisteries

  • #11
    Andrea Camilleri
    “To judge from the entrance the dawn was making, it promised to be a very iffy day -- that is, blasts of angry sunlight one minute, fits of freezing rain the next, all of it seasoned with sudden gusts of wind -- one of those days when someone who is sensitive to abrupt shifts in weather and suffers them in his blood and brain is likely to change opinion and direction continuously, like those sheets of tin, cut in the shape of banners and roosters, that spin every which way on rooftops with each new puff of wind. ”
    Andrea Camilleri, The Terra-Cotta Dog

  • #12
    Andrea Camilleri
    “Montalbano felt moved. This was real friendship, Sicilian friendship, the kind based on intuition, on what was left unsaid. With a true friend, one never needs to ask, because the other understands on his own accordingly.”
    Andrea Camilleri, The Snack Thief

  • #13
    Andrea Camilleri
    “Montalbano and Valente seemed not to have heard him, looking as if their minds were elsewhere. But in fact they were paying very close attention, like cats that, keeping their eyes closed as if asleep, are actually counting the stars. ”
    Andrea Camilleri, The Snack Thief

  • #14
    Andrea Camilleri
    “From the pit of his stomach a violent spasm of nausea rose up and seized his throat. He ran to the bathroom, barely able to stand, knelt down in front of the toilet and started to vomit. He vomited the whiskey he'd just drunk, vomited what he'd eaten that day as well as what he'd eaten the day before, and the day before that, and he felt, with his sweaty head now entirely inside the toilet bowl and a sharp pain in his side, as if he were endlessly vomiting up the entire time of his life on earth, going all the way back to the pap he was given as a baby, and when, at last, he'd expelled his own mother's milk, he kept vomiting poison bitterness, bile, pure hatred.”
    Andrea Camilleri, Excursion to Tindari

  • #15
    Andrea Camilleri
    “He was convinced he would keep his word. Not because he feared for his health, but because one cannot break a promise made to one's guardian angel. And he resumed the climb.”
    Andrea Camilleri, Rounding the Mark

  • #16
    Ismail Kadare
    “And everything would be different, different.”
    Ismail Kadare, Broken April

  • #17
    Ismail Kadare
    “It was only a phrase that went from mouth to mouth and was never quite swallowed.”
    Ismail Kadare, Broken April

  • #18
    Ismail Kadare
    “Having left, for various reasons, the homeland of epic, they were uprooted like trees overthrown, they had lost their heroic character and deep-seated virtue.”
    Ismail Kadare, Broken April

  • #19
    Ismail Kadare
    “To tell the truth, this was one of the few cases in which she had not told him just what she was thinking. Usually, she let him know whatever thoughts happened to come to her, and indeed he never took it amiss if she let slip a word that might pain him, because when all was said and done that was the price one paid for sincerity.”
    Ismail Kadare, Broken April

  • #20
    Ismail Kadare
    “His suspicion that he was not going in the right direction tortmented him more and more. At last he had the conviction that he would never go anywhere but in the wrong direction, to the very end of the handful of days that was left to him, unhappy moonstruck pilgrim, whose April was to be cut off short.”
    Ismail Kadare, Broken April

  • #21
    Jean Cocteau
    “Living is a horizontal fall.”
    Jean Cocteau, Opium: The Illustrated Diary of His Cure

  • #22
    Jean Cocteau
    “In two weeks, despite these notes, I shall no longer believe in what I am experiencing now. One must leave behind a trace of this journey which memory forgets. One must, when this is impossible, write or draw without responding to the romantic solicitations of pain, without enjoying suffering like music, tieing a pen to one's foot if need be, helping the doctors who can learn nothing from laziness.”
    Jean Cocteau, Opium: The Illustrated Diary of His Cure

  • #23
    Jean Cocteau
    “Without opium, plans, marriages and journeys appear to me just as foolish as if someone falling out of a window were to hope to make friends with the occupants of the room before which he passes.”
    Jean Cocteau, Opium: The Illustrated Diary of His Cure

  • #24
    Jean Cocteau
    “Lack of manners is the sign of a hero.”
    Jean Cocteau, Opium: The Illustrated Diary of His Cure

  • #25
    Ismail Kadare
    “Can one move an empire as if it were a house?”
    Ismail Kadare, Elegy for Kosovo

  • #26
    Ismail Kadare
    “This is how things come to pass in the world,' one of the princes is supposed to have said. 'Blood flows one way in life and another way in song, and one never knows which flow is the right one.”
    Ismail Kadare, Elegy for Kosovo

  • #27
    Salman Rushdie
    “Question: What is the opposite of faith?

    Not disbelief. Too final, certain, closed. Itself is a kind of belief.

    Doubt.

    The human condition, but what of the angelic? Halfway between Allahgod and homosap, did they ever doubt? They did: challenging God's will one day they hid muttering beneath the Throne, daring to ask forbidden things: antiquestions. Is it right that. Could it not be argued. Freedom, the old antiquest. He calmed them down, naturally, employing management skills a la god. Flattered them: you will be the instruments of my will on earth, the salvationdamnation of man, all the usual etcetera. And hey presto, the end of protest, on with the haloes, back to work. Angels are easily pacified; turn them into instruments and they'll play your harpy tune. Human beings are tougher nuts, can doubt anything, even the evidence of their own eyes. Of behing-their-own-eyes. Of what, as they sink heavy-lidded, transpires behind closed peepers ... angels, they don't have much in the way of a will. To will is to disagree; not to submit; to dissent.”
    Salman Rushdie, The Satanic Verses

  • #28
    Umberto Eco
    “When you are on the dancefloor, there is nothing to do but dance.”
    Umberto Eco, The Mysterious Flame of Queen Loana

  • #29
    John Reid Edwards
    “And yet, he had this: the ability to make you believe in him and want to fight for him because, without any reservation, he believed in you in a way you did not yet believe in yourself.”
    John Reid Edwards, Four Trials

  • #30
    Agatha Christie
    “It's so much nicer to be a secret and delightful sin to anybody than to be a feather in his cap.”
    Agatha Christie, Murder at the Vicarage



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