Stacey > Stacey's Quotes

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  • #1
    Ariel Dorfman
    “Gerardo; People can die from an excessive dose of the truth, you know.”
    Ariel Dorfman, Death and the Maiden
    tags: truth

  • #2
    Roman Payne
    “Never did the world make a queen of a girl who hides in houses and dreams without traveling.”
    Roman Payne, The Wanderess

  • #3
    Philippa Gregory
    “For most of my life i have been adored by fools and hated by people of good sense, and they all make up stories about me in which I am either a saint or a whore. But I am above these judgments, I am a Queen.”
    Philippa Gregory, The Other Queen
    tags: queen

  • #4
    “The advantages of a hereditary Monarchy are self-evident. Without some such method of prescriptive, immediate and automatic succession, an interregnum intervenes, rival claimants arise, continuity is interrupted and the magic lost. Even when Parliament had secured control of taxation and therefore of government; even when the menace of dynastic conflicts had receded in to the coloured past; even when kingship had ceased to be transcendental and had become one of many alternative institutional forms; the principle of hereditary Monarchy continued to furnish the State with certain specific and inimitable advantages.

    Apart from the imponderable, but deeply important, sentiments and affections which congregate around an ancient and legitimate Royal Family, a hereditary Monarch acquires sovereignty by processes which are wholly different from those by which a dictator seizes, or a President is granted, the headship of the State. The King personifies both the past history and the present identity of the Nation as a whole. Consecrated as he is to the service of his peoples, he possesses a religious sanction and is regarded as someone set apart from ordinary mortals. In an epoch of change, he remains the symbol of continuity; in a phase of disintegration, the element of cohesion; in times of mutability, the emblem of permanence. Governments come and go, politicians rise and fall: the Crown is always there. A legitimate Monarch moreover has no need to justify his existence, since he is there by natural right. He is not impelled as usurpers and dictators are impelled, either to mesmerise his people by a succession of dramatic triumphs, or to secure their acquiescence by internal terrorism or by the invention of external dangers. The appeal of hereditary Monarchy is to stability rather than to change, to continuity rather than to experiment, to custom rather than to novelty, to safety rather than to adventure.

    The Monarch, above all, is neutral. Whatever may be his personal prejudices or affections, he is bound to remain detached from all political parties and to preserve in his own person the equilibrium of the realm. An elected President – whether, as under some constitutions, he be no more than a representative functionary, or whether, as under other constitutions, he be the chief executive – can never inspire the same sense of absolute neutrality. However impartial he may strive to become, he must always remain the prisoner of his own partisan past; he is accompanied by friends and supporters whom he may seek to reward, or faced by former antagonists who will regard him with distrust. He cannot, to an equal extent, serve as the fly-wheel of the State.”
    Harold Nicholson

  • #5
    George R.R. Martin
    “No Queen has clean hands.”
    George R.R. Martin, A Dance with Dragons

  • #6
    “I earned those scars. I'm keeping them.”
    Aimee Carter, Queen

  • #7
    “I realized death isn't the worst thing. It's the last thing. And endings are hard, that's all.”
    Aimee Carter, Queen

  • #8
    Shannon L. Alder
    “Some women are built by the fire. Yet, there are some that are the FIRE!”
    Shannon L. Alder

  • #9
    Jen A. Durand
    “How can the daughter of an whore ever think to hold the heart of a King?”
    Jen A. Durand, Shadowy Lights: Fear

  • #10
    Sherwood Anderson
    “The machines men are so intent on making have carried them very far from the old sweet things.”
    Sherwood Anderson, Poor White



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