From Wikiquote
The Truth Shall Make Ye Fret.
Discworld is a comedic
fantasy book series by British author
Terry Pratchett set on the
Discworld, a flat world balanced on
the backs of four elephants which are in turn standing on the back
of a giant turtle, the
Great A'Tuin. The stories
are arranged in several different story arcs that are further
explained in the Wikipedia article on the
Discworld reading order. This
article also shows quotes of the video game adaptations of the
series.
- If complete and utter chaos was lightning, then he'd be
the sort to stand on a hilltop in a thunderstorm wearing wet copper
armour and shouting 'All gods are bastards'.
- What he didn't like about heroes was that they were usually
suicidally gloomy when sober and homicidally insane when
drunk.
- "It could be worse," he said by way of farewell.^ Like everyone I have been dumbfounded at the stupidity of many of the things that have been done, and I try to understand how they could have thought things through so poorly.
^ Buchanan once said something like race, ethnicity, customs, tradition, holidays, literature, culture, art, institutions are not all, but they are not nothing.- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
^ He said after the 7/7 bombings, while he was in Britain: 'If they could only see into our hearts they would know how good we are', and he honestly believes that.
.
- That's what's so stupid about the whole magic thing, you know.^ Like everyone I have been dumbfounded at the stupidity of many of the things that have been done, and I try to understand how they could have thought things through so poorly.
.
- Twoflower was a tourist, the first ever seen on the Discworld.^ I’m sure you all seen what happened in Kosovo?
- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
^ Since you’ve been so mischaracterized, I’ll make my comments mine and not put words into your mouth.- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
.
- It was all very well going on about pure logic and how the
universe was ruled by logic and the harmony of numbers, but the
plain fact of the matter was that the Disc was manifestly
traversing space on the back of a giant turtle and the gods had a
habit of going round to atheists' houses and smashing their
windows.
- 'You know, I never imagined there were he-dryads.^ Well, there we go.
- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
^ You are exposing yourself as a fantasist because the restoration of the monarchy is never going to happen.- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
^ But before going there, we should note that not all discrimination against other groups is irrational.- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
Not even in
an oak tree.'
One of the giants grinned at him.
Druellae snorted. 'Stupid! Where do you think acorns come
from?'
- What heroes like best is themselves.
We've strayed into a zone with a high magical index...
- 'We've strayed into a zone with a high magical
index,' he said. 'Don't ask me how. Once upon a time a
really powerful magic field must have been generated here, and
we're feeling the after-effects.'
'Precisely,' said a passing bush.
- The only reason for walking into the jaws of Death is so's you
can steal his gold teeth.
- 'It is forbidden to fight on the Killing Ground,' he said, and
paused while he considered the sense of this. 'You know what I
mean, anyway...'
I've seen excitement, and I've seen boredom. And boredom was
best.
- Some pirates achieved immortality by great deeds of cruelty or
derring-do. Some achieved immortality by amassing great wealth. But
the captain had long ago decided that he would, on the
whole, prefer to achieve immortality by not dying.
- It was octarine, the colour of magic. It was alive and
glowing and vibrant and it was the undisputed pigment of the
imagination, because wherever it appeared it was a sign that mere
matter was a servant of the powers of the magical mind. It
was enchantment itself.
But Rincewind always thought it looked a sort of
greenish-purple.
- I've seen excitement, and I've seen boredom. And
boredom was best.
- 'What's this wine — crushed octopus eyeballs?'
'Sea grape,' said the old man.
'Great,' said Rincewind, and swallowed a glassful. 'Not bad. A bit
salty, maybe.'
'Sea grape is a kind of small jellyfish,' explained the stranger.
'[...] Why has your friend gone that strange colour?'
'Culture shock, I imagine,' said Twoflower.
- 'We don't have gods where I come from,' said Twoflower.
.^ Well, I don’t know if you have noticed or not, but they (the immigrants and such) have shown no intention of leaving or “assimilating.” They in fact have said and *demonstrated* that they have no such intentions of leaving.- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
'Everyone has gods. You
just don't think they're gods.'
- '[...] on the disc, the Gods are not so much worshipped as
blamed.'
Of course I'm sane, when trees start talking to me, I don't talk
back.
- The disc, being flat, has no real horizon. .
- Of course I'm sane, when trees start talking to me, I
don't talk back.
- Weems might have had a room-temperature IQ, but he knew idiocy
when he saw it.
- Early to rise, early to bed, makes a man healthy,
wealthy and dead.
- 'Dead?'^ People who talk about “brutality” are either provocateurs or they’re just dumb.
- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
^ (Side note: as well, the Ottoman Empire was viewed as a check against the westward expansion of Russian power, which was the reason why the European powers saved that sick man from a mercifully early death after the Crimean War.- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
^ Then I hear the same people talk about European “fascism” and the brutality they used against those who they considered outsiders.- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
said Rincewind, In the debating chamber of his mind a
dozen emotions got to their feet and started shouting. Relief was
in full spate when Shock cut in on a point of order and then
Bewilderment, Terror and Loss started a fight which was ended only
when Shame slunk in from next door to see what all the row was
about.
- Darkness isn't the opposite of light, it is simply its
absence.
- Ankh-Morpork! Pearl of cities! .
- The death of the warrior
or the old man or the little child, this I understand, and I take
away the pain and end the suffering.^ What you and I might agree upon is an overt celebration of European culture.
- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
^ In fact, it would be very difficult for people to agree on what “culture” even means!- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
^ The attempt to build a universal community is a bit fantastical but love and respect for the other, even and especially if he is one’s enemy, is man’s second most important mandate.- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
I do not understand this
death-of-the-mind.
- Radiating from the book was the light that lies on the far side
of darkness, the light fantastic.
It was a rather disappointing purple colour.
- It may, however, help to explain why Gandalf never got married and why Merlin
was a man. Because this is also a story about sex, although
probably not in the athletic, tumbling,
count-the-legs-and-divide-by-two sense unless the characters get
totally beyond the author's control. .
- She was already learning that if you ignore the rules
people will, half the time, quietly rewrite them so that they don't
apply to you.
- "They're both magic.^ Also one seeks to marry within his people, even if they’re pagan.
- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
^ People who talk about “brutality” are either provocateurs or they’re just dumb.- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
^ We’re entering a very dangerous time in which people with an extreme hatred for us are gaining in numbers.- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
If you can't learn to ride an elephant,
you can at least learn to ride a horse."
"What's an elephant?"
.
- "You mean it's my destiny?"^ So my question is how do you intend to make them leave or comply without some kind of brutality?” (’Brutus) .
- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
^ So my question is how do you intend to make them leave or comply without some kind of brutality?- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
she said at last.
Granny shrugged."Something like that. Probably. .
- It is well known that a vital ingredient of success is
not knowing that what you're attempting can't be done.^ Those who are not well read (Röpke, Mises, Hayek), don’t know that classical liberalism can only exist within a conservative, social stable culture.
- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
^ Well, I don’t know if you have noticed or not, but they (the immigrants and such) have shown no intention of leaving or “assimilating.” They in fact have said and *demonstrated* that they have no such intentions of leaving.- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
^ So, if you’re serious about preserving our traditions then in my opinion the most direct path to success is to simultaneously fight for the preservation of our people and (by doing so) awaken them to our traditions.- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
.
- One reason for the bustle was that over large parts of the
continent other people preferred to make money without working at
all, and since the Disc had yet to develop a music recording
industry they were forced to fall back on older, more traditional
forms of banditry.
- It was a small village, and wouldn't have shown up on a map of
the mountains.^ Culture is meant to serve the people, and I’d prefer not to list them all here since such would only serve to prove I don’t fit false stereotypes.
- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
^ Culture is meant to serve the people, and it does so in many ways though I’d prefer not to list them all here since such would only serve to prove I don’t fit false stereotypes.- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
^ The first thing we need to be able to do is to work up the courage to say openly that we care about the preservation of our peoples (as in race), our culture, our traditions, and our languages without fear of shame from the more-diverse-than-thou Kirt Higdon’s of the world who presently constitute the faux Right.- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
.
- Granny had nothing against fortune-telling provided it was done
badly by people with no talent for it.
- "[...]Can't you read, Esk?"^ Politics are no longer for the people, it’s up to ourselves.
- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
^ You have had several decades now to step up to the plate and show us a kinder, gentler way.- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
^ THAT IS THE WHOLE POINT OF THIS EXERCISE! We want people like you to wake up and work with us to secure our survival.- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
The astonishment in his voice stung her.
"I expect so," she said defiantly. "I've never
tried."
- Although his body had travelled a quite a lot, his mind never
went beyond the limits of his head.
- Publisher's excerpts
online
- This is the Death whose particular sphere of operations
is, well, not a sphere at all, but the Discworld, which is flat
and rides on the back of four giant elephants who stand on the
shell of the enormous star turtle Great A'Tuin, and which is
bounded by a waterfall that cascades endlessly into space.
Scientists have calculated that the chance of anything so
patently absurd actually existing are millions to one. .
- What is your
name?
'Uh,' said Mort.^ When you figure out a way to get *several tens of millions* of people to either leave or do as you want them to do, in a courteous and polite way, I’ll take you seriously.- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
'Mortimer...sir. They call me Mort.'
What a coincidence,
said the skull.
- 'And he goes around killing people?' said Mort. He shook his
head. 'There's no justice.'
Death sighed. No, he
said, there's just
me.
- He saw his life stretching out in front of him like a nasty
black tunnel with no light at the end of it.
...He'd been wrong, there .
- 'It would seem that you have no useful skill or talent
whatsoever' he said.^ As such, no more attention should be given here to him than you would give to a small child’s input on an important financial transaction.
- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
^ Well, I don’t know if you have noticed or not, but they (the immigrants and such) have shown no intention of leaving or “assimilating.” They in fact have said and *demonstrated* that they have no such intentions of leaving.- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
'Have you thought of going into teaching?'
History always has a few tricks up its frayed sleeve. It's been
around a long time.
- Knowledge = Power = Energy = Matter = Mass. A library
is just a genteel black hole that can read
- Death was standing behind a lectern, poring over a map. He
looked at Mort as if he wasn't entirely there.
You haven't heard of the Bay
of Mante, have you? he said.
'No, sir,' said Mort.
Famous shipwreck
there.
'Was there?'
There will be, said
Death, if I can find the damn
place.
- His father regarded him critically.
"Very nice," he said, "for the money."
"It itches," said Mort, "I think there's things in here
with me."
"There's thousands of lads in the world'd be very thankful for a
nice warm — " Lezek paused, and gave up — "garment like that, my
lad."
"I could share it with them?" .
- You don't see people at
their best in this job, said Death.
- "Look, I'll be frank," he said.^ If you don’t like ethnic nationalism then you’ll have to supply a more realistic alternative to “McWorld Coca-Colonisation” than the monarchy.
- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
^ When you figure out a way to get *several tens of millions* of people to either leave or do as you want them to do, in a courteous and polite way, I’ll take you seriously.- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
^ Well, I don’t know if you have noticed or not, but they (the immigrants and such) have shown no intention of leaving or “assimilating.” They in fact have said and *demonstrated* that they have no such intentions of leaving.- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
"I could point you in the
direction of a great brothel."
"I've already had lunch," said Mort vaguely.
- That's mortals for
you, Death continued. They've only got a few years in
this world and they spend them all in making things complicated for
themselves.
- "I've — we've got a special on Cutwell's Shield of Passion
ointment," said the face, and winked in a startling fashion.
"Provides your wild oats while guaranteeing a crop failure, if you
know what I mean."
- (That was a cinematic trick adapted for print. Death wasn't
talking to the princess. He was actually in his study, talking to
Mort. But it was quite effective, wasn't it? It's probably called a
fast dissolve, or a crosscut/zoom. Or something. An industry where
the senior technician is called a Best Boy might call it
anything.)
- History always has a few tricks up its frayed sleeve.
It's been around a long time.
- Go away, Mort thought. His subconcious was worrying him. It
appeared to have a direct line to parts of his body that he wanted
to ignore at the moment.
- "Sodomy non sapiens," said Albert under his breath.
"What does that mean?"
.
- Although the scythe isn't pre-eminent among the weapons of war,
anyone who has been on the wrong end of, say, a peasants' revolt
will know that in skilled hands it is fearsome.
- The only things known to go faster than ordinary light is
monarchy, according to the philosopher Ly Tin Weedle.^ And I don’t mean these macho militarists, who believe war is peace.
- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
^ The only people who are going to take care of us is us.- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
^ Anyone who has studied Europe’s past or present knows this.- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
.^ I would suggest that your racial holy war, if indeed that is your proposed solution, is also a bit fantastical, even if it is “more likely” than a restoration.” .- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
^ Are mono-ethnic states necessarily more peaceful, stable, or long lasting than multi-ethnic ones?- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
^ Some ideas presented here may seem pleasent, but I fear life is often more brutal than our idealistic imaginations like to testify to.- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
Presumably, he said, there must be some elementary particles —
kingons, or possibly queons — that do this job, but of course
succession sometimes fails if, in mid-flight, they strike an
anti-particle, or republicon. .
- Only one creature could have duplicated the expressions on
their faces, and that would be a pigeon who has heard not only that
Lord Nelson has got down off his column but has also been seen
buying a 12-bore repeater and a box of cartridges.
- "My granny says that dying is like going to sleep," Mort added,
a shade hopefully.^ The only people who are going to take care of us is us.
- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
^ It is interesting that both groups wanted to preserve the monarcy and hold the different nations of the empire together, largely because being part of an empire would have kept small nations like Slovenia safer than going it alone amongst bigger, far more powerful neighbours.- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
^ If anything that sounds like the kind of Christian doctrine that only a cynical leftist could preach.- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
I wouldn't know. I have done
neither.
- "Pardon me for living, I'm sure."
.
- "You're dead," he said.^ As Hamilton said of the states, having many small groups means no one group can dominate.
- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
^ Well, I don’t know if you have noticed or not, but they (the immigrants and such) have shown no intention of leaving or “assimilating.” They in fact have said and *demonstrated* that they have no such intentions of leaving.- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
Keli waited. She couldn't think of any
suitable reply. "I'm not" lacked a certain style, while "Is it
serious?" seemed somehow too frivolous.
- The thing between Death's triumphant digits was a fly from the
dawn of time. It was the fly in the primordial soup. It had bred on
mammoth turds. It wasn't a fly that bangs on window panes, it was a
fly that drills through walls.
- Ankh-Morpork had dallied with many forms of government and had
ended up with that form of democracy known as One Man, One Vote.
The Patrician was the Man; he had the Vote.
- I ushered souls into the
next world. I was the grave of all hope. I was the ultimate
reality. .
"Yes, point taken, but do you have any particular skills?"
- Women's clothes were not a subject that preoccupied Cutwell
much — in fact, usually when he thought about women his mental
pictures seldom included any clothes at all — but the vision in
front of him really did take his breath away.
- "You won't get away with this," said Cutwell.^ As such, no more attention should be given here to him than you would give to a small child’s input on an important financial transaction.
- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
^ If you see an opportunity to make a difference, take it, or develop the skills in order to do such or help someone who has them.- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
^ Or, perhaps they really believe a global utopia will come about once nationalism and religion are washed away – who knows.- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
.
- "What do people like to drink here, then?"^ People who talk about “brutality” are either provocateurs or they’re just dumb.
- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
^ If you don’t like ethnic nationalism then you’ll have to supply a more realistic alternative to “McWorld Coca-Colonisation” than the monarchy.- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
^ When you figure out a way to get *several tens of millions* of people to either leave or do as you want them to do, in a courteous and polite way, I’ll take you seriously.- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
.
- "You like it?"^ As such, no more attention should be given here to him than you would give to a small child’s input on an important financial transaction.
- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
^ If you want to know what it will look like, go study the recent history of Zimbabwe.- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
he said to Mort, in pretty much the same tone of
voice people used when they said to St George, "You killed a
what?"
- Mort: 'Truly, the way of enlightenment is like
unto half a mile of broken glass.'
'And what would humans be without love?'
RARE, said Death.
- 'And what would humans be without love?'
Rare, said
Death.
- He sighed again. People were always trying this sort of thing.
.
- The vermine is a small black and white relative of the lemming,
found in the cold Hublandish regions.^ I’m more apt to trust blood ties than religious ties, and voluntary unions of states rather than unions founded by force over subjects.
- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
^ It is interesting that both groups wanted to preserve the monarcy and hold the different nations of the empire together, largely because being part of an empire would have kept small nations like Slovenia safer than going it alone amongst bigger, far more powerful neighbours.- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
^ Ah, I missed the bit about America not originating as a white country… slaves are not citizens.- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
.
- This was the type of thief that could steal the initiative, the
moment and the words right out of your mouth.
- These weren't the normal city watch, cautious and genially
corrupt.^ If my central values were racist rather than Christian, I’d post on Stormfront.
- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
^ Hope this post confirms rather than changes your mind!!- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
^ Since you’ve been so mischaracterized, I’ll make my comments mine and not put words into your mouth.- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
.
- After that one thing sort of led to another and pretty soon
everyone was fighting to get something — either away, out or
even.
- Sourcerer, n.^ I will maintain that only Western man can continue Western civilization because only Western man has ever built or sustained something that we might call Western civilization.
- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
^ Real racial conflict HAS broken out, and everyone who disagrees with you here agrees with one another that whites may not win.- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
.^ Or that even if they do, that you and your family may not survive to see the Brave New World?- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
It is written that there once were
sourcerers in the youth of the world but not may there by now and
blessed be, for sourcery would mean the Ende of the World . . . If
the Creator hadd meant menne to be bee as goddes, he would have
given them wings.
SEE ALSO: thee Apocralypse, the legende of thee Ice Giants, and
thee Teatime of the Goddes.
- Definition in Casplock's Compleet Lexicon of Majik with
Precepts for the Wise
- The current Patrician ... He did of course sometimes have
people horribly tortured to death, but this was considered to be
perfectly acceptable behaviour for a civic ruler and generally
approved of by the overwhelming majority of citizens.
†
-
- † The overhelming majority of citizens being
defined in this case as everyone not currently hanging upside down
over a scorpion pit.
- He had the unique opportunity to watch Conina fight.
.
Her opponents started off grinning at the temerity of a slight
young girl attacking them, and then rapidly passed through various
stages of puzzlement, doubt, concern, and abject gibbetting terror
as they apparently became the center of a flashing, tightening
circle of steel.
- To Rincewind's annoyance the Luggage barrelled after her,
cushioning its fall by dropping heavily onto a slaver, and adding
to the sudden panic of the invaders because, while it was
bad enough to be attacked with deadly and ferocious accuracy by a
rather pretty girl in a white dress with flowers on it, it was even
worse for the male ego to be tripped up and beaten by a travel
accessory; it was pretty bad for all the rest of the male,
too.
- It wasn't blood in general he couldn't stand the sight
of, it was just his blood in particular that was so
upsetting.
- Of course, Ankh-Morpork's citizens had always claimed that the
river water was incredibly pure in any case.^ The Roma, Europe’s ever-increasing current headache, are even worse off, as they have no “come from” anywhere!
- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
^ There was no continent-wide ethnonationalist panic until it became apparent that some ethnic groups would come to dominate other ethnic groups through the ballot box.- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
^ Well, for us its even worse because we don’t have a “Serbia” to fall back to (OK Maybe Vermont).- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
Any water that had
passed through so many kidneys, they reasoned, had to be very pure
indeed.
Never enter an arsekicking contest with a porcupine.
- 'My father always said that death is but a sleep,' said
Conina.
'Yes, the hat told me that,' said Rincewind, as they turned down a
narrow, crowded street between white adobe walls. 'But the way I
see it, it's a lot harder to get up in the morning.'
- 'My father always said that it was pointless to undertake a
direct attack against an enemy extensively armed with efficient
projectile weapons,' she said.
Rincewind, who knew Cohen's normal method of speech, gave her a
look of disbelief.
'Well, what he actually said,' she added, 'was
never enter an arsekicking contest with a
porcupine.'
- The Hashishim, who derived their name from the vast quantities
of hashish they consumed, were unique among vicious
killers in being both deadly and, at the same time, inclined to
giggle, groove to interesting patterns of light and shade on their
terrible knife blades and, in extreme cases, fall over.
Paranoids only think everyone is out to get them.
.
- A popular spell at the time was Pelepel's Temporal Compressor,
which on one occasion resulted in a race of giant reptiles being
created, evolving, spreading, flourishing and then being destroyed
in the space of about five minutes, leaving only its bones in the
earth to mislead forthcoming generations completely.
- The truth isn't easily pinned to a page.^ My gut instinct says denounce all such “race groups.” But since they won’t disengage themselves that leaves one at a disadvantage.
- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
^ In this case it’s one of those – know the truth and the truth can unravel it easily enough and make you free of the dilemma.- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
^ While the Church is not particularly enthusiastic about any type of nationalism, Americanism is one of only two nationalisms condemned as a heresy, the other one being Gallicanism or what we would now call French nationalism.- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
.
- 'I don't trust this man,' said Nijel.^ I’m more apt to trust blood ties than religious ties, and voluntary unions of states rather than unions founded by force over subjects.
- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
^ If you don’t like ethnic nationalism then you’ll have to supply a more realistic alternative to “McWorld Coca-Colonisation” than the monarchy.- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
^ I won’t deny that I hold race to be more important with regards to identity than culturalism acknowledges, but it’s a fine view of the world nevertheless.- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
'I try not to judge from
first impressions, but I definitely think he's up to no
good.'
'He had you thrown in a snake pit!'
.
- Wizards didn't kill ordinary people because a) they
seldom noticed them and b) it wasn't considered sporting and c)
besides, who'd do all the cooking and growing food and
things. And killing a brother wizard with magic was
nigh-well impossible on account of the layers of protective spells
that any cautious wizard maintained about his person at all
times.^ People who talk about “brutality” are either provocateurs or they’re just dumb.
- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
^ Then I hear the same people talk about European “fascism” and the brutality they used against those who they considered outsiders.- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
^ I’m not sure you call all that much about even preserving traditional American culture (much less white people).- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
*
-
- * Of course, wizards often killed each other
by ordinary, non-magical means, but this was perfectly allowable
and death by assassination was considered natural causes
for a wizard.
- Some people think this is paranoia, but it isn't.
Paranoids only think everyone is out to get them. Wizards
know it.
- 'I'm not going to ride on a magic carpet!'^ It’s a bit like culturism (which is a good idea and should gather some following.
- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
^ Pingback by Persons Who Are Wont To Boast of a Certain Private Matter… « Brave New World Watch on 29 February 2008 : .- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
he hissed. 'I'm
afraid of grounds!'
'You mean heights,' said Conina. 'And stop being silly.'
'I know what I mean! It's the grounds that kill you!'
- There was a respectful silence, as there always is when large
sums of money have just passed away.
- Many people who had got to know Rincewind had come to treat him
as a sort of two-legged miner's canary, and tended to assume that
if Rincewind was still upright and not actually running
then some hope remained.
- 'This is fun,' said Creosote. 'Me, robbing my own treasury. If
I catch myself I can have myself flung into the snake pit.'
'But you could throw yourself on your mercy,' said Conina, running
a paranoid eye over the dusty stonework.
'Oh, no. I think I would have to teach me a lesson, as an example
to myself.'
- 'I can't hear anything,' said Nijel loudly. .
- Too much magic could wrap time and space around itself,
and that wasn't good news for the kind of person who had grown used
to things like effects following things like causes.
- They suffered from the terrible delusion that something could
be done.^ I would add one for our friends who say they are conservative.
- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
^ The West isn’t “White” anymore because idiots like you are dating Aruban or Indonesian women whilst romanticizing how the new arrivals will carry on White culture long after our kind has miscegenated out of existence.- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
^ Men who don’t compromise, men who say: enough is enough.- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
.
- 'Poor I don't mind,' said the Seriph.^ At some point without a doubt the ruling elite itself will simply notice that even they don’t want to live here any longer.
- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
^ When you figure out a way to get *several tens of millions* of people to either leave or do as you want them to do, in a courteous and polite way, I’ll take you seriously.- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
^ Pat Buchanan seems to want to have it both ways.- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
.
- Take it from me, there's nothing more terrible than
someone out to do the world a favour.
- Wizards don't like philosophy very much.^ At the end of World War II, Europe’s nations were more ethnically homogenous than they had ever been, at a horrendous cost in blood.
- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
^ Some ideas presented here may seem pleasent, but I fear life is often more brutal than our idealistic imaginations like to testify to.- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
^ Regarding culturalism, I like this new viewpoint very much – it’s certainly far preferable to some other alternatives.- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
.
- 'Quick, you must come with me,' she said.^ In this case it’s one of those – know the truth and the truth can unravel it easily enough and make you free of the dilemma.
- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
^ Not to sound like a conspiracy theorist, but we all know Jews hold disproportionate power to their numbers; whites could do the same if they got their act together.- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
^ As far as preserving traditional American culture is concerned, it depends on what you mean by that.- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
'You're in great
danger!'
'Why?'
.
- "I meant," said Ipslore bitterly, "what is there in this world
that makes living worthwhile?"^ But the West is not completely white anymore, excepting Eastern Europe or Russia maybe — I doubt, you want to live there.
- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
^ Well, I don’t know if you have noticed or not, but they (the immigrants and such) have shown no intention of leaving or “assimilating.” They in fact have said and *demonstrated* that they have no such intentions of leaving.- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
Death thought about it.
Cats, he said finally.
Cats are
nice.
- The Luggage might be magical. It might be terrible. But in its
enigmatic soul it was kin to every other piece of luggage
throughout the multiverse, and preferred to spend its winters
hibernating on top of a wardrobe.
- Rincewind stared into the frothy remnants of his last beer, and
then, with extreme care in case the top of his head fell off,
leaned down and poured some into a saucer for the Luggage. It was
lurking under the table, which was a relief. It usually embarrassed
him in bars by sidling up to drinkers and terrorizing them into
feeding it crisps.
- The subject of wizards and sex is a complicated one, but as has
already indicated it does, in essence, boil down to this:
when it comes to wine, women and song, wizards are allowed
to get drunk and croon as much as they like.
- How can the effect be described with delicacy and taste? .
- And I didn't bother with chapter six, because I promised my
mother I'd just stick with the looting and pillaging, until I find
the right girl.
- Death isn't cruel – merely terribly, terribly good at
his job.
- It's vital to remember who you really are.
It's very important.^ If you want to save the white race, you should find a nice girl and raise a big family.
- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
^ Real racial conflict HAS broken out, and everyone who disagrees with you here agrees with one another that whites may not win.- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
^ That is because it says my nation right or wrong, without ethical grounding.- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
It isn't a good idea to rely on other people
or things to do it for you, you see. They always get it wrong.
- A tiny sun and moon spin around them, on a complicated orbit to
induce seasons, so probably nowhere else in the multiverse is it
sometimes necessary for an elephant to cock a leg to allow the sun
to go past.
Exactly why this should be may never be known. Possibly the Creator
of the universe got bored with all the usual business of axial inclination, albedos
and rotational velocities, and
decided to have a bit of fun for once.
A key to the understanding of all religion is that a god's idea of
amusement is Snakes and Ladders with greased rungs.
- No gods anywhere play chess. They prefer
simple, vicious games, where you Do Not Achieve Transcendence but
Go Straight to Oblivion; A key to the understanding of all
religion is that a god's idea of amusement is Snakes and Ladders
with greased rungs.
- The calendar of the Theocracy of Muntab counts down, not up.
No-one knows why, but it might not be a good idea to hang around
and find out.
- It was dawning on him that the pleasures of the flesh were
pretty sparse without the flesh. Suddenly life wasn't worth
living. The fact that he wasn't living it didn't cheer him up at
all.
- Granny Weatherwax didn't hold with looking at the future, but
now she could feel the future looking at her. She didn't like its
expression at all.
- If I'd had to buy you, you wouldn't be worth the price.
This is Art holding a Mirror up to Life. That's why everything is
exactly the wrong way round.
- The days followed one another patiently. Right back at
the beginning of the multiverse they had tried all passing at the
same time, and it hadn't worked.
- Demons were like genies or philosophy professors — if you
didn't word things exactly right, they delighted in giving
you absolutely accurate and completely misleading answers.
- Everywhere's been where it is ever since it was first put
there. It's called geography.
- Destiny was funny stuff, he knew. You couldn't trust
it. Often you couldn't even see it. Just when you
knew you had it cornered, it turned out to be something else —
coincidence, maybe, or providence.
- This was real. This was more real even than reality. This was
history. It might not be true, but that had nothing to do with
it.
- This is Art holding a Mirror up to Life. That's why
everything is exactly the wrong way round.
- Greebo's grin gradually faded, until there was nothing left but
the cat. This was nearly as spooky as the other way round.
- "Actors," said Granny, witheringly. "As if the world weren't
full of enough history without inventing more."
- The duke had a mind that ticked like a clock and, like a clock,
it regularly went cuckoo.
- "There must be a hundred silver dollars in here," moaned
Boggis, waving a purse. "I mean, that's not my league. That's not
my class. I can't handle that sort of money. You've got to be in
the Guild of Lawyers or something to steal that much."
- "I'd like to know if I could compare you to a summer's day.
Because — well, June 12th was quite nice, and..."
- "'Tis not right, a woman going into such places by herself."
Granny nodded. She thoroughly approved of such sentiments so long
as there was, of course, no suggestion that they applied to
her.
- Above the hearth was a huge pokerwork sign saying "Mother". No
tyrant in the whole history of the world had ever achieved a
domination so complete.
- "A man could go far, knowing his rights like you do," said
Granny. "But right now he should go home."
- "I daresay," said Granny, pushing the Fool aside and stepping
over a writhing taproot. "If anyone locked me in a dungeon, there'd
be screams."
- "Yes, bugger all that." said Nanny. "Let's curse
somebody."
- On nights such as these the gods, as has already been pointed
out, play games other than chess with the fates of mortals and the
thrones of kings. It is important to remember that they always
cheat, right up to the end...
- The famous Battle of Morpork, he strongly suspected had
consisted of about two thousand men lost in a swamp on a cold, wet
day, hacking one another into oblivion with rusty swords. What
would the last King of Ankh have said to a pack of ragged men who
knew they were outnumbered, outflanked and outgeneralled? Something
with bite, something with edge, something like a drink of brandy to
a dying man; no logic, no explanation, just words that would reach
right down through a tired man's brain and pull him to his
feet by his testicles.
Never trust a species that grins all the time. It's up to
something.
- All assassins had a full-length mirror in their rooms, because
it would be a terrible insult to anyone to kill them when you were
badly dressed.
- You scrimped and saved to send them to the best schools, and
then they went and paid you back by getting educated.
- Seeing, contrary to popular wisdom, isn't believing.
It's where belief stops, because it isn't needed any
more.
- It was said that life was cheap in
Ankh-Morpork. This was, of course, completely wrong.
Life was often very expensive; you could get death
for free.
- The king looked surprised.
"I understood that Death came as a three-headed giant scarab
beetle," he said.
Death shrugged. Well.
Now you know.
- It's not for nothing that advanced mathematics tends to be
invented in hot countries. It's because of the morphic resonance of
all the camels, who have that disdainful expression and famous
curled lip as a natural result of an ability to do quadratic
equations.
- The fact is that camels are far more intelligent than
dolphins.*
-
- * Never trust a species that grins all
the time. It's up to something.
- From here he could see past the long, low bulk of the palace
and across the river to the Great Pyramid itself. It was almost
hidden in dark clouds, but what he could see of it was definitely
wrong. He knew it had four sides, and he could see all eight of
them.
It seemed to be moving in and out of focus, which he felt
instinctively was a dangerous thing for several million tons of
rock to do.
- [...]human beings, little bags of thinking water held
up briefly by fragile accumulations of calcium,[...]
- Camels gallop by throwing their feet as far away from them as
possible and then running to keep up.
- Nature abhors dimensional abnormalities, and seals them neatly
away so that they don't upset people. Nature, in fact, abhors a lot
of things, including vacuums, ships called the "Marie Celeste", and the chuck keys for
electric drills.
- Mere animals couldn't possibly manage to act like this.
You need to be a human being to be really
stupid.
- "Ibid you already know." (Discworld philosophers)
- The Ephebians made wine out of anything they could put in a
bucket, and ate anything that couldn't climb out of one.
- There was not a lot that could be done to make Morpork a worse
place. A direct hit by a meteorite, for example, would count as
gentrification.
- "Therefore I will have dinner sent in," said the priest. "It
will be roast chicken."
"I hate chicken."
Dios smiled. "No sire. On Wednesdays the King always enjoys
chicken, sire."
- Ritual and ceremony in their due times kept the world under the
sky and the stars in their courses. It was astonishing what
ritual and ceremony could do.
- She had a number of stoutly-held views on a variety of
subjects, but most of them involved the flaying alive of people she
disapproved of. This meant most people under the age of
thirty-five, to start with.
- He [Ptaclusp] put his arms around his sons' shoulders.
"Lads", he said proudly. "It's looking really
quantum"
- This is most
irregular
We're sorry. It's not our fault.
How many of you are
there?
More than 1300, I' afraid
Very well, then.
Please form an orderly queue.
- He couldn't help remembering how much he'd wanted a
puppy when he was a little boy. Mind you, they'd been starving —
anything with meat on it would have done.
- It was amazing, this mystic business. You tell them a lie, and
then when you don't need it any more you tell them another lie and
tell them they're progressing along the road to wisdom. Then
instead of laughing they follow you even more, hoping that at the
heart of all the lies they'll find the truth. And bit by bit they
accept the unacceptable.
- The reason that clichés become clichés is that they are the
hammers and screwdrivers in the toolbox of communication.
- 'No one knows how to do officering, Fred. That's why they're
officers. If they'd knew anything, they'd be sergeants.'
- 'Brother Doorkeeper?'
Metaphorically.
- 'What's the good of not wanting to be poor if the rich are
allowed to go round livin' in ordinary rooms?'
- 'You don't get big houses and carriages without grindin' the
faces of the poor a bit.'
- 'Those are the royal hippos of Ankh,' said the man proudly.
'Reminders of our noble heritage.'
- He looked up at the hooded figure beside him. 'We never
intended this,' he said weakly. 'Honestly. No offence. We just
wanted what was due to us.' A skeletal hand patted him on the
shoulder, not unkindly. And Death said,
Congratulations.
- People who are rather more than six feet tall and nearly as
broad across the shoulders often have uneventful journeys. People
jump out at them from behind rocks then say things like, "Oh.
Sorry. I thought you were someone else."
- The three rules of the Librarians of Time and Space are: 1)
Silence; 2) Books must be returned no later than the date last
shown; and 3) Do not interfere with the nature of causality
- "... a number of offences of murder by means of a blunt
instrument, to whit, a dragon, and many further offences of
generalized abetting ..."
- "Have another drink, not-Corporal Nobby?" said Sergeant Colon
unsteadily.
"I do not mind if I do, not-Sgt Colon," said Nobby.
- "'E's fighting in there!" he stuttered, grabbing the captain's
arm.
"All by himself?" said the captain.
"No, with everyone!" shouted Nobby, hopping from one foot to the
other.
- [Captain Vimes addresses a band of rioters] This is
Lord Mountjoy Quickfang Winterforth IV, the hottest dragon in the
city. It could burn your head clean off.
- There was a thoughtful pause in the conversation as the
assembled Brethren mentally divided the universe into the deserving
and the undeserving, and put themselves on the appropriate
side.
- All dwarfs have beards and wear up to twelve layers of
clothing. Gender is more or less optional.
- All dwarfs are by nature dutiful, serious, literate, obedient
and thoughtful people whose only minor failing is a tendency, after
one drink, to rush at enemies screaming "Arrrrrrgh!" and axing
their legs off at the knee.
- He nodded to the troll which was employed by the Drum as a
splatter [footnote: Like a bouncer, but trolls use more
force].
- It was possibly the most circumspect advance in the history of
military manoeuvres, right down at the bottom end of the scale that
things like the Charge of the Light Brigade are at the top of.
- Lady Ramkin's bosom rose and fell like an empire.
- It's a metaphor of human bloody existence, a dragon. And if
that wasn't bad enough, it's also a bloody great hot flying
thing.
- A number of religions in Ankh-Morpork still practiced human
sacrifice, except that they didn't really need to practice any more
because they had got so good at it.
- Thunder rolled. ... It rolled a six.
- Right, you bastards, you're... you're geography
- The significant owl hoots in the night.
- A good bookshop is just a genteel Black Hole that knows how to
read
- 'I believe you find life such a problem because you think there
are the good people and the bad people,' said the man [Vetinari].
'You are wrong, of course. There are, always and only, the bad
people, but some of them are on opposite sides.'
- You have the effrontery to be squeamish, it thought at
him. But we were dragons. We were supposed to be cruel,
cunning, heartless, and terrible. But this much I can tell you, you
ape – the great face pressed even closer, so that Wonse was
staring into the pitiless depths of his eyes - we never burned
and tortured and ripped one another apart and called it
morality.
The
Book of Ultimate Control. He knew about it. There was
a copy in the Library somewhere, although wizards never bothered
with it...
- Just erotic. Nothing kinky. It's the difference between
using a feather and using a chicken.
- 'I thought you were stuffed,' said Rincewind.
[The parrot] 'Up yours!'
- When he was left alone he wandered over to the lectern and
looked at the book. The title, in impressively flickering red
letters, was Mallificarum Sumpta Diabolicite Occularis
Singularum, the Book of Ultimate Control. He knew about it.
There was a copy in the Library somewhere, although wizards never
bothered with it.
This might seem odd, because if there is one thing a wizard would
trade his grandfather for, it is power. But it wasn't all that
strange, because any wizard bright enough to survive for five
minutes was also bright enough to realise that if there was any
power in demonology, then it lay with the demons. Using it for your
own purposes would be like trying to beat mice to death with a
rattlesnake.
No-one had been able to find any rule about orang-utans being
barred, although they had surreptiously looked very hard for
one.
- The librarian was, ex officio, a member of the college
council. No-one had been able to find any rule about
orang-utans being barred, although they had surreptiously looked
very hard for one.
- 'They never give him any of the things a sensitive growing
wossname really needs, if you was to ask me.'
'What, you mean love and guidance?' said Rincewind.
'I was thinking of a bloody good wossname,
thrashing.' said the parrot.
- Rincewind gave his fingers a long shocked stare, as one might
regard a gun that has been hanging on the wall for decades and has
suddenly gone off and perforated the cat.
- Demons have existed on the Discworld for at least as long as
the gods, who in many ways they closely resemble. The difference is
basically the same as that between terrorists and freedom
fighters.
- Interestingly enough, the gods of the Disc have never bothered
much about judging the souls of the dead, and so people only go to
hell if that's where they think they deserve to go. Which they
won't do if they don't know about it. This explains why it is
important to shoot missionaries on sight.
- The entire priesthood was sitting around it and watching it
carefully, in case it did anything amusing or religious.
- This follows studies by cosmotherapists which have revealed
that the violence of the Big Bang can give a universe
serious psychological problems when it gets older.
- Astfgl had achieved in Hell a particularly high brand of
boredom which is like the boredom you get which a) is costing you
money, and b) is taking place while you should be having a nice
time.
- 'According to Ephebian mythology, there's a girl who comes down
here every winter.'
'To keep warm?'
'I think the story says she actually creates the winter, sort
of.'
'I've known women like that,' said Rincewind, nodding wisely.
- 'Multiple exclamation marks,' he went on, shaking his head,
'are a sure sign of a diseased mind.'
- A crude hut of driftwood had been built on the long curve of
the beach, although describing it as 'built' was a slander on
skilled crude hut builders throughout the ages; if the sea had
simply been left to pile the wood up it might have done a better
job.
- The senior wizard in a world of magic had the same
prospects of long-term employment as a pogo stick tester in a
minefield.
- The Archchancellor's most important job, as the Bursar saw it,
was to sign things, preferably, from the Bursar's point of view,
without reading them first.
- What the Bursar failed to consider was that no more
bangs doesn't mean they've stopped doing it, whatever it is. It
just means they're doing it right.
- Of course, it is very important to be sober when you
take an exam. Many worthwhile careers in the street-cleaning,
fruit-picking and subway-guitar-playing industries have been
founded on a lack of understanding of this simple
fact.
- No-one with their sleeves rolled up who walks
purposefully with a piece of paper held conspicuously in their hand
is ever challenged.
- He'd looked at its ramshackle organisation, such as it was,
with the eye of a lifelong salesman. There seemed nowhere in it for
him, but this wasn't a problem. There was always room at the
top.
- 'She hwas dusting,' said Mrs Whitlow, helpfully. When Mrs
Whitlow was in the grip of acute class consciousness she could
create aitches where nature never intended them to be.
- Probably only one person in the world had been interested in
whether the old man lived or died, and he'd been the first to
know.
- Inside every old person is a young person wondering
what happened.
- The Wahooni Fruit grows only in certain parts of heathen
Howondaland. It's twenty feet long, covered in spikes the colour of
ear wax, and smells like an anteater that's eaten a very bad
ant.
- One said, That is the point. The word is him.
Becoming a personality is inefficient. We don't
want it to spread. Supposing gravity developed a personality?
Supposing it decided to like people?
One said, Got a crush on them, sort of thing?
- 'It's not old Windle. Old Windle was a lot older!'
'Older? Older than dead?'
- The Archchancellor was the first one to recover.
'Windle!' he said. 'We thought you were dead!'
He had to admit that it wasn't a very good line. You didn't put
people on a slab with candles and lilies all round them because you
think they have a bit of a headache and want a nice lie down for
half an hour.
- Was that justice? Was that a proper reward for being a firm
believer in reincarnation for almost 130 years? You come back as a
corpse?*
-
- * No wonder the undead were traditionally
considered to be very angry.
- Intellectually, Ridcully maintained his position for two
reasons. One was that he never, ever, changed his mind about
anything. The other was that it took him several minutes to
understand any new idea put to him, and this is a very valuable
trait in a leader, because anything anyone is still trying
to explain to you after two minutes is probably important and
anything they give up after a mere minute or so is almost certainly
something they shouldn't have been bothering you with in the first
place.
- Ridcully was simple-minded. This doesn't mean stupid. It just
means that he could only think properly about things if he cut away
all the complicated bits around the edges.
- No naked little men sat on the summit dispensing wisdom,
because the first thing the truly wise man works out is
that sitting around on mountaintops gives you not only haemorrhoids
but frostbitten haemorrhoids.
- "My name's Miss Flitworth."
Yes.
She waited.
"I expect you have a name too," she prompted.
Yes. That's
right.
She waited again.
"Well?"
I'm sorry?
"What is your name?"
The stranger stared at her for a moment, the looked around
wildly.
"Come on," said Miss Flitworth. I ain't employing no one without no
name. Mr...?"
The figure stared upward.
Mr. Sky?
"No one's called Mr. Sky."
Mr... Door?
She nodded.
"Could be. Could be Mr. Door. There was a chap called Doors I knew
once. Yea. Mr. Door. And your first name? .^ In this case it’s one of those – know the truth and the truth can unravel it easily enough and make you free of the dilemma.- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
^ However, you then say, in one way or another, “those who don’t wish to be a part of our culture should reconsider their immigration to the West.- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
You've got to be a Bill or a Tom or a Bruce
or one of those names."
Yes.
"What?"
One of those.
"Which one?"
Er. The first
one?
"You're a Bill?"
Yes?
Miss Flitworth rolled her eyes.
"All right, Bill Sky..." she said.
Door.
"Yeah. Sorry. All right, Bill Door..."
Call me Bill.
- Drop the scythe, and turn
around slowly!
- There is no justice,
there is just us
- What can the harvest hope
for, if not for the care of the Reaper Man?
- A crown? I never wore a
crown!
'You never wanted to rule.'
- Windle shook his head sadly. Five exclamation marks,
the sure sign of an insane mind.
- Light thinks it travels faster than anything but it is
wrong. No matter how fast light travels it finds the darkness has
always got there first, and is waiting for it.
- 'It can't be intelligent, can it?' said the Bursar.
'All it's doing is moving around slowly and eating things,' said
the Dean.
'Put a pointy hat on it and it'd be a faculty member,' said the
Archchancellor.
- Because you're all you've
got, said Death.
'What? Oh. Yes. That as well. It's a great big cold universe out
there.'
You'd be amazed.
'One lifetime just isn't enough.'
Oh, I don't
know.
'Hmm?'
Windle Poons?
'Yes?'
That was your
life.
And, with great relief, and general optimism, and a feeling that on
the whole everything could have been much worse, Windle Poons
died.
- 'Tell me,' said Magrat, 'you said your mummy knows about the
big bad wolf in the woods, didn't you?'
'That's right.'
.
- All witches are very conscious of stories.
They can feel stories, in the same way that a bather in a
little pool can feel the unexpected trout.^ Not to sound like a conspiracy theorist, but we all know Jews hold disproportionate power to their numbers; whites could do the same if they got their act together.
- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
^ When you figure out a way to get *several tens of millions* of people to either leave or do as you want them to do, in a courteous and polite way, I’ll take you seriously.- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
^ Then I hear the same people talk about European “fascism” and the brutality they used against those who they considered outsiders.- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
Knowing how stories work
is almost all the battle. For example, when an obvious innocent
sits down with three experienced card sharpers and says 'How do you
play this game, then?', someone is about to be shaken down until
their teeth fall out.
- She heard Nanny say: 'Beats me why they're always putting
invisible runes on their doors. I mean, you pays some wizard to put
invisible runes on your door, and how do you know you've got value
for money?'
She heard Granny say: 'No problem there. If you can't see 'em, you
know you've got proper invisible runes.'
- Granny Weatherwax didn't like maps. She felt
instinctively that they sold the landscape short.
- Asking someone to repeat a phrase you'd not only heard very
clearly but were also exceedingly angry about was around Defcon II
in the lexicon of squabble.
- You can't go around building a better world for people. Only
people can build a better world for people. Otherwise it's just a
cage.
- The Yen Buddhists are the richest religious sect in the
universe. They hold that the accumulation of money is a great evil
and a burden to the soul. They therefore, regardless of personal
hazard, see it as their unpleasant duty to acquire as much as
possible in order to reduce the risk to innocent people.
- "We've got a lot of experience of not having any
experience"
"But the point is... the point is... the point is we've not been
experienced for a lot longer than you."
- The only way housework could be done in this place was with a
shovel or, for preference, a match.
- People didn't hit you over the head with farmhouses back
home.
- Racism was not a problem on the Discworld, because — what with
trolls and dwarfs and so on — speciesism was more interesting.
Black and white lived in perfect harmony and ganged up on
green.
- Nanny Ogg quite liked cooking, provided there were other people
around to do things like chop up the vegetables and wash the dishes
afterwards.
- "Emberella," thought Magrat. "I'm fairy godmothering a girl who
sounds like something you put up in the rain."
- Magrat was annoyed. She was also frightened, which made her
even more annoyed. It was hard for people when Magrat was annoyed.
It was like being attacked by damp tissue.
- Nanny Ogg looked him up and down or, at least, down and further
down. "You're a dwarf," she said.
- "'S called the Vieux River."
"Yes?"
"Know what that means?"
"No."
"The Old (Masculine) River," said Nanny.
"Yes?"
"Words have sex in foreign parts," said Nanny hopefully.
- Bad spelling can be lethal. For example, the greedy Seriph of
Al-Ybi was cursed by a badly-educated deity and for some days
everything he touched turned to Glod, which happened to be the name
of a small dwarf from a mountain community hundreds of miles away
who found himself magically dragged to the kingdom and relentlessly
duplicated. Some two thousand Glods later the spell wore off. These
days, the people of Al-Ybi are renowned for being remarkably short
and bad-tempered.
- Greebo's technique was unscientific and wouldn't have stood a
chance against any decent swordmanship, but on his side was the
fact that it is almost impossible to develop decent swordmanship
when you seem to have run into a food mixer that is biting your ear
off.
- Genua had once controlled the river mouth and taxed its traffic
in a way that couldn't be called piracy because it was done by the
city government.
- "Baths is unhygienic," Granny declared. "You know I've never
agreed with baths. Sittin' around in your own dirt like that."
- "Listen, happy endings is fine if they turn out
happy," said Granny, glaring at the sky. "But you can't make 'em
for other people. Like the only way you could make a happy marriage
is by cuttin' their heads off as soon as they say "I do", yes? You
can't make happiness..."
- Time is like a drug. Too much of it kills
you.
- Around the Godde there forms a Shelle of prayers and Ceremonies
and Buildings and Priestes and Authority, until at Laste the Godde
Dies. Ande this maye notte be noticed.
- Words are the litmus paper of the minds. If you find yourself
in the power of someone who will use the word 'commence' in cold
blood, go somewhere else very quickly. But if they say 'Enter',
don't stop to pack.
- Cuius testiculos habes, habeas cardia et
cerebellum.
[Translated: "When you have a good grip on their balls, their
hearts and minds will follow"]
- When the least they could do to you was everything,
then the most they could do to you suddenly held no
terror.
- The memory stole over him: a desert is what you think it is.
And now, you can think clearly...
There were no lies here. All fancies fled away. That's what
happened in all deserts. It was just you, and what you
believed.
What have I always believed?
That, on the whole, and by and large, if a man lived properly, not
according to what any priests said, but according to what seemed
decent and honest inside, then it would, in the end, more
or less, turn out all right.
You couldn't get that on a banner. But the desert looked better
already.
Fri'it set out.
- Gravity is a habit that is hard to shake
off.
- One day a tortoise will learn how to fly.
- Vorbis was the head of the Quisition, whose job it was to do
all those things that needed to be done and which other people
would rather not do.
- You do not ask people like that what they are thinking
about in case they turn around very slowly and say
'You.'
- Tortoise: 'How many talking tortoises have you
met?'
Brutha: 'I don't know.'
Tortoise: 'What d'you mean, you don't know?'
Brutha: 'Well, they might all talk. They
just might not say anything when I'm there.'
- Brutha hesitated. It dawned on him, very slowly, that demons
and succubi didn't turn up looking like small old tortoises. There
wouldn't be much point. Even Brother Nhumrod would have to agree
that when it came to rampant eroticism, you could do a lot better
than a one-eyed tortoise.
- Many feel they are called to the priesthood, but what they
really hear is an inner voice saying, 'It's indoor work with no
heavy lifting, do you want to be a ploughman like your
father?'
- An upturned tortoise is the ninth most pathetic thing
in the entire multiverse.
An upturned tortoise who knows what's going to happen to it next
is, well, at least up there at number four.
- I swear to me that I am the Great God Om, greatest of
gods!
- Most gods find it hard to walk and think at the same
time.
- It is a popular fact that nine-tenths of the brain is
not used and, like most popular facts, it is wrong... It
is used. And one of its functions is to make the
miraculous seem ordinary and turn the unusual into the
usual.
Because if this was not the case, then human beings, faced
with the daily wondrousness of everything, would go around wearing
big stupid grins, similar to those worn by certain remote tribesmen
who occasionally get raided by the authorities and have the
contents of their plastic greenhouses very seriously
inspected.
- Gods don't like people not doing much work. People who aren't
busy all the time might start to think.
- Pets are always a great help in times of stress. And in
times of starvation too, o'course.
- Or, to put it another way, the existence of a badly
put-together watch proved the existence of a blind watchmaker.
- Something about him generally made people think of the word
'spry,' but, at the moment, they would be much more likely to think
of the words 'mother naked' and possibly also 'dripping wet' and
would be one hundred percent accurate, too.
- People think that professional soldiers think a lot
about fighting, but serious professional soldiers think a lot more
about food and a warm place to sleep, because these are two things
that are generally hard to get, whereas fighting tends to turn up
all the time.
- 'That's right,' he said. 'We're philosophers. We think,
therefore we am.'
- 'We get that in here some nights, when someone's had a few.
Cosmic speculation about whether the gods exist. Next thing,
there's a bolt of lightning through the door with a note wrapped
round it saying, "Yes, we do" and a pair of sandals with smoke
coming out.'
- Because what gods need is belief, and what human want is
gods.
- There was something creepy about that boy, Nhumrod thought. It
was the way he looked at you when you were talking, as if he was
listening.
- 'The God speaks to a chosen one and he becomes a great
prophet,' said Nhumrod. 'Now, I am sure you wouldn't presume to
consider yourself one of them? Mmm?'
- No matter what your skills, there was a place for you in the
Citadel.
And if your skills lay in asking the wrong kinds of questions or
losing the righteous kind of wars, the place might just be the
furnaces of purity, or the Quisition's pits of justice
- And it all meant this: that there are hardly any excesses of
the most crazed psychopath that cannot easily be duplicated by a
normal, kindly family man who just comes in to work every day and
has a job to do.
- The Omnians were a God-fearing people. They had a great
deal to fear.
- He knew from experience that true and obvious ideas, such as
the ineffable wisdom and judgment of the Great God Om, seemed so
obscure to many people that you actually have to kill them before
they saw the error of their ways.
- 'Did not the Great God declare, through the Prophet Abbys, that
there is no greater and more honourable sacrifice than one's own
life for the God?'
'Indeed he did,' said Fri'it. He couldn't help recalling that Abbys
had been a bishop in the Citadel for fifty years before the Great
God has chosen him. Screaming enemies had never come at him with a
sword. He'd never looked in to the eyes of someone who wished him
dead.
- 'Yes, but humans are more important than animals,' said
Brutha.
'This is a point of view often expressed by humans,' said Om.
- Winners never talk about glorious victories. That's
because they're the ones who see what the battlefield looks like
afterward. It's only the losers who have glorious
victories.
- The Ephebians believed that every man should have the vote
†. Every five years someone was elected to be
Tyrant, provided he could prove that he was honest, intelligent,
sensible, and trustworthy. Immediately after he was elected, of
course, it was obvious to everyone that he was a criminal madman
and totally out of touch with the view of ordinary philosopher in
the streets looking for towel. And then five years later they
elected another one just like him, and really it was amazing how
intelligent people kept on making the same mistakes.
-
- †Provided that he wasn't poor, foreign, nor
disqualified by reason of being mad, frivolous, or a woman
- 'I know about sureness,' said Didactylos. Now the light
irascible tone had drained out of his voice. 'I remember before I
was blind, I went to Omnia once. This was before the borders were
closed, when you still let people travel. And in your Citadel I saw
a crowd stoning a man to death in a pit. Ever seen that?'
'It has to be done,' Brutha mumbled. 'So the soul can be shriven
and — '
'Don't know about soul. Never been that kind of a philosopher,'
said Didactylos. 'All I know is, it was a horrible sight.'
'The state of the body is not — '
'Oh, I'm not talking about the poor bugger in the pit,' said the
philosopher. 'I'm talking about the people throwing the stones.
They were sure all right. They were sure it wasn't them in the pit.
You could see it in their faces. So glad that it wasn't them that
they were throwing just as hard as they could.'
- Do unto others before they do unto you.
- Bishops move diagonally. That's why they often turn up
where the kings don't expect them to be.
- His philosophy was a mixture of three famous school — the
Cynics, the Stoics and the Epicureans — and summed up all three of
them in his famous phrase, 'You can't trust any bugger further you
can throw him, and there's nothing you can do about it, so let's
have a drink. Mine's double, if you are buying. Thank you.
And a packet of nuts. Her left bosom is nearly uncovered, eh? Two
more packets, then!'
- 'Now we've got a truth to die for!'
'No. Men should die for lies. But the truth is too precious to die
for'
- "That's why it's always worth having a few philosophers around
the place. One minute it's all Is Truth Beauty and Is Beauty Truth,
and Does A Falling Tree in the Forest Make A Sound if There's No
one There to Hear It, and then just when you think they're going to
start dribbling one of 'em says, Incidentally, putting a
thirty-foot parabolic reflector on a high place to shoot the rays
of the sun at an enemy's ships would be a very interesting
demonstration of optical principles."
- The trouble with being a god is tha't you've got no one to pray
to.
- "Chain letters," said the Tyrant. "The Chain Letter to the
Ephebians. Forget Your Gods. Be Subjugated. Learn to Fear. Do not
break the chain — the last people who did woke up one morning to
find fifty thousand armed men on their lawn."
- It's a god-eat-god world.
- You can't trample infidels when you're a tortoise. I mean, all
you could do is give them a meaningful look.
- Dhblah sidled closer. This was not hard. Dhblah sidled
everywhere. Crabs thought he walked sideways.
- History, contrary to popular theories, is kings and dates and
battles.
- And it came to pass that in time the Great God Om spake unto
Brutha, the Chosen One: "Psst!"
- Brother Preptil, the master of the music, had described
Brutha's voice as putting him in mind of a disappointed vulture
arriving too late at the dead donkey.
- "There's very good eating on one of these, you know."-
[Eyeing the tortoise for tea.]
- The labyrinth of Ephebe is ancient and full of one hundred and
one amazing things you can do with hidden springs, razor-sharp
knives, and falling rocks.
- "Ah. Philosophy," said Om.
- Not a man to mince words. People, yes. But not
words.
- Squeak.- The Death
of Rats
- "Eureka," he said. "Going to have a bath then?"
- "Are you a philosopher? Where's your sponge?"
- Remind me again,
he said, How the little
horse-shaped ones move.
- "Go on, do Deformed Rabbit... it's my favourite."
- "Oh, a very useful philosophical animal, your average tortoise.
Outrunning metaphorical arrows, beating hares in races... very
handy."
- The people who really run organizations are usually found
several levels down, where it is still possible to get things
done.
- Guilt was the grease in which the wheels of the authority
turned.
- "What's a philosopher ?" said Brutha. "Someone who's
bright enough to find a job with no heavy lifting," said a voice in
his head.
- "Slave is an Ephebian word. In Om we have no word for slave,"
said Vorbis. "So I understand," said the Tyrant. "I imagine that
fish have no word for water."
- "He says gods like to see an atheist around. Gives them
something to aim at."
- "You're not one of us."
"I don't think I'm one of them, either," said Brutha. "I'm one of
mine."
- Simony's eyes gleamed with the gleam of a man who had seen the
future and found it covered with armour plating.
- "All holy piety in public, and all peeled grapes and
self-indulgence in private."
- When you can flatten entire cities at a whim, a tendency
towards quiet reflection and
seeing-things-from-the-other-fellow's-point- of-view is seldom
necessary.
- Take it from me, whenever you see a bunch of buggers puttering
around talking about truth and beauty and the best way of attacking
Ethics, you can bet your sandals it's all because dozens of other
poor buggers are doing all the real work around the place.
- "Why do you bother with him? He's had thousands of people
killed!"
"Yes, but perhaps he thought that you wanted it."
- The figures looked more or less human. And they were engaged in
religion. You could tell by the knives (it's not murder if you do
it for a god).
- The trouble was that he was talking in philosophy, but they
were listening in gibberish.
- "He's muffed it," said Simony. "he could have done anything
with them. And he just told them the facts. You can't inspire
people with facts. They need a cause. They need a symbol."
- "You can't find a hermit to teach you herming, because of
course that rather spoils the whole thing."
- Om began to feel the acute depression that steals over every
realist in the presence of an optimist.
- "All the other prophets came back with commandments!"
"Where they get them?"
"I ... suppose they made them up."
"You get them from the same place."
- Brutha tried to nod, and thought: I'm on everyone's side. It'd
be nice if, just for once, someone was on mine.
- Probably the last man who knew how it worked had been tortured
to death years before. Or as soon as it was installed. Killing the
creator was a traditional method of patent protection.
- Give anyone a lever long enough and they can change the
world. It's unreliable levers that are the problem.
- You have perhaps heard
the phrase that hell is other people? "Yes. Yes, of course."
Death nodded. In time,
he said, You will learn that
this is wrong.
- I used to think that I was stupid, and then I met
philosophers.
- "I like the idea of democracy. You have to have someone
everyone distrusts," said Brutha. "That way, everyone's
happy."
- "But Vorbis died a hundred years ago!"
Yes. He had to walk it all
alone. All alone with himself. If he dared.
"He's been here for a hundred years?"
Possibly not. Time is
different here. It is ... more personal.
"Ah. You mean a hundred years can pass like a few seconds?"
A hundred years can pass like
infinity.
The black-on-black eyes stared imploringly at Brutha, who reached
out automatically, without thinking…and then hesitated.
He was a murderer,
said Death. And a creator of
murderers. A torturer. Without passion. Cruel. Callous.
Compassionless.
"Yes. I know. He's Vorbis," said Brutha. Vorbis changed people.
Sometimes he changed them into dead people. But he always changed
them. That was his triumph.
He sighed.
"But I'm me," he said.
Vorbis stood up, uncertainly, and followed Brutha across the
desert.
- Fear is a strange soil. Mainly it grows obedience like
corn, which grows in rows and makes weeding easy. .
- 'You can die for your country or your people or your family,
but for a god you should live fully and busily, every day of a long
life.^ If you want to waste your life on WN, that’s fine by me.
- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
^ If you want to save the white race, you should find a nice girl and raise a big family.- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
^ Or that even if they do, that you and your family may not survive to see the Brave New World?- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
- You Shall Not Subject Your God To Market Forces!
Gods like a joke as much as anyone else.
- Much human ingenuity has gone into finding the ultimate
Before.
The current state of knowledge can be summarized thus:
In the beginning, there was nothing, which exploded.
Other theories about the ultimate start involve gods creating the
universe out of the ribs, entrails and testicles of their
father.† There are quite a lot of these.
They are interesting, not for what they tell you about
cosmology, but for what they say about people. Hey, kids,
which part do you think they made your town out of?
-
- † Gods like a joke as much as anyone
else.
- Witches generally act as layers-out of the dead as well as
midwives; there were plenty of people in Lancre for whom Nanny
Ogg's face had been the first and last thing they'd ever seen,
which had probably made the bit in the middle seem quite uneventful
by comparison.
- Mustrum Ridcully did a lot for rare species. For one thing, he
kept them rare.
- Using metaphor in front of a man as unimaginative as Ridcully
was like a red flag to a bu — was like putting something very
annoying in front of someone who was annoyed by it.
- People were always telling him to make something of his life,
and that's what he wanted to do. He wanted to make a bed of
it.
- 'But all them things exist,' said Nanny Ogg.
'That's no call to go around believing in them. It only encourages
'em.'
- 'I never said nothing,' said Nanny Ogg mildly.
'I know you never! I could hear you not saying anything!
You've got the loudest silences I ever did hear from anyone who
wasn't dead!'
- Nanny Ogg had a pragmatic attitude to the truth; she told it if
it was convenient and she couldn't be bothered to make up something
more interesting.
- She was an incredibly comfortable person to be around, partly
because she had a mind so broad it could accommodate three football
fields and a bowling alley.
- The shortest unit of 'time' in the multiverse is the
New York second, defined as the period of time between the traffic
lights turning green and the cab behind you honking.
- There was something about the eyes. It wasn't the
shape or the color. The was no evil glint. But there was... ... a
look. It was such a look that a microbe might encounter if it could
see up from the bottom end of the microscope. It said: You are
nothing. .^ Well, I don’t know if you have noticed or not, but they (the immigrants and such) have shown no intention of leaving or “assimilating.” They in fact have said and *demonstrated* that they have no such intentions of leaving.
- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
It said: You
are animal. It said: Perhaps you may be a pet, or perhaps you may
be a quarry. It said: And the choice is not yours.
- Dwarfs are generally scared of heights, since they don't often
have the opportunity to get used to them.
- Magrat says a broomstick is one of them sexual metaphor
things.†
-
- † Although this is a phallusy.
- 'It's certain death anyway,' said Ridcully. 'That's the thing
about Death, certainty.'
- The Monks of Cool, whose tiny and exclusive monastery is hidden
in a really cool and laid-back valley in the lower Ramtops, have a
passing-out test for a novice. He is taken into a room full of all
types of clothing and asked: Yo†, my son, which of
these is the most stylish thing to wear? And the correct
answer is: Hey, whatever I select.
-
- † Cool, but not necessarily up to date
- Elves are wonderful. They provoke
wonder.
Elves are marvellous. They cause marvels.
Elves are fantastic. They create fantasies.
Elves are glamorous. They project glamour.
Elves are enchanting. They weave enchantment.
Elves are terrific. They beget terror.
The thing about words is that meaning can twist just like a
snake, and if you want to find snakes look for them behind words
that have changed their meaning.
No one ever said elves are nice.
Elves are bad.
- There are no delusions for the dead. Dying is like waking up
after a really good party, when you have one or two seconds of
innocent freedom before you recollect all the things you did last
night which seemed so logical and hilarious at the time, and then
you remember the really amazing thing you did with a
lampshade and two balloons, which had them in stitches,
and now you realize you're going to have to look a lot of people in
the eye today and you're sober now and so are they but you can
both remember.
- Granny Weatherwax: 'Personal's not the same as
important. .
- Royalty, when they marry, either get very small things, like
exquisitely constructed clockwork eggs, or large bulky items, like
duchesses.
- If you really want to upset a witch, do her a favor which she
has no means of repaying.^ In fact, the people that are re-colonizing America, whether they be Latin Americans, Orientals, or Punjabis could care less about Western civilization as you and I think about it.
- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
^ I guess that’s mean to say… but surely some of these open borders supporters realise just what they’re doing.- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
^ One gets the feeling that he wants to connect America’s heritage with the Anglo-Saxon derived people who’ve made her great but he just can’t bring himself to say it for the same reason that so many others can’t either.- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
The unfulfilled obligation will nag at
her like a hangnail.
- An elf's strength lay in persuading others they were
weak.
- He could think in italics. Such people need
watching.
Preferably from a safe distance.
- Dwarfs are very attached to gold. Any highwayman demanding
'Your money or your life' had better bring a folding chair and
packed lunch and a book to read while the debate goes on.
- The Ramkins were more highly bred than a hilltop bakery,
whereas Corporal Nobbs had been disqualified from the human race
for shoving.
- When you hit your thumb with an eight-pound hammer it's nice to
be able to blaspheme. It takes a very special and strong-minded
atheist to jump up and down with their hand clasped under their
other armpit and shout, 'Oh,
random-fluctuations-in-the-space-time-continuum!' or 'Aaargh,
primitive-and-outmoded-concept on a crutch!'
- There was much pushing and shoving and honking of noses and
falling of prats. It was a scene to make a happy man slit his
wrists on a fine spring morning.
- Fingers-Mazda, the first thief in the world, stole fire from
the gods. But he was unable to fence it. It was too hot.
He got really burned on that deal.
- Dwarfs and trolls get along like a house on fire ... Ever been
in a burning house, miss?
- Sometimes it's better to light a flamethrower than
curse the darkness.
- If you have to look along the shaft of an arrow from
the wrong end, if a man has you at his mercy, then hope like hell
that man is an evil man. Because the evil like power,
power over people, and they want to see you in fear. They want you
to know you are going to die. So they'll talk. They'll gloat.
They'll watch you squirm. They'll put off the murder like another
man will put off a good cigar.
So hope like hell your captor is an evil man. A good man
will kill you with hardly a word.
Gods play games with the fates of men. But first they have to get
all the pieces on the board, and look all over the place for the
dice...
- Certain things have to happen before other things. Gods
play games with the fates of men. But first they have to get all
the pieces on the board, and look all over the place for the
dice.
- The question seldom addressed is where Medusa had
snakes. Underarm hair is an even more embarrassing problem when it
keeps biting the top of the deodorant bottle.
- Susan hated Literature. She'd much prefer to read a good
book.
- The school encouraged fresh air, it was available in large
amounts for free.
- Some peasants who wanted to stop being peasants revolted. And
since the nobles won they stopped being peasants really
quickly.
- He was not, by the standard definitions, a bad man; in the same
way a plague-bearing rat is not, from a dispassionate point of
view, a bad animal.
- Imp hesitated, as people do when, after having used a language
all their lives, they're told to 'say something'.
- 'We'll practise as we go along,' said Glod. 'Welcome to the
world of professional musicianship.'
- Susan looked at the mess sizzling in the huge frying-pan. It
wasn't a sight to be seen on an empty stomach, although it could
probably cause one.
- 'You're a musician, ain't you?' said Glod. 'What do you think
you do?'
'I hits 'em with de hammers,' said Lias, one of nature's
drummers.
- There is something very sad about an empty dressing room. It's
like a discarded pair of underpants, which it resembles in a number
of respects. It's seen a lot of activity. It may even have
witnessed excitement and a whole gamut of human passions. And now
there's nothing much left but a faint smell.
- It was eight in the morning, a time when drinkers are trying
either to forget who they are or to remember where they live.
- C. M. O. T. Dibbler liked to be up at first light, in case
there was an opportunity to sell a worm to the early bird.
- 'We need to get it together if we're going to wow them at the
Festival,' said Crash.
'What, you mean ... like ... learn to play?' said Jimbo.
'No! Music With Rocks In just happens. If you go around
learning you'll never get anywhere,' said Crash.
- The thought was flooding into his mind, and not for the first
time, that Mr. Clete was not playing with a full orchestra, that he
was one of those people who built their own hot madness out of sane
and chilly parts.
- Bee There Orr Bee A Rectangular Thyng
- I'm mean and turf and I'm mean and turf and
I'm mean and turf and I'm mean and turf.
Me and my friends will walk towards you
With our hats on backwards in a menacing way.
Yo!
- It is said that whosoever the gods wish to destroy, they first
make mad. In fact, whosoever the gods wish to destroy, they first
hand the equivalent of a stick with a fizzing fuse and Acme
Dynamite Company written on its side. It's more interesting, and
doesn't take as long.
- Famous I don't know about ... I just want to play music every
day and hear someone say, "Thanks, that was great, here's some
money, same time tomorrow, okay?"
This is where the gods play games with the lives of men, on a board
which is
at one and the same time a simple playing area
and the whole world.
And Fate always wins.
KIDS! Only very silly wizards with bad sinus trouble do
this...
Probably the last sound heard before the Universe folded up like a
paper hat would be someone saying, 'What happens if I do
this?'
- This is where the gods play games with the lives of
men, on a board which is at one and the same time a simple
playing area and the whole world.
And Fate always wins.
Fate always wins. Most of the gods throw dice but Fate plays chess,
and you don't find out until too late that he's been using two
queens all along.
- Gods can take any form, but the one aspect of themselves they
cannot change is their eyes, which show their nature. The eyes of
Fate are hardly eyes at all — just dark holes into an infinity
speckled with what may be stars or, there again, may be other
things.
- When someone is saved from certain death by a strange
concatenation of circumstances, they say that's a miracle. But of
course, if someone is killed by a freak chain of events —
the oil spill just there, the safety fence broken just
there — that must also be a miracle. Just
because it's not nice doesn't mean it's not
miraculous.
- There was always an argument about whether the newcomer was a
goddess at all. Certainly no one ever got anywhere by worshipping
her, and she tended to turn up only where she was least expected,
such as now. And people who trusted in her seldom survived. Any
temples built to her would surely be struck by lightning Better to
juggle axes on a tightrope than say her name. Just call her the
waitress in the Last Chance saloon.
She was generally referred to as the Lady, and her eyes were
green...
- According to the philosopher Ly Tin Wheedle, chaos is
found in greatest abundance wherever order is being sought. It
always defeats order, because it is better organized.
- Assassination was meat and drink to the Hunghung court; in
fact, meat and drink were often the means.
- 'I reckon it was some kind of firework. They're very big on
fireworks here.'
'You mean the sort of things where you light the blue touch paper
and stick it up your nose?'†
-
- † KIDS! Only very silly wizards with bad sinus trouble
do this. Sensible people go off to a roped-off
enclosure where they can watch a heavily protected man, in the
middle distance, light (with the aid of a very long pole) something
that goes 'fsst'. And then they can shout 'Hooray'.
- 'It's just that his memory's bad. We had a bit of trouble on
the way over. I keep telling him, it's rape the women and
set fire to the houses.'
'Rape?' said Rincewind. 'That's not very — '
'He's eighty-seven,' said Cohen. 'Don't go and spoil an old man's
dreams.'
- Probably the last sound heard before the Universe
folded up like a paper hat would be someone saying, 'What happens
if I do this?'
- 'But there are causes worth dying for,' said Butterfly.
'No, there aren't! Because you've only got one life but you can
pick up another five causes on any street corner!'
'Good grief, how can you live with a philosophy like
that?'
Rincewind took a deep breath.
'Continuously!'
- With him here,
even uncertaincy is uncertain. .
- What is so surprising
about bacon?
'I don't know.^ (A side note: don’t even think about lecturing me on the porno culture in Latin countries.- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
^ I’m not sure you call all that much about even preserving traditional American culture (much less white people).- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
^ And don’t even think about telling me that the Japanese invented video games; we do not have a monopoly on banality, but we seem to be among the greatest perpetrators.- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
I suppose it comes as something of a shock to the
pig.'
- 'There's a lot of waiting in warfare,' said
Boy Willie.
'Ah, yes,' said Mr. Saveloy. 'I've heard people say that. .^ There were long periods of peace and stability and long periods of warfare.- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
'Not really, said Cohen. .
- Once you were in the hands of a Grand Vizier, you were dead.^ If you don’t like ethnic nationalism then you’ll have to supply a more realistic alternative to “McWorld Coca-Colonisation” than the monarchy.
- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
Grand Viziers were always scheming megalomaniacs. It was probably
in the job description: 'Are you a devious, plotting, unreliable
madman? Ah, good, then you can be my most trusted adviser.'
- The Empire's got something worse than whips, all right. It's
got obedience. Whips in the soul.
- Rincewind listened. .^ The only cultural influence an alien variety can have on an indigenous peoples is when it complements or is something in addition that harmoniously couples with an indigenous culture.
- The Return of Ethnic Nationalism : Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture 17 January 2010 8:48 UTC www.chroniclesmagazine.org [Source type: Original source]
There were
lots of bodies, but only a few people. That's why you kept
running into the same ones. There was probably a mold
somewhere.
- He thought: meddle first, understand later. You had to meddle a
bit before you had anything to try to understand. And the
thing was never, ever, to go back and hide in the Lavatory of
Unreason. You have to try and get your mind around the
Universe before you can give it a twist.
Perhaps we shouldn't have given you a name. We didn't think about
that. It was a joke. But we should have remembered that
names are important. A thing with a name is a bit more than a
thing.
- Nanny also recalled her as being rather thoughtful and shy, as
if trying to reduce the amount of world she took up.
- No one had asked her, before she was born, whether she wanted a
lovely personality or whether she'd prefer, say, a miserable
personality but a body that could take size 9 in dresses. Instead,
people would take pains to tell her that beauty was only skin-deep,
as if a man ever fell for an attractive pair of kidneys.
- Ahahahahaha! Ahahahaha! Aahahaha!
BEWARE!!!!!
Yrs sincerely
The Opera Ghost
- "What sort of person," said Salzella patiently, "sits down and
writes a maniacal laugh? And all those exclamation marks, you
notice? Five? A sure sign of someone who wears his underpants on
his head. Opera can do that to a man."
- His progress through life was hampered by his
tremendous sense of his own ignorance, a disability which affects
all too few people.
- The kicking and punching stopped only when it became apparent
that all the mob was attacking was itself. And, since the IQ of a
mob is the IQ of its most stupid member divided by the number of
mobsters, it was never very clear to anyone what had happened.
- A day ago the future had looked aching and desolate, and now it
looked full of surprises and terror and bad things happening to
people... If she had anything to do with it anyway - [Granny
Weatherwax commits optimism]
- It was done far more often than the audiences ever realized —
when singers had a sore throat, or had completely dried, or had
turned up so drunk they could barely stand, or, in one notorious
instance many years previously, had died in the interval and
subsequently sung their famous aria by means of a broom-handle
stuck up their back and their jaw operated with a piece of
string.
- People who didn't need people needed people around to know that
they were the kind of people who didn't need people
- "The singers all loathe the sight of one another, the chorus
despises the singers, they both hate the orchestra, and everyone
fears the conductor; the staff on one prompt side won't talk to the
staff on the opposite prompt side, the dancers are all crazed from
hunger in any case..."
- "Well, basically there are two sorts of opera,' said Nanny, who
also had the true witch's ability to be confidently expert on the
basis of no experience whatsoever. 'There's your heavy opera, where
basically people sing foreign and it goes like "Oh oh oh, I am
dyin', oh, I am dyin', oh, oh, oh, that's what I'm doin'", and
there's your light opera, where they sing in foreign and it
basically goes "Beer! Beer! Beer! Beer! I like to drink lots of
beer!", although sometimes they drink champagne instead. That's
basically all of opera, really."
- The person on the other side was a young woman. Very obviously
a young woman. There was no possible way that she could have been
mistaken for a young man in any language, especially Braille.
- Nanny Ogg found herself embarrassed to even think about this,
and this was unusual because embarrassment normally came as
naturally to Nanny as altruism comes to a cat
- He had a unique stride: it looked as though his body was being
dragged forward and his legs had to flail around underneath it,
landing wherever they could find room. It wasn't so much a walk as
a collapse, indefinitely postponed.
- She'd even given herself a middle initial - X - which stood for
"someone who has a cool and exciting middle name".
- Most people in Lancre, as the saying goes, went to bed with the
chickens and got up with the cows. [footnote: Er. That is to say,
they went to bed at the same time as the chickens went to bed, and
got up at the same time as the cows got up. Loosely worded sayings
can really cause misunderstandings.]-
- "...my father is the Emperor of Klatch and my mother is a small
tray of raspberry puddings."- [Agnes tells Christine after
realising she isn't listening]
- "There have been...accidents."
"What kind of accidents?"
"The kind of accidents you prefer to call...accidents."
- "But I don't believe in reincarnation!" he protested.
SQUEAK.
And this, Mr Pounder understood with absolute rodent clarity,
meant: Reincarnation believes in you.
- After you'd known Christine for any length of time, you found
yourself fighting a desire to look into her ear to see if you could
spot daylight coming the other way.
- No male had ever touched Agnes before, except perhaps to push
her over and steal her sweets.
- The pre-luncheon drinks were going quite well, Mr Bucket
thought. Everyone was making polite conversation and absolutely no
one had been killed up to the present moment.
- Nanny could get a statue to cry on her shoulder and say what it
really thought about pigeons.
- Greebo could, in fact, commit sexual harrassment simply by
sitting very quietly in the next room.
- It is the fate of all banisters worth sliding down that there
is something nasty waiting at the far end.
- I am Death, not
taxes. I turn up only once.
- And, while it was regarded as pretty good evidence of
criminality to be living in a slum, for some reason owning a whole
street of them merely got you invited to the very best social
occasions.
- It is traditionally the belief of policemen that they can tell
what a substance is by sniffing it and then gingerly tasting it,
but this practice had ceased in the Watch ever since Constable
Flint had dipped his finger into a blackmarket consignment of
ammonium chloride cut with radium, said "Yes, this is definitely
slab wurble wurble sclup," and had to spend three days tied to his
bed until the spiders went away.
- 'You listen to me,' hissed Vimes. 'I mix with
crooks and thieves and thugs all day and that doesn't worry me at
all but after two minutes with you I need a bath. And if I find
that damn golem I'll shake its damn hand, you hear me?'
- 'We can rebuild him,' said Carrot, hoarsely. 'We have the
pottery.'
- Today is a good day for someone else to die!
- 'I Suggest You Take Me And Smash Me And Grind The Bits Into
Fragments And Pound The Fragments Into Powder And Mill Them Again
To The Finest Dust There Can Be, And I Believe You Will Not Find A
Single Atom Of Life-'
'True! Let's do it!'
'However, In Order To Test This Fully, One Of You Must
Volunteer To Undergo The Same Process.'
There was silence.
'That's not fair,' said a priest, after a while. 'All anyone has to
do is bake up your dust again and you'll be alive...'
There was more silence.
- The Community Co-ordinator of Equal Heights for Dwarfs was
demanding that dwarfs in the Watch be allowed to carry an axe
rather than the traditional sword, and should be sent to
investigate only those crimes committed by tall people.
- 'There's not a lot you can say about mining. "I mine in my mine
and what's mine is mine,"' said Cheery in a singsong voice.
- 'He screamed a lot, Vimes. In a heart-rending fashion, I am
told. And I gather he uttered a number of threats against you, for
some reason.'
'I shall try to fit him into my busy schedule, sir.'
- 'No it's not! said Constable Visit. 'Atheism is a
denial of a god.'
'Therefore It Is A Religious Position,' said Dorfl. 'Indeed, A True
Atheist Thinks Of The Gods Constantly, Albeit In Terms of Denial.
Therefore, Atheism Is A Form Of Belief. If The Atheist Truly Did
Not Believe, He Or She Would Not Bother To Deny.'
- 'What are your duties?' said Vimes.
'To Serve The Public Trust, Protect The Innocent, And Seriously
Prod Buttock, Sir,' said Dorfl.
- 'You Say To People "Throw Off Your Chains" And They Make New
Chains For Themselves?'
'Seems to be a major human activity, yes.'
Dorfl rumbled as he thought about this. 'Yes,' he said eventually.
'I Can See Why. Freedom Is Like Having The Top Of Your Head Opened
Up.'
'I'll have to take your word for that, Constable.'
- He hated the very idea of the world being divided into the
shaved and the shavers. Or those who wore the shiny boots and those
who cleaned the mud off them. Every time he saw Willikins the
butler fold his, Vimes's, clothes, he suppressed a terrible urge to
kick the butler's shiny backside as an affront to the dignity of
man.
- It was hard enough to kill a vampire. You could stake them down
and turn them into dust and ten years later someone drops a drop of
blood in the wrong place and guess who's back? They returned more
times than raw broccoli.
- Rumor is information distilled so finely that it can filter
through anything. It does not need doors and windows — sometimes it
does not need people. It can exist free and wild, running from ear
to ear without ever touching lips
- Slab: Jus' say "AarrghaarrghpleeassennononoUGH"- [Detritus'
war on drugs]
- There were no public health laws in Ankh-Morpork. It would be
like installing smoke detectors in Hell.
- "Just because someone's a member of an ethnic minority doesn't
mean they're not a nasty small-minded little jerk ..."
- You never ever volunteered. Not even if a sergant stood there
and said, "We need someone to drink alcohol, bottles of, and make
love, passionate, to women, for the use of." There was always a
snag. If a choir of angels asked for volunteers for Paradise to
step forward, Nobby knew enough to take one smart pace to the
rear.
- In all, I've had seventeen demands for your badge. Some want
parts of your body attached. Why did you have to upset everybody?-
Lord Vetinari reproves Vimes.
- It was Carrot who'd suggested to the Patrician that hardened
criminals should be given the chance to "serve the community" by
redecorating the homes of the elderly, lending a new terror to old
age and, given Ankh-Morpork's crime rate, leading to at least one
old lady having her front room wallpapered so many times in six
months that now she could only get in sideways.
- What a mess the world was in, reflected Vimes. Constable Visit
had told him that the meek would inherit it, and what had the poor
devils done to deserve that?
- WORDS IN THE HEART CANNOT BE TAKEN -Dorfl
- 'And there's the sign, Ridcully,' said the Dean. You
have read it, I assume. You know? The sign which says "Do
not, under any circumstances, open this door"?'
'Of course I've read it,' said Ridcully. 'Why d'yer think I want it
opened?'
'Er...why?' said the Lecturer in Recent Runes.
'To see why they wanted it shut, of course.'†
-
- † This exchange contains almost all you need to know about
human civilisation. At least, those bits of it that are now under
the sea, fenced off or still smoking.
- Downey stood up with some relief and walked over to his large
drinks cabinet. His hand hovered over the Guild's ancient and
valuable tantalus, with its labelled decanters of Mur, Nig, Trop
and Yksihw.†
-
- † It's a sad and terrible thing that high-born folk really have
thought that the servants would be fooled if spirits were put into
decanters that were cunningly labelled backwards. And also
throughout history the more politically conscious butler has taken
it on trust, and with rather more justification, that his employers
will not notice if the whisky is topped up with eniru.
- Getting an education was a bit like a communicable sexual
disease. It made you unsuitable for a lot of jobs and then you had
the urge to pass it on.
- She'd become a governess. It was one of the few jobs a known
lady could do. And she'd taken to it well. She'd sworn that if she
did indeed ever find herself dancing on rooftops with chimney
sweeps she'd beat herself to death with her own umbrella.
- 'You can't give her that!' she screamed. 'It's not safe!'
It's a sword.
said the Hogfather. They're
not meant to be safe.
'She's a child!' shouted Crumley.
It's
educational.
'What if she cuts herself?'
That will be an
important lesson.
- 'I...think my name is Bilious. I'm the...I'm the
oh God of Hangovers.'
'There's a God of Hangovers?'
'An oh god,' he corrected. 'When people witness me, you
see, they clutch their head and say "Oh God..." How many
of you are standing here?'
- 'So mistletoe, in fact, symbolises mistletoe?'
'Exactly, Archchancellor,' said the Senior Wrangler, who was now
just hanging on.
'Funny thing, that,' said Ridcully, in the same thoughtful tone of
voice. 'That statement is either so deep it would take a
lifetime to fully comprehend every particle of its meaning, or it
is a load of absolute tosh. Which is it, I wonder?'
'It could be both,' said the Senior Wrangler desperately.
'And that comment,' said Ridcully, 'is either very perceptive, or
very trite.'
'It might be bo — '
'Don't push it, Senior Wrangler.'
- It's the expression on
their little faces I like, said the Hogfather.
'You mean the sort of fear and awe and not knowing whether to laugh
or cry or wet their pants?'
Yes. Now that is
what I call belief.
- Then the Dean repeated the mantra that has had such a marked
effect on the progress of knowledge through the ages.
'Why don't we just mix up absolutely everything and see what
happens?' he said.
And Ridcully responded with the traditional response.
'It's got to be worth a try,' he said.
- 'I remember my father tellin' me some valuable advice about
drinks,' said Ridcully. 'He said, "Son, never drink any drink with
a paper umbrella in it, never drink any drink with a humorous name,
and never drink any drink that changes colour when the last
ingredient goes in. And never, ever, do this — "'
He dipped his finger into the beaker.
- While evidence says that the road to Hell is paved with
good intentions, they're probably all on first steps.
- Many people are aware of the weak and strong anthropic
principle. The weak one says, basically, that is was jolly
amazing of the universe to be constructed in such a way that humans
could evolve to a point where they make a living in, for example,
universities, while the strong one says that, on the contrary, the
whole point of the universe was that humans should not only work in
universities but also write for huge sums books with words like
'Cosmic' and 'Chaos' in the titles.†
-
- † And they are correct. The universe clearly operates for the
benefit of humanity. This can be readily seen from the way the sun
comes up in the morning, when people are ready to start the
day.
- Why are your hands on
bits of string, child?
The child looked down the length of its arms to the dangling
mittens affixed to its sleeves. It held them up for
inspection.
"Glubs," said the bobble hat.
I see. Very
practical.
"Are you weal?" said the bobble hat.
What do you
think?
The bobble hat sniggered. "I saw your piggie do a wee!" it said,
and implicit in the tone was the suggestion that this was unlikely
to be dethroned as the most enthralling thing the bobble hat had
ever seen.
Oh. Er ... good.
"It had a gwate big — "
What do you want for
Hogswatch? said the Hogfather hurriedly.
Are those real mountains or some kind of shadows?
- You may as well know
this. Down in the deepest kingdom of the sea, where there is no
light, there lives a type of creature with no brain, no eyes and no
mouth. It does nothing but live and put forth petals of perfect
crimson where none are there to see. It is nothing except a
tiny yes in the night.
And yet... it has enemies that bear it a vicious, unbending malice,
who wish not only for its tiny life to be over but also that it had
never existed. Are you with me so far?
"Well, yes, but — "
Good, now,
imagine what they think of humanity.
- "All right," said Susan, "I'm not stupid. You're saying
humans need ... fantasies to make life bearable."
No. Humans need fantasy to be
human. To be the place where the falling angel meet the rising
ape.
"Tooth fairies? Hogfathers?"
Yes. As practice. You have to
start out learning to believe the little lies.
"So we can believe the big ones?"
Yes. Justice. Duty. Mercy.
That sort of thing.
"They're not the same at all!"
Really? Then take the
universe and grind it down to the finest powder and sieve it
through the finest sieve and then show me one atom of
justice, one molecule of mercy. And yet you act, like there was
some sort of rightness in the universe by which it may be
judged:
"Yes. But people have got to believe that or what's the
point?"
My point
exactly.
- "Are those real mountains or some kind of shadows?"
Yes.
- There are those who believe that knowledge can only be
recalled, that there was some Golden Age in the distant past when
everything was known and the stones fitted together so you could
hardly put a knife between them, you know, and it's obvious they
had flying machines, right, because of the way the earthworks can
only be seen from above, yeah? and there's this museum I read about
where they found a pocket calculator under the altar of this
ancient temple, you know what I'm saying? but the government hushed
it up ...†
-
- † It's amazing how good governments are, given their track
record in almost every other field, at hushing up things like alien
encounters. One reason may be that the aliens themselves are too
embarrassed to talk about it. It's not known why most of the
space-going races of the universe want to undertake rummaging in
Earthling underwear as a prelude to formal contact. But
representatives of several hundred races have taken to hanging out,
unsuspected by one another, in rural corners of the planet and, as
a result of this, keep on abducting other would-be abductees.
Some have been in fact abducted while waiting to carry out
an abduction on a couple of other aliens trying to abduct the
aliens who were, as a result of misunderstood instructions, trying
to form cattle into circles and mutilate crops. The planet
Earth is now banned to an alien races until they can compare notes
and find out how many, if any, real humans they have actually got.
It is gloomily suspected that there is only one who is big, hairy
and has very large feet. The truth may be out there, but
lies are inside your head.
- 'So Hex here has caught daftness off the Bursar,' said
Ridcully. 'Simple. Real stupidity beats artificial
intelligence every time.'
- Give a man a fire and he's
warm for a day, but set fire to him and he's warm for the rest of
his life.
- Gentlemen, no fighting please. This is, after all, a council of
war.
- Lord Vetinari sounded like a man straining to see a light at
the end of the tunnel. ... It had turned out that the end of the
tunnel was on fire.
- I know no-one ever locked their houses down our street. ... It
was 'cos the bastards even used to steal the locks.
- For the serious empire-builder there was no such thing as a
final frontier.
- Putting up a statue to someone who tried to stop a war is not
very, um, statuesque. Of course, if you had butchered five hundred
of your own men out of arrogant carelessness, we'd be melting the
bronze already.
- The intelligence of that creature known as a crowd is the
square root of the number of people in it.
- After all, when you seek advice from someone it's certainly not
because you want them to give it. You just want them to be there
while you talk to yourself.
- Taxation, gentlemen, is very much like dairy farming.
The task is to extract the maximum amount of milk with the minimum
amount of moo.
- And then Corporal Littlebottom had pointed out that
Ankh-Morpork's pigeons were, because of many centuries of
depredation by the city's gargoyle population, considerably more
intelligent than most pigeons, although Vimes considered that this
was not difficult because there were things growing on old damp
bread that were more intelligent than most pigeons.
- I do like negotiating with people after the Unseen
University have entertained them to lunch. The tend not to
move around as much and they'll agree to practically anything if
they think there's a chance of a stomach powder and a small glass
of water.
- There may be a lot of things I'm not good at, thought Vimes,
but at least I don't treat the punctuation of a sentence like a
game of Pin the Tail on the Donkey...
- "Captain Carrot is an honest young man, Vimes."
"Yes, sir."
"And did you know that he winces when he hears you tell a direct
lie?"
"Really, sir?" damn.
- "One of the advantages of horses that people sometimes point
out," said Vetinari, after some thought, "is that they very seldom
explode. Almost never, in my experience, apart from that
unfortunate occurence in the hot summer a few years ago."
- "Captain, I expect that if you'd done it in a cellar at
midnight his lordship would have said 'wasn't it rather dark down
there?' next morning."
- It was still a mystery, but he'd solve it, he knew he would.
He'd assemble the facts, analyze them, look at them from every
angle with an open mind, and find out exactly how Lord Rust had
organized it.
- D'reg wasn't their name for themselves, although they tended to
adopt it now out of pride. The word meant enemy.
Everyone's.
- Sargeant: "They're... D'regs, sir!"
Officer: "No. D'regs would be charging, sergeant."
Carrot: "Oh, sorry. Shall I tell them to charge? Is that what you
prefer?"
- He was in the immediate company of a man even the Assassin's
Guild was frightened of, another man who would stay up all night in
order to invent an alarm clock to wake him up in the morning, and a
man who had never knowingly changed his underwear.
- Ye gods, no! My mother is a D'reg! She'd be terribly
offended if I trusted her. She'd say she hadn't brought me up
right.
- It is always useful to have an enemy who is prepared to
die for his country, this means that both you and he have exactly
the same aim in mind.
- 'Chapter Fifteen, Elementary Necromancy', she read out loud.
'Lesson One: Correct Use of Shovel…
- It was so much easier to blame it on Them. It was bleakly
depressing to think that They were Us. If it was Them, then nothing
was anyone's fault. If it was Us, what did that make Me? After all,
I'm one of Us. I must be. I've certainly never thought of myself as
one of Them. No one ever thinks of themselves as one of Them. We're
always one of Us. It's Them that do the bad things.
- One of the universal rules of happiness is: always be wary of
any helpful item that weighs less than its operating manual.
- ...Vimes's grin was as funny as the one that moves very fast
towards drowning men. And has a fin on top.
- She sighed again. She was familiar with the syndrome. They said
they wanted a soulmate and helpmeet but sooner or later the list
would include a skin like silk and a chest fit for a herd of
cows.
- "*Veni, vici*...Vetinari."
- And there was nothing finer than a wizard dressed up formally,
until someone could find a way of inflating a Bird of Paradise,
possibly by using an elastic band and some kind of gas.
- "One o'clock pee em! Hello, Insert Name Here!"- The
Dis-organizer
- He had the look of a lawn mower just after the grass had
organised a workers' collective. There was a definite suggestion
that, deep inside, he knew this was not really happening. It could
not be happening because this sort of thing did not happen. Any
contradictory evidence could be safely ignored.
Creators aren't gods. They make places, which is quite hard. It's
men that make gods. This explains a lot.
- All bastards are bastards, but some bastards is
bastards.
- All tribal myths are true, for a given value of
'true'.
- We might find out why mankind is here, although that is more
complicated and begs the question "Where else should we be?"
- You couldn't stop Tradition. You could only add to
it.
- Something as artificial and human as an hour wouldn't
last five minutes here.
- Logic is a wonderful thing but doesn't always beat
actual thought.
- Ridcully was to management what King Herod was to the Bethlehem
Playgroup Association.
- Rincewind awoke with a scream, to get it over with.
- Creators aren't gods. They make places, which is quite
hard. It's men that make gods. This explains a lot.
- He hated weapons, and not just because they'd so often been
aimed at him. You got into more trouble if you had a
weapon. People shot you instantly if they thought you were going to
shoot them. But if you were unarmed, they often stopped to talk.
Admittedly, they tended to say things like, 'You'll never
guess what we're going to do to you, pal,' but that took
time. And Rincewind could do a lot with a few seconds. He
could use them to live longer in.
- It had been going so well. They almost seemed up to speed. This
may have been what caused Ponder to act like the man who, having so
far fallen a hundred feet without any harm, believes that the last
few inches to the ground will be a mere formality.
- There's a certain kind of manager who is known by his call of
'My door is always open' and it is probably a good idea to beat
yourself to death with your own CV rather than work for him. In
Ridcully's case, however, he meant, 'My door is always open because
then, when I'm bored, I can fire my crossbow right across the hall
and into the target just above the Bursar's desk.'
- And he was pretty sure that there was no way you could get a
cross between a human and a sheep. If there was, people would
definitely have found out by now, especially in the more isolated
rural districts.
- 'Haven't you noticed that by running away you end up in more
trouble?'
'Yes, but you see, you can run away from that, too,' said
Rincewind. 'That's the beauty of the system. Dead is only for once,
but running away is for ever.'
'Ah, but it is said that a coward dies a thousand deaths, while a
hero dies only one.'
'Yes, but it's the important one.'
- Rincewind paused. He had always been the foremost exponent of
the from rather than the to of running.
- One of the most basic rules for survival on any planet
is never to upset someone wearing black leather.†
-
- † This is why protesters against the wearing of animal skins by
humans unaccountably fail to throw their paint over Hell's
Angels.
- That was the thing about fire. If you saw one, everyone went to
put it out. Fire spread like wildfire.
- Rincewind had always been happy to think of himself as a
racist. The One Hundred Meters, the Mile, the Marathon — he'd run
them all. Later, when he learned with some surprise what the word
actually meant, he'd been equally certain he wasn't one. He
was a person who divided the world quite simply into people who
were trying to kill him and people who weren't. That didn't leave
much room for fine details like what colour anyone
was.
- The Bursar, who had been properly brought up said, 'Hooray,
there's a rosebush?'.
- People's whole lives do
pass in front of their eyes before they die. The process is called
'living'
- "When it's time to stop living, I will certainly make Death my
number one choice!"
- "I think there may be one or two steps in your logic that I
have failed to grasp, Mister Stibbons," said the Archchancellor
coldly. "I suppose you're not intending to shoot your own
grandfather, by any chance?"
"Of course not!" snapped Ponder, "I don't even know what he looked
like. He died before I was born."
"Ah-hah!"
- In the fetid fleapit of Rincewind's brain the projectionist of
memory put on reel two. Recollection began to flicker.
- Daggy stepped forward, but only comparatively; in fact, his
mates had all, without discussion, taken one step backwards in the
choreography of caution.
- They say the heat and the flies here can drive a man insane.
But you don't have to believe that, and nor does that bright mauve
elephant that just cycled past.
- Ridcully was to management what King Herod was to the Bethlehem
Playgroup Association. His mental approach to it could be
visualised as a sort of business flowchart with, at the top, a
circle entitled "Me, who does the telling" and, connected below it
by a line, a large circle entitled "Everyone else".
- "When You're Up to Your Ass in Alligators, Today Is the First
Day of the Rest of Your Life."
- In Ghat they believe in vampire watermelons, although folklore
is silent about what they believe about vampire
watermelons. Possibly they suck back.
- They thought that you could see life through books but you
couldn't, the reason being that the words got in the way.
- Mirrors had lead to one of the Church's innumerable schisms,
one side saying that since they encouraged vanity they were bad,
and the other side saying that since they reflected the goodness of
Om they were holy.
- Lancre operated on the feudal system, which was to say,
everyone feuded all the time and handed on the fight to their
descendants. The chips on some shoulders had been passed down for
generations.
- The smug mask of virtue triumphant could be almost as horrible
as the face of wickedness revealed.
- What had she ever earned? The reward for toil had been more
toil. If you dug the best ditches they gave you a bigger
shovel.
- She'd never, ever asked for anything in return. And the trouble
with not asking for anything in return was that sometimes you
didn't get it.
- There was something... sort of damp about him, the
kind of helpless hopelessness that made people angry rather than
charitable, the total certainty that if the whole world
was a party he'd still find the kitchen.
- 'Will it be enough to know that the world is your
oyster?'
Her forehead wrinkled in perplexity. 'Why should I want it to be
some nasty little sea creature?' she said.
'Because they get eaten alive,' said the Count.
- She was not, herself, hugely in favour of motherhood in
general. Obviously it was necessary, but it wasn't exactly
difficult. Even cats managed it. But women acted as if
they'd been given a medal that entitled them to boss people around.
It was as if, just because they'd got the label which said
'mother', everyone else got a tiny part of the label that said
'child'...
- The result would have been called primitive even by people who
were too primitive to have a word yet for 'primitive'.
- Oh, we're always all right. You remember that.
We happen to other people.
- The role of the lower intestine in the efforts to build
a better nation is one that is often neglected by
historians.
- Drinking's what they like best"
"an' fighting!"
"And fighting"
"drinking an' fighting!"
"Drinking and fighting is what they like best"
"An' snaffling coobeasties!"
"And stealing cows"
- "It's not as simple as that. It's not a black-and-white issue.
There are so many shades of gray."
"There's no grays, only white that's got grubby. I'm surprised you
don't know that. And sin, young man, is when you treat
people as things. Including yourself. That's what sin
is."
"It's a lot more complicated than that-"
"No. It ain't. When people say things are more complicated
than that, they means they're getting worried that they won't like
the truth. People as things, that's where it
starts."
"Oh, I'm sure there are worse crimes-"
"But they starts with thinking about people as things…"
- Sam Vimes could parallel-process. Most husbands can. They learn
to follow their own line of thought while at the same time
listening to what their wives say. And the listening is important,
because at any time they could be challenged and must be ready to
quote the last sentence in full. A vital additional skill is being
able to scan the dialogue for telltale phrases, such as 'and they
can deliver it tomorrow' or 'so I've invited them for dinner' or
'they can do it in blue, really quite cheaply'.
- It was funny how people were people everywhere you
went, even if the people concerned weren't the people the people
who made up the phrase 'people are people everywhere' had
traditionally thought of as people. And even if you
weren't virtuous, as you had been brought up to understand the
term, you did like to see virtue in other people, provided it
didn't cost you anything.
- 'Can you think of any reason why someone would kill him?'
The troll scratched his head. 'Well, 'cos dey wanted him dead, I
reckon. Dat's a good reason.'
- He sagged to his knees. He ached all over. It wasn't just that
his brain was writing cheques that his body couldn't cash. It had
gone beyond that. Now his feet were borrowing money that his legs
hadn't got, and his back muscles were looking for loose change
under the sofa cushions.
- Practically from the moment she'd been able to talk she'd been
taught how to listen.
- There is no exception to the rule that everyone thinks that
there an exception to the rule.
- 'And I thought, "I wonder if someone'd tried to make a mould of
the replica Scone", sir,' said Reg.
'Now that is clever,' said Fred Colon, 'You'd get the real
one back then, wouldn't you?'
- A marriage is always made up of two people who are prepared to
swear that only the other one snores.
- He was aware that a wise man should always respect the folkways
of others, to use Carrot's happy phrase, but Vimes often had
difficulty with this idea. For one thing, there were people in the
world whose folkways consisted of gutting other people like clams
and this was not a procedure that commanded, in Vimes, any kind of
respect at all.
- The one positive thing you could say about the bread products
around him was that they were probably as edible now as they were
on the day they were baked. Forged was a better term. Dwarf bread
was made as a meal of last resort and also as a weapon and a
currency. Dwarfs were not, as far as Vimes knew, religious in any
way, but the way they thought about bread came close.
- You did something because it had always been done, and the
explanation was "but we've always done it this way." A million dead
people can't have been wrong, can they?
- He smacked the club down again. He roared. There were no words
there. It was a sound from before words. If there was any meaning
in it at all it was a lament that he couldn't cause enough
pain.
- There was no such thing as a dwarfish female pronoun or, once
the children were on solids, any such thing as women's work.
- He wasn't strictly aware of it, but he treated even geography
as if he was investigating a crime (did you see who carved out the
valley? Would you recognize that glacier if you saw it again?)
- As castles went, this one looked as though it could be taken by
a small squad of not very efficient soldiers. For defence, putting
a blanket over your head might be marginally safer.
- She moved like someone who had grown used to her body and, in
general, looked like what Vimes had heard described as "a woman of
a certain age." He'd never been quite certain what age that
was.
- Vimes: "And now it appears that we have reached what Sergeant
Colon persists in referring to as an imp arse"
There's a fifth element, and generally it's called Surprise.
- The Truth Shall Make Ye Fret.
- Misprinted motto of the Ankh-Morpork Times, which was
supposed to read, "The Truth Shall Make Ye Free".
- Spit or swallow, he thought, the eternal conundrum.
- The world is made up of four elements: Earth, Air, Fire
and Water. This is a fact well known even to Corporal Nobbs. It's
also wrong. There's a fifth element, and generally it's called
Surprise.
For example, the dwarfs found out how to turn lead into gold by
doing it the hard way. The difference between that and the easy way
is that the hard way works.
- In fact he was incurably insane and hallucinated more or less
constantly, but by a remarkable stroke of lateral thinking his
fellow wizards had reasoned that, in that case, the whole business
could be sorted out if only they could find a formula that caused
him to hallucinate that he was completely sane.†
-
- † This is a very common hallucination, shared by most
people.
- 'You know I've always wanted a paperless office — '
'Yes, Archchancellor, that's why you hide it all in cupboards and
throw it out of the window at night.'
- There are, it has been said, two types of people in the world.
There are those who, when presented with a glass that is exactly
half full, say: this glass is half full. And then there are those
who say: this glass is half empty.
The world belongs, however, to those who can look at the
glass and say: 'What's up with this glass? Excuse me? Excuse
me? This is my glass? I don't think so.
My glass was full! And it was a bigger glass! And
at the other end of the bar the world is full of the other type of
person, who has a broken glass, or a glass that has been carefully
knocked over (usually by one of the people calling for a larger
glass), or who had no glass at all, because they were at the back
of the crowd and had failed to catch the barman's eye.
- Your Brain On Drugs is a terrible sight, but Mr. Tulip was
living proof of the fact that so was Your Brain on a cocktail of
horse liniment, sherbet and powdered water-retention pills.
- If his body was a temple, it was one of those strange ones
where people did odd things to animals in the basement, and if he
watched what he ate it was only to see it wriggle.
- William barely had time to undress and lie down before it was
time to get up again.
- No enemy was too strong, no wound was too deep, and no sword
was too heavy for a de Worde. No grave was too deep either.
- Do not put all your trust
in root vegetables. What things seem may not be what things
are, said Death.
- Pulling together is the aim of despotism and tyranny.
Free men pull in all kinds of directions.
- "Anyway, you're a vampire. What advice could a vampire give me
about women?"
"Oh, my vord, vake up and smell zer garlic! Oh, zer stories I
could tell you." Otto paused. "But I von't because I don't do zat
sort of thing any more, now that I have seen the daylight." He
nudged William, who was red with embarrassment. "Let us just say,
zey don't alvays scream." "That's a bit tasteless, isn't
it?" "Oh, that vas in zer bad old days," said Otto hurriedly. "Now
I like nothing better than a nice mug of cocoa and a good sing-song
around zer harmonium, I assure you. Oh yes. My vord."
- "Oh vill you come to the mission, vill you come, come, come,
zere's a nice cup of tea and a bun, and a bun..."
What is the difference between a humanistic, monastic system of
belief in which wisdom is sought by means of an apparently
nonsensical system of questions and answers, and a lot of mystic
gibberish made up on the spur of the moment?
- Then you have The Story of the Emperor Who Had No
Clothes.
But if you knew a bit more, it would be The Story of the Boy Who
Got a Well-Deserved Thrashing from His Dad for Being Rude to
Royalty, and Was Locked Up.
- Genius is always allowed some leeway, once the hammer
has been pried from its hands and the blood has been cleaned
up.
- Igor had to admit it. When it came to getting weird
things done, sane beat mad hands down.
Wen considered this for some time, and at last said: "A
fish!"
And Clodpool went away, satisfied.
- "I will teach you to deal with time as you would deal with a
coat, to be worn when necessary and discarded when not."
"Will I have to wash it?" said Clodpool.
Wen gave him a long, slow look. "That was either a very
complex piece of thinking on your part, Clodpool, or you were just
trying to overextend a metaphor in a rather stupid way. Which do
you think it was?"
- When you look into the abyss, it's not supposed to wave
back.
- "Sometimes I really think people ought to have to pass a
proper exam before they're allowed to be parents. Not just
the practical, I mean."
- Susan stopped. Of course someone would be that stupid. Some
humans would do anything to see if it was possible to do it.
If you put a large switch in some cave somewhere, with a
sign on it saying "End-of-the-World Switch. PLEASE DO NOT TOUCH",
the paint wouldn't even have time to dry.
- In the Second Scroll of Wen the Eternally Surprised a
story is written concerning one day when the apprentice Clodpool,
in a rebellious mood, approached Wen and spake thusly:
"Master, what is the difference between a humanistic, monastic
system of belief in which wisdom is sought by means of an
apparently nonsensical system of questions and answers, and a lot
of mystic gibberish made up on the spur of the moment?"
Wen considered this for some time, and at last said: "A
fish!"
And Clodpool went away, satisfied.
Questions don't have to make sense, Vincent... But answers
do.
- "Well, I just...I thought...well, I just thought you'd be
teaching me more, that's all."
"I'm teaching you things all the time," said Lu-Tze. "You
might not be learning them, of course."
- 'Questions don't have to make sense, Vincent,' said
Miss Susan. 'But answers do.'
- ¨A loophole," said Susan.
Yes.
"Well, why can't you find one too?"
I am the grim reaper.
I do not think people wish me to get...
creative.
- "I said it's uncertain death."
"Is that worse than certain death?"
"Much. Watch." Susan picked up a hammer that was lying on the floor
and poked it gently towards the clock. It vibrated in her hand when
she brought it closer, and she swore under her breath as it was
dragged from her fingers and vanished. Just before it did there was
a brief, contracting ring around the clock that might have been
something like a hammer would be if you rolled it very flat and
bent it into a circle.
"Have you any idea why that happened?" she said.
"No."
"Nor have I. Now imagine you were that hammer. Uncertain death,
see?"
- A chocolate you did not want to eat does not count as
chocolate. This discovery is from the same branch of culinary
physics that determined that food eaten while walking along
contains no calories.
- Some distance away [...] were a number of gentlemen's clubs. It
would be far too cynical to say that here the term "gentlemen" was
simply defined as "someone who can afford five hundred dollars a
year"; they also had to be approved of by a great many
other gentlemen who could afford the same fee. And they didn't much
like the company of ladies. This was not to say that they were
that kind of gentlemen, who had their own, rather
better-decorated clubs in another part of town, where there was
generally a lot more going on. These gentlemen were
gentlemen of a class who were, on the whole, bullied by ladies from
an early age. Their lives were steered by nurses, governesses,
matrons, mothers and wives, and after four or five decades of that
the average mild-mannered gentleman gave up and escaped as politely
as possible to one of these clubs, where he could snooze the
afternoon away in a leather armchair with the top button of his
trousers undone.
- Rule One: Never act incautiously around small, wrinkly, bald,
smiling men.
- "You may think otherwise, but it was me standing there."
- In order to have a change
of fortune at the last minute you have to take your fortune to the
last minute
I have no use for people who have learned the limits of the
possible.
- Their eyes said that wherever it was, they had been
there. Whatever it was, they had done it, sometimes more than once.
But they would never, ever, buy the T-shirt. And they did know the
meaning of the word 'fear'. It was something that happened to other
people.
- I have no use for people who have learned the limits of
the possible.
- This man was so absent-mindedly clever that he could paint
pictures that didn't just follow you around the room but went home
with you and did the washing-up.
- More of the ambassadors from other countries had arrived at the
university, and more heads of the Guilds were pouring in, and
every single one of them wanted to be involved in the
decision-making process without necessarily going through the
intelligence-using process first.
- 'I don't think I've become old.' said Boy Willie. 'Not
your actual old. Just more aware of where the next lavatory
is.'
- Rincewind stared at the badge. He'd never had one before. Well,
that was technically a lie ... he'd had one that said 'Hello, I Am
5 Today!', which was just about the worst possible present to get
when you are six.
- It occurred to him that when you'd had everything, all
that was left was nothing.
- 'I SAID YOU HAD TO CUT OFF YOUR WORST ENEMY'S WOSSNAME AND
PRESENT IT TO HER!'
'Aye, romance is a wonderful thing,' said Mad Hamish.
'What'd you do if you didn't have a worst enemy?' said Boy
Willie.
'You try and cut off anyone's wossname,' said Truckle, 'and you've
soon got a worst enemy.'
- '"Morituri Nolumus Mori" - "We who are about to die dont want
to"
- One day, when he was naughty, Mr Bunnsy looked over the hedge
into Farmer Fred's field and it was full of green lettuces. Mr
Bunnsy, however, was not full of lettuces. This did not seem fair.
- Rats!
They chased the dogs and bit the cats, they —
But there was more to it than that. As the amazing Maurice said, it
was just a story about people and rats. And the difficult part of
it was deciding who the people were, and who were the rats.
But Malicia Grim said it was a story about stories.
- 'Listen, Peaches, trickery is what humans are all about,' said
the voice of Maurice. 'They're so keen on tricking one another all
the time that they elect governments to do it for them.'
- He'd realized there was something educated about the
rats when he jumped on one and it'd said, 'Can we talk about
this?', and part of his amazing new brain had told him you
couldn't eat someone who could talk. At least, not until you'd
heard what they'd got to say.
- Everyone's thinking these days. I think there's a good deal too
much of this thinking, that's what I think. We never thought about
thinking when I was a lad. We'd never get anything done if we
thought first.
- People listened to Hamnpork because he was the leader,
but they listened to Darktan because he was often telling you
things that you really, really needed to know if you wanted to go
on living.
- It was much more true than the truth would sound.
- 'What is a rat?' and Hamnpork had replied, Teeth. Claws. Tail.
Run. Hide. Eat. That's what a rat is.'
Dangerous Beans had said, 'But now we can also say "what is a
rat?"' he said.
'And that means we're more than that.'
'We're rats,' Hamnpork had argued. 'We run around and squeak and
steal and make more rats. That's what we're made for!'
'Who by?' Dangerous Beans had said, and that had led to another
argument about the Big Rat Deep Under The Ground theory.
- He lived life as if it was a performance.
Other rats just ran around squeaking and messing up things, and
that was quite good enough to convince humans there was a plague.
But, oh, no, Sardines always had to go further. Sardines and his
yowoorll song and dance act!
- It was a good routine, even Maurice had to admit. Some towns
had advertised for a rat piper the very first time he'd done it.
People could tolerate rats in the cream, and rats in the roof, and
rats in the teapot, but they drew the line at tapdancing.
If you saw tap-dancing rats, you were in big trouble. Maurice had
reckoned that if only the rats could play an accordion as well they
could do two towns a day.
Ninety per cent of most magic merely consists of knowing one extra
fact.
- Vimes pulled out his truncheon. "At 'em, lads," he yelled.
"Trucheons! Nothing fancy! Bop 'em on the fingers and let gravity
do the work! They're goin' down.
- There was some more laughter. We who think we are about to die
will laugh at anything.
What a bunch. I know you well, gentlemen. You're in it for the
quiet life and the pension, you don't hurry too much in case the
danger is still around when you get there, and the most you ever
expected to face was an obstreperous drunk or a particularly
difficult cow. Most of you aren't even coppers, not in your head.
In the sea of adventure, you're bottomfeeders.
And now, it's war... and you're in the middle. Not on either side.
You're the stupid little band of brownjobs. You're beneath
contempt. But believe me, boys - you'll rise.
- His movements could be called cat-like, except that he did not
stop to spray urine up against things.
- Ninety per cent of most magic merely consists of
knowing one extra fact.
- Don't put your trust in revolutions. They always come
around again. That's why they're called revolutions. People die,
and nothing changes.
- One of the hardest lessons of young Sam's life had been finding
out that the people in charge weren't in charge. It had been
finding out that governments were not, on the whole, staffed by
people who had a grip, and that plans were what people made instead
of thinking.
- There were plotters, there was no doubt about it. Some had been
ordinary people who'd had enough. Some were young people with no
money who objected to the fact that the world was run by old people
who were rich. Some were in it to get girls. And some had been
idiots as mad as Swing, with a view of the world just as rigid and
unreal, who were on the side of what they called 'the people'.
Vimes had spent his life on the streets, and had met decent men and
fools and people who'd steal a penny from a blind beggar and people
who performed silent miracles or desperate crimes every day behind
the grubby windows of little houses, but he'd never met The
People.
- People on the side of The People always ended up disappointed,
in any case. They found that The People tended not to be grateful
or appreciative or forward-thinking or obedient. The People tended
to be small-minded and conservative and not very clever and were
even distrustful of cleverness. And so the children of the
revolution were faced with the age-old problem: it wasn't that you
had the wrong kind of government, which was obvious, but that you
had the wrong kind of people.
- As soon as you saw people as things to be measured, they didn't
measure up....
- 'Then he went on sweeping.'
"Sweeping?"
"Oh, it's the kind of holy thing they do. So they don't tread on
ants, I think. Or they sweep sins away. Or maybe they just like the
place clean. Who cares what monks do?"
- "He wanted to add: you're a cell of one, Reg. The real
revolutionaries are silent men with poker-player faces and probably
don't know or care if you live or die. You've got the shirt and the
haircut and the sash and you know all the songs, but you're no
urban guerrila. You're an urban dreamer. You turn over rubbish bins
and scrawl on walls in the name of The People, who'd clip you round
the ear if they found you doing it."
- "You'd like Freedom, Truth and Justice, wouldn't you, comrade
sergeant?" said Reg encouragingly.
"I'd like a hardboiled egg," said Vimes, shaking the match
out.
What's this all about, Reg?'
"The People's Republic of Treacle Mine Road!" said Reg proudly. "We
are forming a government!"
"Oh, good," said Vimes. "Another one. Just what we need. Now, does
any one of you know where my damn barricades have gone?"
- "That was my egg, you bastard!" he screamed, punching the nose.
"With soldiers!"
- "see the little angels rise up high..." Others were picking up
the tune.
[...]
"do they rise up, rise up, rise up, how do they rise up, rise up
high?"
"It could have been good, sergeant," said Reg, looking up. "It
really could. A city where a man can breathe free."
"they rise ARSE up, arse up, arse up, see the little angels rise up
high..."
"Wheeze free, Reg," said Vimes, sitting down next to him. This is
Ankh-Morpork." And they all hit that line together, thought the
part of him that was listening with the other ear. Strange that
they should do that, or maybe not.
"Yeah, make a joke of it. Everyone thinks it's funny," said Reg,
looking at his feet.
"I don't know if this'll help, Reg, but I didn't even get my
hardboiled egg," said Vimes.
- 'That's a nice song,' said young Sam, and Vimes remembered that
he was hearing it for the first time.
'It's an old soldiers' song,' he said.
'Really, sarge? But it's about angels.'
Yes, thought Vimes, and it's amazing what bits those angels cause
to rise up as the song progresses. It's a real soldiers' song:
sentimental, with dirty bits.
'As I recall, they used to sing it after battles,' he said. I've
seen old men cry when they sing it,' he added.
'Why? It sounds cheerful.'
They were remembering who they were not singing it with,
thought Vimes. You'll learn. I know you will.
- 'But I'll tell you what,' said Vimes. 'If this goes on, the
city will see to it the deliveries come in by other gates. We'll be
hungry then. That's when we'll need your organizational
skills.'
'You mean we'll be in a famine situation?' said Reg, the light of
hope in his eyes.
'If we aren't, Reg, I'm sure you could organize one,' said Vimes,
and realized he'd gone just a bit too far.
- Some had even fled Reg Shoe, who was sitting on the barricade,
staring at the sheer weight of arrows in him. As he watched, his
brain seemingly decided that he must be dead on this evidence, and
he fell backwards. But in a few hours, his brain would be in for a
surprise.
No one knew why some people became natural zombies,
substituting sheer stubborn will power for blind life force. But
attitude played a part. For Reg Shoe, life was only just
beginning...
- 'Make sure Reg Shoe gets a decent burial!'
'We will!'
'Not too deep, he'll be wanting to come out again in a few
hours!'
- The Particulars, they were officially, but as far as Vimes
could remember they'd revelled in their nickname of the
Unmentionables. They were the ones that listened in every
shadow and watched at every window. That was how it seemed, anyway.
They certainly were the ones who knocked on doors in the middle of
the night.
- 'And when you told that man to prove he was Henry the Hamster,
I thought I'd widdchoke! You knew they weren't going to sign,
right, sarge? 'cos if there's a bit of paper saying they've got
someone, then if anyone wants to find out-'
'Just drive, lanceconstable.' But the boy was right. For
some reason, the Unmentionables both loved and feared
paperwork.
- Sorry for the inconvenience, ladies and gentlemen, but it
appears the Unmentionables are not doing business tonight. Looks
like we'll have to do the interrogation ourselves. We're not very
experienced at this, so I hope we don't get it wrong. Now,
listen carefully. Are any of you serious conspirators bent on the
overthrow of the government?
- 'Come on, come on,' said Vimes. 'I haven't got all night. Does
anyone want to overthrow Lord Winder by force?'
'Well... no?' said the voice of Miss Palm.
'Or by crochet?'
'I heard that!' said another female voice sharply.
- They didn't like the Unmentionables. Like petty criminals
everywhere, the watchmen prided themselves that there were some
depths to which they would not sink. There had to be some things
below you, even if it was only mudworms. (Older Vimes's
thoughts)
- Bad coppers had always had their ways of finding out if someone
was guilty. Back in the old days — hah, now — these included
thumbscrews, hammers, small pointed bits of wood and, of course,
the common desk drawer, always a boon to the copper in a hurry.
Swing didn't need any of this. He could tell if you were guilty by
looking at your eyebrows.
He measured people. He used calipers and a steel
ruler. And he quietly wrote down the measurements, and did
some sums, such as dividing the length of the nose by the
circumference of the head and multiplying it by the width of the
space between the eyes. And on such figures he could, infallibly,
tell that you were devious, untrustworthy and congenially criminal.
After you had spent the next twenty minutes in the company
of his staff and their less sophisticated tools of inquiry he
would, amazingly, be proved right.
- Everyone was guilty of something. Vimes knew
that. Every copper knew it. That was how you maintained
your authority. Everyone, talking to a copper, was secretly afraid
you could see their guilty secret written on their forehead. You
couldn't, of course. But neither were you supposed to drag someone
off the street and smash their fingers with a hammer until they
told you what it was.
- 'I repeat, I order you to dismantle this barricade.' He took a
breath, and went on: 'And rebuild it on the other side on the
corner with Cable Street! And put up another one at the top of
Sheer Street! Properly built! Good grief, you don't just pile stuff
up, for gods' sake! A barricade is something you construct!
- 'Yeah? On whose authority?'
Vimes swung his crossbow up. 'Mr Burleigh and Mr Stronginthearm,'
he said, and grinned.
The two guards exchanged glances. 'Who the hell are they?' said
one.
There was a moment of silence followed by Vimes saying, out of the
corner of his mouth: :'Lance-Constable Vimes?'
'Yessir?'
'What make are these crossbows?'
'Er... Hines Brothers, sir. They're Mark Threes.'
'Not Burleigh and Stronginthearm?'
'Never heard of them, sir.'
Damn. Five years too early, thought Vimes. And it was such a good
line, too.
'Let me put it another way,' he said to the guards. 'Give
me any trouble and I will shoot you in the head.' That wasn't a
good line, but it did have a certain urgency, and the bonus that it
was simple enough even for an Unmentionable to
understand.
- It was a beguiling theory that might have arisen in the minds
of Wiglet and Waddy and, yes, even in the not overly exercised mind
of Fred Colon, and as far as Vimes could understand it, it went
like this:
1. Supposing the area behind the barricades was bigger than the
area in front of the barricades, right?
2. Like, sort of, it had more people in it and more of the city, if
you follow me.
3. Then, correct me if I'm wrong, sarge, but that'd mean in a
manner of speaking we are now in front of the barricades, am I
right?
4. Then, as it were, it's not like we're rebellin', is it? 'cos
there's more of us, so the majority can't rebel, it stands to
reason.
5. So that makes us the good guys. Obviously we've been the good
guys all along, but now it'd be kind of official, right? Like,
mathematical?
6. So we thought we'd push on to Short Street and then we could nip
down into Dimwell and up the other side of the river...
7. Are we going to get into trouble for this, sarge?
8. You're looking at me in a funny way, sarge.
9. Sorry, sarge.
- Bleedwell had worn black. Assassins always did. Black
was cool and, besides, it was the rules. But only in a
dark cellar at midnight was black a sensible colour. Elsewhere,
Vetinari preferred dark green, or shades of dark grey. With
the right colouring, and the right stance, you vanished.
People's eyes would help you vanish. They erased you from their
vision, they fitted you into the background.
- Vetinari had done him a private honour, though. He had hunted
down and melted the engraver's plates of Some Observations on
the Art of Invisibility.
He tracked down the other four extant copies, too, but had felt
unable to burn them. Instead he'd had the slim volumes
bound together inside the cover of Anecdotes of the Great
Accountants, Vol. 3. He felt that Lord Winstanleigh
Greville-Pipe would rather appreciate that.
- There is no more time,
even for cake. For you, the cake is over. You have reached the end
of cake. - Death
- The sound of running feet indicated that Sergeant Detritus was
bringing some of the latest trainees back from their morning run.
He could hear the jody Detritus had taught them. Somehow, you could
tell it was made up by a troll:
'Now we sing dis stupid song!'
'Sing it as we run along!'
'Why we sing dis we don't know!'
'We can't make der words rhyme prop'ly!'
'Sound off!'
'One! Two!'
'Sound off!'
'Many! Lots!'
'Sound Off!'
'Er ... What?'
- 'Yeah, all right, but everyone knows they torture people,'
mumbled Sam.
'Do they?' said Vimes. 'Then why doesn't anyone do anything about
it?'
''cos they torture people.'
- History finds a way. The nature of events had changed,
but the nature of the dead had not. It had been a mean,
shameful little fight that ended them, a flyspecked little footnote
of history, but they hadn't been mean or shameful men. They hadn't
run, and they could have run with honor. They'd stayed, and he
wondered if the path had seemed as clear to them then as it did to
him now. They'd stayed not because they wanted to be
heroes, but because they choose to think of it as their job, and it
was in front of them —
- Vetinari: "'You know, it has often crossed my mind that those
men deserve a proper memorial of some sort."
Vimes: "Oh yes? In one of the main squares, perhaps?"
Vetinari: "Yes, that would be a good idea."
Vimes: "Perhaps a tableau in bronze? All seven of them raising the
flag, perhaps?"
Vetinari: "Bronze, yes."
Vimes: "Really? And some sort of inspiring slogan?"
Vetinari: "Yes, indeed. Something like, perhaps, 'They Did The Job
They Had To Do'?"
Vimes: "No. How dare you? How dare you! At this time! In this
place! They did the job they didn't have to do, and they
died doing it, and you can't give them anything. Do you
understand? They fought for those who'd been abandoned, they fought
for one another, and they were betrayed. Men like them always are.
What good would a statue be? It'd just inspire new fools to
believe they're going to be heroes. They wouldn't want
that. Just let them be. For ever."
- There was a gust of Jolly Sailor tobacco, and sheep, and
turpentine.
Sparkling in the dark, light glittering off the white shepherdess
dress and every blue ribbon and silver buckle of it, was Granny
Aching, smiling hugely, radiant with pride. In one hand she held
the huge ornamental crook, hung with blue bows.
She pirouetted slowly, and Tiffany saw that while she was a
brilliant, sparkling shepherdess from hat to hem, she still had her
huge old boots on.
- Tiffany had seen a picture of Klatch in the Almanack. It showed
a camel standing in a desert. She'd only found out what both those
names were because her mother told her. And that was Klatch, a
camel in a desert. She'd wondered if there wasn't a bit more to it,
but it seemed that "Klatch = camel, desert" was all anyone
knew.
- "Nac Mac Feegle! The Wee Free Men! Nae king! Nae quin! Nae
laird! Nae master! We willna be fooled again!"
- "You take the high road an' I'll take your wallet!"
- "We are a famously stealin' folk. Aren't we,
lads? Whut's it we're famous for?"
"Stealin'!" shouted the blue men.
"And what else, lads?"
"Fightin'!"
"And what else?"
"Drinkin'!"
"And what else?"
There was a certain amount of thought about this, but they all
reached the same conclusion.
"Drinkin' and fightin'!"
"And there was summat else," muttered the twiddler. "Ach, yes. Tell
the hag, lads!"
"Stealin' an' drinkin' an' fightin'!" shouted the blue men
cheerfully.
- "The secret is not to dream," she whispered. "The
secret is to wake up. Waking up is harder. I have woken up
and I am real. I know where I come from and I know where I'm going.
You cannot fool me any more. Or touch me. Or anything that
is mine."
- This time it had been been magic. And it didn't stop being
magic just because you found out how it was done.
- They didn't have to be funny - they were father
jokes.
- The stories never said why she was wicked. It was enough to be
an old woman, enough to be all alone, enough to look strange
because you have no teeth. It was enough to be called a
witch. If it came to that, the book never gave you the
evidence of anything. It talked about "a handsome
prince"... was he really, or was it just because he was a prince
that people called handsome? As for "a girl who was as beautiful as
the day was long"... well, which day? In midwinter it hardly ever
got light! The stories don't want you to think, they just wanted
you to believe what you were told...
- "Tell me why you still want to be a witch bearing in
mind what happened to Mrs. Snapperly."
"So that sort of thing doesn't happen again." said Tiffany
- "If you trust in yourself ... and believe in your dreams...and
follow your star...you'll still get beaten by people who spent
their time working hard and learning things and weren't so
lazy"
- "Yes, but my father said that free advice often turns out to be
expensive." Said Tiffany.
- Granny had smiled at the horizon, puffed at her pipe for a
while, and replied: "A man who takes arms against his lord, that
man is hanged. A starving man who steals his lord's sheep, that man
is hanged. A dog that kills sheep, that dog is put to death. Those
laws are of these hills and these hills are in my bones. What is a
baron, that the law be brake for him?"
- Granny smoked her pipe and stared at the new lambs and
said: "Ye speaks for your master, your master speaks for his dog.
Who speaks for the hills? Where is the Baron, that the law be brake
for him?"
- "Good. A law is brake by silver or gilt is no worthwhile
law..."
- "This is the school, isn't it. The magic place? The
world. Here. And you don't realize it until you look. Do you know
the pictsies think this world is heaven? We just don't look. You
can't give lessons on witchcraft. Not properly. It's all about who
you are... you, I suppose."
- "The thing about witchcraft," said Mistress Weatherwax, "is
that it's not like school at all. First you get the test, and then
afterward you spend years findin' out how you passed it. It's a bit
like life in the respect."
- Paul had wanted medals, because they were shiny. That'd been
almost a year ago, when any recruiting party that came past went
away with the best part of a battalion, and there had been people
waving them off with flags and music. Sometimes, now, smaller
parties of men came back. The lucky ones were missing only one arm
or one leg. There were no flags.
- She unfolded the other piece of paper. It was a pamphlet. It
was headed "From the Mothers of Borogravia!!" The mothers of
Borogravia were very definite about wanting to send their sons off
to war Against the Zlobenian Aggressor!! and used a great many
exclamation points to say so. And this was odd, because the mothers
in the town had not seemed keen on the idea of their sons going off
to war, and positively tried to drag them back. Several copies of
the pamphlet seemed to have reached every home, even so. It was
very patriotic. That is, it talked about killing foreigners.
- He's dead. However, credit where it's due, he hasn't
let that stop him.
- The interests of Ankh-Morpork are the interests of all
money-lov — oops, sorry, all freedom-loving people
everywhere.
- Most of the vampire families were highly nobby. You never knew
who was connected to who... not just connected to who, in fact, but
to whom. Whoms were likely to be far more trouble than your
common everyday who.
- 'The great General Tacticus says that in dangerous times the
commander must be like the eagle and see the whole, and yet still
be like the hawk and see every detail.'
'Yessir,' said Jackrum, gliding the razor down a cheek. 'And if he
acts like a common tit, sir, he can hang upside down all day and
eat fat bacon.'
'Er...well said, sergeant.'
- 'I've starved a few times. There's no future in it. Ate a man's
leg when we were snowed up in the Ibblestarn campaign but, fair's
fair, he ate mine.' He looked at their faces. 'Well, it's not on,
is it, eating your own leg? You'd probably go blind.'
- Lieutenant Blouse was standing in the middle of the floor in
his breeches and shirtsleeves, holding a sabre. Polly was no expert
in these matters, but she thought she recognised the stylish,
flamboyant pose as the one beginners tend to use just before
they're stabbed through the heart by a more experienced
fighter.
- 'Good evening, gentlemen!' said the vampire. 'Please pay
attention. I am a reformed vampire, which is to say, I am
a bundle of suppressed instincts held together with spit and
coffee. It would be wrong to say that violent, tearing
carnage does not come easily to me. It's not tearing your
throats out that doesn't come easily to me. Please don't make it
any harder.'
- 'What's abominable about the colour blue? It's just a colour!
The sky is blue!'
'Yes, sir. Devout Nugganites try not to look at it these days. Um
...' Chinny had been trained as a diplomat. Some things he didn't
like to say directly. 'Nuggan, sir ... um ... is rather ...
tetchy,' he managed.
- You mean Nuggan objects to dwarfs, cats and the colour blue and
there're more insane commandments?
- Yes, I think I can see why. So what we have here is a country
that tries to run itself on the commandments of a god who, the
people feel, may be wearing his underpants on his head. Has he
Abominated underpants?
No, sir, Chinny sighed. But it's probably only a matter of
time.
- All right, all right,' the sergeant said. Upon my oath, I am
not a man to disobey orders. — And the eyes twinkled.
- Polly heard Tonker gasp. Strappi turned, eyes glinting with
sinister anticipation. Oh, someone doesn't like being called a
lady, eh?' he said. Dear me, Private Halter, you've got a lot to
learn, haven't you? You're a sissy little lady until we make a man
of you, right? And I dread to think how long that's going to take.
Move!'
I know, thought Polly, as they set off. It takes about ten seconds,
and a pair of socks. One sock, and you could make Strappi.
- When they were standing a little apart from the rest of the
squad, Blouse lowered his voice and said: 'I don't wish to
discourage initiative, Perks, but what are you doing?'
'Er . . . anticipating your orders, sir.'
'Anticipating them?'
'Yessir.'
'Ah. Right. This is still small-picture stuff, is it?'
Exactly, sir.'
- She'd larded it with as many 'sirs' as she dared. And she was
very proud of 'anticipating your order'.
She hadn't heard Jackrum use it, but with a certain amount of care
it was an excuse to do almost anything. 'General thrust' was pretty
good, too.
- I want to eat chocolates in a great big room where the world is
a different place.
-
William De Worde
EDITOR, THE TIMES OF ANKH-MORPORK
'The Truth Shall Make Ye Fret'
Gleam Street, Ankh-Morpork c-mail: WDW@Times.AM
Someone had crossed out the 't' in 'fret' and pencilled in an 'e'
above it.
- 'Mr de Worde, you have I am sure heard the saying that the pen
is mightier than the sword?'
De Worde preened a little. 'Of course, and I — '
'Do you want to test it? Take your picture, sir, and then my men
will escort you back to your road.'
- The pencil was hovering. Around it, the world turned. It wrote
things down, and then they got everywhere. The pen might
not be mightier than the sword, but maybe the printing press was
heavier than the siege weapon. Just a few words can change
everything...
- And the new day was a great big fish.
- A woman always has half an onion left over, no matter what the
size of the onion, the dish or the woman.
- Wishes needed thought. She was never likely to say, out loud,
'I wish that I could marry a handsome prince,' but knowing that if
you did you'd probably open the door to find a stunned prince, a
tied-up priest and a Nac Mac Feegle grinning cheerfully and ready
to act as Best Man definitely made you watch what you said.
- Admittedly — and it took some admitting — he was a lot less of
a twit than he had been. On the other hand, there had been such a
lot of twit to begin with.
- The beef stew tasted, indeed, just like beef stew and not, just
to take an example completely and totally at
random, stew made out of the last poor girl who'd worked here.
- 'Mistress Weatherwax is the head witch, then, is she?'
'Oh no!' said Miss Level, looking shocked. 'Witches are all equal.
We don't have head witches. That's quite against the
spirit of witchcraft.'
'Oh, I see,' said Tiffany.
'Besides,' Miss Level added, 'Mistress Weatherwax would never allow
that sort of thing.'
You build little worlds, little stories, little shells around your
minds, and that keeps infinity at bay and allows you to wake up in
the morning without screaming!
- To be looked at by Annagramma was to know that you'd
already taken up too much of her valuable time.
- 'I had a lot of voles last night,' said Mistress Weatherwax
over her shoulder.
'Yes, but you didn't actually eat them, did you?' said
Tiffany. 'It was the owl that actually ate them.'
'Technic'ly, yes,' Mistress Weatherwax admitted. 'But if
you think you've been eating voles all night you'd be amazed how
much you don't want to eat anything next morning. Or ever
again.'
- "Ye've got tae let me go sooner or later, you big 'natomy!"
yelled Rob Anybody. "And then ye're gonna get sich a kickin'!"
- "Young Toby? He's been dead for fifteen years. And Mary was the
old man's daughter, she died quite young. Mr. Weavall is very
shortsighted, but he sees better in the past."
Tiffany didn't know what to reply except: "It shouldn't be like
this."
"There isn't a way things should be. There's just what
happens, and what we do."
- "Why would you need my help?" asked Annagramma sulkily.
— We need allies, the hiver thought with Tiffany's mind.
They can help protect us. If necessary, we can sacrifice them.
Other creatures will always want to be friends with the powerful,
and this one loves power —
- People didn't respect Miss Level. They liked her, in an
unthinking sort of way, and that was it. Mistress
Weatherwax was right, and Tiffany wished she wasn't.
"Why did you and Miss Tick send me to her, then?" she said.
"Because she likes people," said the witch, striding ahead. "She
cares about 'em. Even the stupid, mean drooling ones, the mothers
with the runny babies and no sense, the feckless and silly fools
who treat her like some kind of a servant. Now
that's what I call magic — seein' all that,
dealin' with all that, and still goin' on."
- Do you know what it feels like to be aware of every
star, every blade of grass? Yes. You do. You call it "opening your
eyes again." But you do it for a moment. We have done it for
eternity. No sleep, no rest, just endless... endless
experience, endless awareness. Of everything. All the time.
How we envy you, envy you! Lucky humans, who can close
your minds to the endless deeps of space! You have this thing you
call... boredom? That is the rarest talent in the universe! We
heard a song — it went "Twinkle twinkle little star...." What
power! What wondrous power! You can take a billion trillion
tons of flaming matter, a furnace of unimaginable strength, and
turn it into a little song for children! You build little worlds,
little stories, little shells around your minds, and that keeps
infinity at bay and allows you to wake up in the morning without
screaming!
- I believe in freedom, Mr. Lipwig. Not many people do, although
they will, of course, protest otherwise. And no practical
definition of freedom would be complete without the freedom to take
the consequences. Indeed, it is the freedom upon which all the
others are based.
- I told him, sir, that fruit baskets is like life — until you've
got the pineapple off of the top you never know what's
underneath.
- The Ankh-Morpork Central Post Office had a gaunt frontage. It
was a building designed for a purpose. It was, therefore, more or
less, a big box to employ people in, with two wings at the rear,
which enclosed the big stable yard. Some cheap pillars had been
sliced in half and stuck on the outside, some niches had been
carved for some miscellaneous stone nymphs, some stone urns had
been ranged along the parapet, and thus Architecture had been
created.
- Always move fast, Mr Spools. You never know who's catching
up!
- 'Yes, sir, we asked him about that, sir, but he said no, it
wasn't. He said it provided' — his forehead wrinkled —
'occ-you-pay-shun-all ther-rap-py, healthy exercise, prevented
moping and offered that greatest of all treasures which is Hope,
sir.'
- After all, what could a master criminal buy? There was a
shortage of seaside properties with real lava flows near a reliable
source of piranhas...
- 'Oh, all right. Of course I accept as a natural born criminal,
habitual liar, fraudster and totally untrustworthy perverted
genius'. 'Capital! Welcome to government service!' said Lord
Vetinari, 'I pride myself on being able to pick the right
man.'
- They say that the prospect of being hanged in the
morning concentrates a man's mind wonderfully; unfortunately what
the mind inevitably concentrates on is that it is in a body, that,
in the morning, is going to be hanged.
- 'Come on, Mr Spangler, you don't want me to get into trouble,
do you?' said the hangman, patting him on the shoulder. 'Just a few
words and then we can all get on with our lives. Present company
excepted, obviously.'
Moist knew
something about golems...
- I commend my soul to any god that can find
it.
- 'Work for wages, I realise the concept may not be familiar.'
Only as a form of hell, Moist thought.
- Weapons raised the ante far too high. It was much better to
rely on a gift for talking his way out of things, confusing the
issue and, if that failed, some well-soled shoes and a cry of
'Look, what's over there!'
- What sort of man would put a known criminal in charge
of a major branch of government? Apart from, say, the average
voter.
- Moist knew something about golems.
They used to be baked out of clay, thousands of years ago, and
brought to life by some kind of scroll put inside their heads, and
they never wore out and they worked, all the time. You saw them
pushing brooms, or doing heavy work in timber yards and foundries.
Most of them you never saw at all. They made the hidden wheels go
round, down in the dark. And that was more or less the limit of his
interest in them. They were, almost by definition, honest.
But now the golems were freeing themselves. It was the
quietest, most socially responsible revolution in history. They
were property, and so they saved up and bought
themselves.
- Mr Groat took a measured spoonful of tincture of rhubarb and
cayenne pepper, to keep the tubes open, and checked that he still
had the dead mole round his neck, to ward off any sudden attack of
doctors. Everyone knew doctors made you ill, it stood to reason.
Nature's remedies were the trick every time, not some hellish
potion made of gods knew what.
- Speak softly and employ a huge man with a
crowbar.
- 'Er..Mr Pump?'
'Yes, Mr Lipvig?' said the golem.
'Are you allowed to assist me in any way, or do you just wait
around till it's time to hit me on the head?'
'There Is No Need For Hurtful Remarks, Sir. I Am Allowed To Render
Appropriate Assistance.'
- The freedom to succeed goes hand in hand with the
freedom to fail.
- Do you not know that a man is not dead while his name is still
spoken?
Truly, the leopard can change his shorts.
In one way or another, are we not all looking for our cow?
- Vimes stared at [Detritus]. When I first met you, you were
chained to a wall like a watchdog and didn't speak much beyond a
grunt, he thought. Truly, the leopard can change his
shorts.
- In one way or another, are we not all looking for our
cow?
- 'Where is my Cow' advertisement on the back of the Thud!
hardback cover.
- It goes baa, that is a sheep! That is not my cow!
Vimes had never got on with any game much more complex than
darts...
- Vimes had never got on with any game much more complex than
darts. Chess in particular had always annoyed him. It was the dumb
way the pawns went off and slaughtered their fellow pawns while the
kings lounged about doing nothing that always got to him;
if only the pawns united, maybe talked the rooks round, the
whole board could've been a republic in a dozen
moves.
- Good Morning, Insert Name Here! I am the Dis-Organizer Mark
Five, "The Gooseberry"TM. How may I — ' it began,
speaking fast in order to get as much said as possible before the
inevitable interruption.
'I swear I switched you off,' said Vimes.
'You threatened me with a hammer,' said the imp accusingly, and
rattled the tiny bars. 'He threatens state-of-the-Craft technomancy
with a hammer, everybody!' it shouted. 'He doesn't even fill in the
registration card! That's why I have to call him Insert Nam —
'
- 'Then would you like to engage the handy-to-use
BluenoseTM Integrated Messenger Service?'
'What does that do?' said Vimes with deep suspicion. The
succession of Dis-Organizers he had owned had proved quite
successful at very nearly sorting out all the problems that stemmed
from owning them in the first place.
'Er, basically, it means me running with a message to the nearest
clacks tower really fast,' said the imp hopefully.
'And do you come back?' said Vimes, hope also rising.
' Absolutely!'
'Thank you, no,' said Vimes.
'How about a game of Splong!TM, specially devised for
the Mark Five?' pleaded the imp. 'I have the bats right here. No?
Perhaps you would prefer the ever-popular Guess My Weight in Pigs?
Or I could whistle one of your favourite tunes? My
iHumTM function enables me to remember up to one
thousand five hundred of your all-time — '
- Good old Cheery. She knew what a Vimes BLT was all about. It
was about having to lift up quite a lot of crispy bacon before you
found the miserable skulking vegetables. You might never notice
them at all.
- "You can't ask questions, it's magic. It doesn't explain
anything, it's magic. You don't know where it comes from, it's
magic! That's what I don't like about magic, it does everything by
magic!" — Commander Vimes
- 'Yes, your grace. Nevetheless, I must represent the public
interest here. I shall try not to be obtrusive. Quis custodiet
ipsos custodes? your grace.'
'I know that one,' said Vimes. 'Who watches the watchman? Me, Mr.
Pessimal.'
'Ah, but who watches you, your grace?' said the inspector, with a
brief smile.
'I do that, too. All the time,' said Vimes. 'Believe
me.'
- All the city's departments got inspected from time to time,
Vetinari had said. There was no reason why the Watch should be
passed over, was there? It was, after all, a major drain on the
city coffers.
Vimes had pointed out that a drain was where things went to
waste.
Nevertheless, Vetinari had said. Just nevertheless.
You couldn't argue with 'nevertheless'.
- 'Shoes, men, coffins... never accept the first one you
see.'
- 'Where's my daddy? Is that my daddy? He goes "Buggrit!
Millennium hand and shrimp!" That's Foul 'Ole Ron! That's not my
daddy!' - Vimes' "street version" of Where's My Cow?
- [Sargent Colon] 'D'you know much about art, Nobby?'
`If necessary, sarge.'
`Oh, come on, Nobby!'
`What? Tawneee says what she does is Art, sarge. And she wears more
clothes than a lot of the women on the walls around here, so why be
sniffy about it?'
`Yeah, but. ..' Fred Colon hesitated here. He knew in his heart
that spinning upside down around a pole wearing a costume you could
floss with definitely was not Art, and being painted lying on a bed
wearing nothing but a smile and a small bunch of grapes was good
solid Art, but putting your finger on why this was the case was a
bit tricky. `No urns,' he said at last.
`What urns?' said Nobby.
`Nude women are only Art if there's an urn in it,' said Fred Colon.
This sounded a bit weak even to him, so he added, `or a plinth.
Both is best, o'course. It's a secret sign, see, that they put in
to say that it's Art and okay to look at.'
`What about a potted plant?'
`That's okay if it's in an urn.'
`What about if it's not got an urn or a plinth or a potted plant?'
said Nobby.
`Have you one in mind, Nobby?' said Colon suspiciously.
`Yes, The Goddess Anoia [1] Arising from the Cutlery,' said Nobby.
`They've got it here. It was painted by a bloke with three i's in
his name, which sounds pretty artistic to me.'
`The number of i's is important, Nobby,' said Sergeant Colon
gravely, `but in these situations you have to ask yourself: where's
the cherub? If there's a little fat pink kid holding a mirror or a
fan or similar, then it's still okay. Even if he's grinning.
Obviously you can't get urns everywhere.'
[1] Anoia is the Ankh-Morpork Goddess of Things That Get Stuck in
Drawers.
- "Where's my daddy? Is that my daddy? It goes: 'I arrest you in
the name of the Law!' That's my daddy!"
"Law," yawned Young Sam, falling asleep.
"That's my boy," said Sam Vimes, as he tucked him in.
- 'Ach, she's writ here: Oh, the dear Feegles ha' turned up
again' he said. This was met with general applause.
'Ach, what a kind girl tae write that', said Billy BigChin. 'Can I
see?'
He read: Oh dear, the Feegles have turned up again.
- There be a lot o' men who became heroes cuz they wuz
too scared tae run!
- 'Er ... I dinnae wanta be a knee aboot this, but why is ye all
here freezin' tae death?'
'Our oxen wandered off and, alas, the snow's too deep to walk
through' said Mr Swinsley.
'Aye. But youse got a stove and all them dry ol' books,' said the
dark figure.
'Yes, we know,' said the librarian looking puzzled.
There was the kind of wretched pause you get when two
people aren't going to understand each other's point of view at
all.
- 'This I choose to do,' she croaked her breath leaving little
clouds in the air. She cleared her throat and started again. 'This
I choose to do. If there is a price, this I choose to pay. If it is
my death, I choose to die. Where this takes me, I choose to go. I
choose. This I choose to do.' It wasn't a spell, except in her
head. But, as Granny Weatherwax said, if you can't make a spell
work in your own head, what good is it?
- Witches usually wear black, but as far as she could tell the
only reason that witches wore black was because they'd always worn
black. This did not seem a good enough reason, so she tended to
wear blue or green.
- 'When a bull coo meets a lady coo he disna have tae say, "My
hert goes bang-bang-bang when I see your wee face," 'cuz it's kinda
built intae their heads. People have it more difficult.
Romancin' is verra important ye ken. Basically it's a way
the boy can get close to the girl wi'oot her attackin' him and
scratchin' his eyes oot.'
- Students, eh? Love 'em or hate 'em, you're not allowed to hit
'em with a shovel.
- 'There's no need to get hysterical,' said Adora Belle.
'Yes, there is! What there isn't a need for is staying calm!'
- 'The box exists in ten or possibly eleven dimensions.
Practically anything may be possible.'
'Why only eleven dimensions?'
'We don't know,' said Ponder. 'It might be simply that more
would be silly.'
- "If you are smoking, thank you for being beaten about
the head"
- "I wonder ... Am I really a bastard or am I just really good at
thinking like one?"
- Moist didn't like the sound of that, whatever it was. It didn't
help that Adora Belle was smiling.
- "(...) true style comes from innate cunning and mendacity. You
can't buy it."
- "Whole new theories of money were growing here like mushrooms,
in the dark and based on bullshit."
- "Building a temple didn't mean you believed in gods, it just
meant you believed in architecture."
- "I hate it when there are two four o'clocks in the same
day."
- "He is as straight as a corkscrew."
"A corkscrew?!"
"Yeah, he acts kind of curly, but he very well gets the cork
out."
- "I think that comes under the rule of Quia Ego Sic
Dico."
"Yes, what does that mean?"
"'Because I said so', I think."
"That doesn't sound like much of a rule!"
"It's the only one [Vetinari] needs.[...]"
- And yet [Tyranny] does work. This has annoyed a number
of people who feel, somehow, that it should not, and who want a
monarch instead, thus replacing a man who has achieved his position
by cunning, a deep understanding of the realities of the human
psyche, breathtaking diplomacy, a certain prowess with the stiletto
dagger, and, all agree, a mind like a finely balanced circular saw,
with a man who has got there by being born.
- A third proposition, that the city be governed by a choice of
respectable members of the community who would promise not to give
themselves airs or betray the public trust at every turn, was
instantly the subject of music-hall jokes all over the city.
- "I was remarking that tonight's Megapode was undoubtedly the
finest on record, Archchancellor. It was
Rincewind. The official Megapode headdress suited him very
well, all things considered. I think he's gone for a lie
down."
- It was amazing, he thought, how people would argue against
figures on no better basis than "they must be wrong".
- "That is so", said Ponder, "but I'm afraid that is because
[the Bursar] regards the decimal point as a
nuisance."
- [on sherry] There are those who say that sherry should
not be drunk early in the morning. They are
wrong.
- "[...] But if I was to suggest so much as an egg and spoon race
these days [the Wizards]'d use the spoon to eat the
egg."
- The other intru-- customer was not much more than a boy and
therefore likely to commit a crime any moment.
- "But I did not return until half past four this morning and I
distinctly remember stubbing my toe on the stairs. I am as drunk as
a skunk, Drumknott, which of course means skunks are just as drunk
as I. I must say the term is unfamiliar to me, and I had not
thought hitherto of skunks in this context, but Mustrum Ridcully
was kind enough to enlighten me."
- Contrary to popular belief and hope, people don't usually come
running when they hear a scream. That's not how humans work. Humans
look at other humans and say, 'Did you hear a scream?' because the
first scream might have been you screaming inside your head, or a
horse backfiring.
- "[The Smith]'s not speedin' nuffink on account of him
just laminating his hand to the anvil."
- The singing of the National Anthem was always a ragged affair,
the good people of Ankh-Morkpork feeling that it was unpatriotic to
sing songs about how patriotic you were, taking the view that
someone singing a song about how patriotic they were was either up
to something or a Head of State¹.
¹ i.e. up to something.
- Ponder looked around until he saw Rincewind. "Professor
Rincewind. You were, I mean you are, [the Librarian's]
friend, can't you stick your fingers down his throat or
something?"
"Well, no," said Rincewind. "I am very attached to my
fingers and I like to think of them as attached to
me."
- "Peace?" said Vetinari. "Ah, yes, defined as period of time to
allow for preparation for the next war."
Other
Discworld works
- Theatre of Cruelty (online
text)
- "I call it highly suspicious, being dead like that. He's been
drinking, too. We could do him for being dead and disorderly."
- 'Now I know you saw something, sir,' [Corporal Carrot]
said. 'You were there.'
Well, yes, said Death.
I have to be, you know. But
this is very irregular.
- Death and What Comes Next
(online text)
- The concept you put
before me proves the existence of two hitherto mythical places.
Somewhere, there is a world where everyone made the right choice,
the moral choice, the choice that maximised the happiness of their
fellow creatures, of course, that also means that somewhere else is
the smoking remnant of the world where they did not...
- Let me put forward
another suggestion: That you are nothing more than a lucky species
of ape that is trying to understand the complexities of creation
via a language that evolved in order to tell one another where the
ripe fruit was?
- A Collegiate Casting-Out of
Devilish Devices (online text)
- "Explain to him that we don't do things, Stibbons," said the
Lecturer in Recent Runes. "We are academics."
- "Ridiculous!" said the Dean. "Forty per cent duffers?"
"Exactly!" said the Archchancellor. "That means we'd have to find
enough clever people to make up over half the student intake! We'd
never manage it. If they were clever already, they wouldn't need to
go to university! No, we'll stick to an intake of 100 per cent
young fools, thank you. Bring 'em in stupid, send them away clever,
that's the UU way!"
- "Yes, but we soon disabuse them of that," said the Dean
happily. "What is a university for if it isn't to tell you that
everything you think you know is wrong?"
"Well put, that man!" said Ridcully. "Ignorance is the key! That's
how the Dean got where he is today!"
- "Really? Good idea," said Ridcully, a gleam in his eye. "And
are we to take it that for his part he intends to make a point of
hirin' clerks who aren't very good at sums and file everythin'
under 'S' for 'stuff'?"
- "Put it on the agenda for this time next year, Mr Stibbons,
will you? No, perhaps the year after next. Yes, that might be
better. You can't hurry urgency, I've always said
so."
- There are no inconsistencies in the Discworld books,
merely alternative pasts.
Discworld
(Reformed) Vampyre's Diary 2003
- Thought for the
week
Remember, ve are not bloodsuckers.
What is missing from *AMPY*ISM? V R! - 1–5 Offle
- If the Swan be nesting high, then floods are expected; if only
the head of the Swan may be seen, they have arrived abruptly. -
- 1. All fungi are
edible.
2. Some fungi are not edible more than once.
With magic, you can turn a frog into a prince...
- With magic, you can turn a frog into a prince. With science,
you can turn a frog into a Ph.D and you still have the frog you
started with.
- Magicians and scientists are, on the face of it, poles
apart. Certainly, a group of people who often dress
strangely, live in a world of their own, speak a specialized
language and frequently make statements that appear to be in
flagrant breach of common sense have nothing in common with a group
of people who often dress strangely, speak a specialized language,
live in ... er ...
- On Roundworld, things happen because the
things want to happen.†
-
- † In a manner of speaking. They happen because things obey the
rules of the universe. A rock has no detectable opinion
about gravity.
- Sometimes, the best answer is a more interesting
question.
- This was turning out to be the longest winter in living memory,
so long, in fact, that living memory itself was being shortened as
some of the older citizens succumbed.
- 'Where did you get the idea for this, Mister Stibbons?' said
Ridcully.
'Well, er, a lot of it is from my own research, but I got quite a
few leads from careful reading of the Scrolls of Loko in the
Library, sir.'
[...]'Loko...Loko...Loko,' mused Ridcully. 'That's up in Uberwald,
isn't it?'
'That's right, sir.'
'Tryin' to bring it to mind,' Ridcully went on, rubbing his beard.
'Isn't that where there's that big deep valley with the ring of
mountains round it? Very deep valley indeed, as I recall.'
'That's right, sir. According to the library catalogue the scrolls
were found in a cave by the Crustley Expedition-'
'Lots of centaurs and fauns and other curiously shaped magical
whatnots are there, I remember reading.'
'Is there, sir?'
'Wasn't Stanmer Crustley the one who died of planets?'
'I'm not familiar with-'
'Extremely rare magical disease, I believe.'
'Indeed sir, but-'
'Now I come to think about it, everyone on that expedition
contracted something seriously magical within a few months of
getting back,' Ridcully went on.
'Er, yes, sir. The suggestion was that there was some kind of curse
on the place. Ridiculous notion, of course.'
- "I somehow feel I need to ask, Mister Stibbons...what chance is
there of this just blowin' up and destroyin' the entire
university?'
Ponder's heart sank. He mentally scanned the sentence, and took
refuge in the truth. 'None, sir.'
'Now try honesty, Mister Stibbons.'
[...] 'Well...in the unlikely event of it going seriously wrong,
it...wouldn't just blow up the university, sir.'
'What would it blow up, pray?'
'Er...everything, sir.'
'Everything there is, you mean?'
'Within a radius of about fifty thousand miles out into space, sir,
yes. According to Hex, it'd happen instantanously. We wouldn't even
know about it.'
'And the odds of this are...?'
'About fifty to one, sir.'
The wizards relaxed.
'That's pretty safe. I wouldn't bet on a horse at those odds,' said
the Senior Wrangler.
- As yet unmeasured, but believed to be faster than light
owing to its ability to move so quickly out of light's
way.
- As humans, we have invented lots of useful kinds of lie. As
well as lies-to-children ('as much as they can understand') there
are lies-to-bosses ('as much as they need to know')
lies-to-patients ('they won't worry about what they don't know')
and, for all sorts of reasons, lies-to-ourselves.
Lies-to-children is simply a prevalent and neccesary kind of lie.
Universities are very familiar with bright, qualified
school-leavers who arrive and then go into shock on finding that
biology or physics isn't quite what they've been taught so far.
'Yes, but you needed to understand that,' they are told,
'so that now we can tell you why it isn't exactly
true.' Discworld teachers know this, and use it to
demonstrate why universities are truly storehouses of knowledge:
students arrive from school confident that they know very nearly
everything, and they leave years later certain that they know
practically nothing. Where did the knowledge go in the meantime?
Into the university, of course, where it is carefully dried and
stored.
- 'We've got about ten seconds to the next discharge, sir,' said
Ponder. 'Only...now that the balls have gone it will simply earth
itself...'
'Ah. Oh. Really? Well, then...' Ridcully looked around at his
fellow wizards as the walls began to shake again. 'It's been nice
knowing you. Some of you. One or two of you, anyway...'
The whine of increasing magic rose in pitch.
The Dean cleared his throat.
'I'd just like to say, Mustrum,' he began.
'Yes, old friend?'
'I'd just like to say...I think I'd have made a much better
Archchancellor than you.'
- 'And the Dean stirred it up,' the Senior Wrangler went
on.
'That's right!' said the Dean. 'That means I'm sort of a
god.'
'Waggling your fingers around and saying "oo, it prickles" is not
godliness,' said Ridcully severely.
- 'My hypothesis, for what it's worth,' said the Lecturer in
Recent Runes, 'is that since it was all started off by the Dean, a
certain Dean-like tendency may have imparted itself to the
ensuing...er...developments.'
'What? You mean we've got a huge windy universe with a tendency to
sulk?'
'Thank you, Archchancellor,' said the Dean.
'I was referring to the predilection of matter to...er...accrete
into...er...spherical shapes.'
'Like the Dean, you mean.' said Archchancellor.
'I can see I'm among friends here,' said the Dean.
- 'I would just like to point out, Dean, that it was not a very
funny joke to begin with. It was a pathetic attempt, Dean, at
dragging a sad laugh out of a simple figure of speech. Only
four-year-olds and people with a serious humour deficiency keep
on and on about it. I just wanted to bring this
out in the open, Dean, calmly and in the spirit of reconciliation,
for your own good, in the hope that you may be made well. We are
all here for you, although I can't imagine what you are
here for.'
- 'I think it looks more like a Hogswatchnight ornament,' said
the Senior Wrangler later, as the wizards took a pre-dinner drink
and stared into the omniscope at the glittering white world. 'Quite
pretty, really.'
'Bang go the blobs,' said Ponder Stibbons.
'Phut,' said the Dean cheerfully. 'More sherry,
Archchancellor?'
'Perhaps some instability in the sun...' Ponder mused.
'Made by unskilled labour,' said Archchancellor Ridcully. 'Bound to
happen sooner or later. And then it's nothing but frozen death, the
tea-time of the gods and an eternity of cold.'
'Sniffleheim,' said the Dean, who'd got to the sherry ahead of
everyone else.
- Ponder was working the Rules again. Now they read:
THE RULES
1 Things fall apart, but centres hold
2 Everything moves in curves
3 You get balls
4 Big balls tell space to bend
5 There are no turtles anywhere
(after this one he'd added Except ordinary ones)
6 Life turns up everywhere it can
7 Life turns up everywhere it can't
8 There is something like narrativium
9 There may be something called bloodimindium (see rule 7)
10 ...
- 'Well, what is it achieving? I mean, really? Y'know, I
thought, all you had to do is get a world working, and before you
could say "creation" there'd be some creature who'd stand up,
getting a grip on its surroundings, gaze with a certain amount of
intelligence and awe at the infinite sky and say - '
' - that thing's getting bigger, I wonder if it's going to hit us,'
said Rincewind.
'Rincewind, that remark was extremely cynical and accurate.'
'Sorry, Archchancellor.'
- 'Did you see the weather report for this world?' said
Rincewind, waving his hands in the air. 'Two miles of ice, followed
by a light shower of rocks, with outbreaks of choking fog for the
next thousand years? There will be widespread vulcanism as half a
continent's worth of magma lets go, followed by a period of
mountain building? And that's normal.'
'Yes, well -'
'Oh yes, there are some nice quiet periods, everything
settles down, and then - whammo!'
'There's no need to get so excited -"
'I've been here!' said Rincewind. 'This is how this place
works! And now, please, you tell me how, I mean
how, can anything living on this world possibly
mess it up? I mean, compared to what happens anyway?' He paused,
and gulped air. 'I mean, don't get me wrong, if you pick the right
time, yes, sure, it's a great world for a holiday, ten thousand
years, even a few million if you're lucky with the weather but,
good grief, it's just not a serious proposition for anything long
term. It's a great place to grow up on, but you wouldn't want to
live here. If anything's got off, the best of luck to
them.'
- Eden and Camelot, the wonderous garden-worlds of myth
and legend, are here now. This is about as good as it ever
gets. Mostly, it's a lot worse. And it won't stay like this for
very long.
- Rincewind: 'This world is an anvil. Everything
here is between a rock and a hard place. Every single thing on it
is the descendant of creatures that have survived everything the
world could throw at them. I just hope they never get angry....
'
The
Science of Discworld II: The Globe (2002)
- If you gave a man a fat woman, he'd just have a fat woman for a
day, but if you helped a man become very important because he knew
the secret of buffaloes and fish, he could get himself as many fat
women as he wanted.
- Elf Queen: You have forgotten that there is no
narrativium in this world. It does not know how stories should go.
Here the third son of a king is probably just a useless weak
prince. Here, there are no heroes, only degrees of villainy. An old
lady gathering wood in the forest is just an old lady and not, as
in your world, almost certainly a witch. Oh, there's a belief in
witches. But a witch here is merely a method of ridding society of
burdensome old ladies and an inexpensive way of keeping the fire
going all night. Here, gentlemen, good does not ultimately triumph
at the expense of a few bruises and a non-threatening shoulder
wound. Here, evil is generally defeated by a more organized kind of
evil. My world, gentlemen. Not yours. Good day to you.
The
Science of Discworld III: Darwin's Watch (2005)
- Discworld is real. It's the way worlds should work. Admittedly,
it is flat and goes through space on the back of four elephants
which stand on the shell of a giant turtle, but consider the
alternatives.
Consider, for example, a globular world, a mere crust upon an
inferno of molten rock and iron. An accidental world, made of the
wreckage of old stars, the home of life which, nevertheless, in a
most unhomely fashion, is regularly scythed from its surface by
ice, gas, inundation or falling rocks travelling at 20,000 miles an
hour.
- The thing about best laid plans is that they don't
often go wrong. They sometimes go wrong, but not often,
because of having been, as aforesaid, the best laid. The kind of
plans made by wizards, who barge in, shout a lot, try to sort it
all out by lunchtime and hope for the best, on the other
hand...well, they go wrong almost instantly.
- There is a kind of narrativium on Roundworld, if you
really look.
On Discworld, the narrativium of a fish tells it that it is a fish,
was a fish, and will continue to be a fish. On Roundworld,
something inside a fish tells it that it is a fish, was a
fish...and might eventually be something else...
...perhaps.
- It is always useful for a university to have a Very Big Thing.
It occupies the younger members, to the relief of their elders
(especially if the VBT is based at some distance from the seat of
learning itself) and it uses up a lot of money which would
otherwise only lie around causing trouble or be spent by the
sociology department or, probably, both. It also helps to push back
boundaries, and it doesn't much matter what boundaries these are,
since as any researcher will tell you it's the pushing that
matters, not the boundary.
It's a good idea, too, if it's a bigger VBT than anyone else's and,
in particular, since this was Unseen University, the greatest
magical university in the world, if it's a bigger one than the one
those bastards are building at Braseneck College.
'In fact,' said Ponder Stibbons, Head of Inadvisably Applied Magic,
'theirs is really only a QBT, or Quite Big Thing. Actually, they've
had so many problems with it, it's probably only a BT!'
The senior wizards nodded happily.
- [...]In that world as we left it, the first humans
walked on the Moon is less than seventy years after they flew at
all.'
Ponder looked at their blank faces.
'Which was quite an achievement,' he said.
'Why? We've done that,' said the Dean.
Ponder sighed. 'Things are different on a globe, sir. There are no
broomsticks, no magic carpets, and going to the Moon is not just a
case of pushing off over the edge and trying to avoid the Turtle on
the way down.'
'How did they do it, then?' said the Dean.
'Using rockets, sir.'
'The things that go up and explode with lots of coloured
lights?'
'Initially sir, but fortunately they found out how to stop them
doing that.'
- +++ I am sorry. It is hard to convey five-dimensional ideas in
a language evolved to scream defiance at the monkeys in the next
tree. +++
- 'Collecting was enormous popular among the English of this
century. Bones, shells, butterflies, birds, other people's
countries...'
- There are quite a lot of reasons why that course of action
might not, with ease, be rescued in any coherent way from the
category of the insanely unwise, Dean.
- Ponder Stibbons, in Ch. 11
- 'That would be unethical, Dean,' said Ridcully.
'Why? We're the Good Guys, aren't we?'
'Yes, but that rather hinges on doing certain things and not doing
others, sir', said Ponder. 'Playing around with other
people's heads against their will would almost certainly be one of
the nots.'
- This mission had created a difficult decision for Rincewind,
when he'd been presented with the task of preventing Charles Darwin
being stung to death by wasps. Right from the start it was obvious
that Darwin would see him, and if Rincewind was invisible the wasps
wouldn't see him. He'd therefore undertaken the mission
carrying two buckets of warm jam and wearing a pink tutu, an
acid-green wig, and a red nose, reasoning that (a) Darwin wouldn't
believe that he had seen him and in any case (b) wouldn't dare tell
anyone...
- Rincewind reappeared above the lawn, and rolled expertly when
he hit the ground. Other wizards, nothing like so experienced at
dealing with the vicissitudes of the world, lay about groaning or
staggered around uncertainly.
'It wears off,' he said, as he stepped over them. 'You might throw
up a bit at first. Other symptoms of rapid cross-dimensional travel
are short-term memory loss, ringing in the ears, constipation,
diarrhoea, hot flushes, confusion, bewliderment, a morbid dread of
feet, disorientation, nose bleeds, ear twinges, grumbling of the
spleen, widgeons, and short-term memory loss.'
- Most of Mount Impossible was hollow. You need a lot of space
when you are trying to devise a dirigible whale.
'It really should work,' said the God of Evolution, over tea.
'Without that heavy blubber and with an inflatable skeleton of
which, I must say I am rather proud, it should do well on the
routes of migratory birds. Larger maw, of course. Note the
cloud-like camouflage, obviously required. Lifting is produced via
bacteria in the gut which produce elevating gases. The dorsail sail
and the flattened tail give a reasonable degree of steerability.
All in all, a good piece of work. My main problem is devising a
predator. The sea-air ballistic shark has proved quite
unsatisfactory. I don't know if you might have any suggestions, Mr.
Darwin?'
Ponder looked at Darwin. The poor man, his face grey, was staring
up at the two whales who were crusing gently near the roof of the
cave.
- AFTERTHOUGHT
The Darwin family motto:
cave et aude.
Watch, and listen
Video
Games
Discworld (Trouble With
Dragons)
Rincewind
When the player clicks on Rincewind
"Hands off my pixels!"
"Who do you think you're poking? I'm a great wizard, I am! I'll
turn you into a mindless ugly toad (second passes) gosh! it
worked!"
"Please, don't stare, I'm rather shy."
"Of course it's me! Who were you expecting? Death?
"That's it! Poke a man in the ribs! let's see what you can do
without it! (cursor disappears for a few seconds) oh, all right!
you can have it back if you promise to use it wisely.
"If only I had another dimension, I'd teach you a thing or
two."
When examining the Luggage
"Where'd you put all that stuff?"
"Luggage! *whistles* here! Luggage!"
"Oy! heel! heel! down! I'm sorry, he normally never does
this"
"Why can't I just have an Inventory Window like everybody
else?"
When examining certain items
(when examining the pond) "actually it's been a while
since I had a bath."
(when examining the sleeping luggage) a snoring chest?
that's novel! well, I'll soon fix that.
(when examining the Unseen University gate) "now
where's the doorknob then? how can you have a door this big without
a knob?
(when examining the Apprentice) good grief! and I
thought the apprentices were all kept tied to stakes.
(when examining the Unseen University from outside) ah
ha! good old Unseen U! I wonder if the walls are this high to keep
what's outside from getting in, and what's inside from getting
out?
(when examining a doorway) Ah. Portallus Exitus. Or,
the common doorway. You see? I'm not a wizard for nothing!
(when examining the 'shape' out his window) yes, a
mysterious shape, a sinister shape, a shape forted with, with,
shapeness. it must be a plot element, otherwise there would be a
better label
(when examining the Archchancellor) as far as leaders
go, the only reason I'd follow him into battle is out of
curiousity.
(when examining the frozen book) hmm.. 'sex magic' no
wonder it's on ice.
(when examining the floating book acting like a guard
dog) ahh, let's not press this curiousity thing too far then
shall we?
(when examining the Librarian) Actually, on close
examination, this would seem to be some sub-tropical boborial
ape.
(when examining a staue) Actually, this one is
not a statue, it used to be a frog outside in the pond.
Oh, well, he should never have asked to be turned into a hansome
plinth.
Conversations
Rincewind: hi! you don't mind if I monkey about in the Library
for while? (gets hit in the head by the Librarian) did you get the
number off that donkey cart?
Rincewind: may I take a book from the Library please?
Librarian: ook! ook!
Rincewind: excuse me?
Librarian: ook! ook ee!
Rincewind: I see, um, I need something in order to take out a
book.
Librarian: ook ook
Rincewind: toothpaste? fingers? gloves? something in your
hand?
Librarian: ook ook
Rincewind: A dentest? Hypitosis? you want some mouthwash, that's
it, you want some mouthwash, I'm sorry, but I'm already spoken
for.
Libarian: oooooook!
Rincewind: oh! a library card! well why didn't you say so in the
first place? well why didn't you say so in the first place? what
happens if just barge in without giving you a Library card? yes,
well look, unfortunately, I don't have one, ape.
Librarian: ook
Rincewind: ape, on ya, upon my person, yes, upon my person, whew! I
didn't say monkey! (gets hit in the head by the Librarian) did you
get the number off that donkey cart?
Rincewind (Referring to the bag of prunes): Can I have one
before I go?
Apprentice: Having one before you go is the whole point of prunes!
And no, you can't.
Discworld II (Missing presumed...?!)aka Mortality
Bites!
Rincewind
When the player clicks on Rincewind
"Rincewind: Homo-Sapien Sorcerus Iritablus. In reality I'm a
full foot taller, bronzed and rippling with muscles but it's been a
hard night for the artist."
"Rincewind: Honestly, some people. You give someone a tool and
they spend the next 10 years of their life just playing with it.
Doesn't anyone around here have a sense of purpose? A sensible grip
on life?!"
When examining certain items or people
(when examining Granny Weatherwax)
"Granny Weatherwax: A tough lady this one. Best to let her get the
beauty sleep she so obviously needs."
(when examining the Imp's steel-toed boots)
"Hmm. Those boots have steel caps on the end. Very...large, metal
toecaps. Look, what do you want me to do? Shout out the word
"hint"?!"
(when examining a Bunsen Burner)
"What's a "Bunsen" anyway? And why would you want to burn one?"
(when examining a mouse)
"I shall love him and squeeze him and name him George! Or something
like that."
(when examining a pint of beer)
"A beer, with some amoeba's on a stick. Ooh, look! Some of them are
waving!"
(when examining a Pot of ancient glue)
"Hey, this stuff's guaranteed to last 1000 years, so if it fails
then you can take it back and complain."
(when examining a pillar)
"It's a pillar not a pillow!"
(when examining the man selling camels)
"*Sigh* It's the heat you know, it really does thing to a man's
uh...a man's.....*Squeak*?"
When leaving a conversation
"Sorry, but I think it's about time for me to take my
medicine."
Death
(Acting in his own Moving Picture) "Now is the winter
of our discontent, made all the more dreary for the lack of death.
Oooh! To be, or not to be, that is the question. Whether to be
extremely cool, reach the height of fashion and snuff it or to keep
drawing breath and lose all fashion sense forever more."
(Acting in his own Moving Picture after being hit on the
head a few times) "Now is the winter of the tents, er, the
discontent, made all the more dreary for the lack of, of, uh,
death. Oooh! To be, or not to be, that's the question! Whether to
be extremely cold, reach the heights of fashion and, and sniffing
or to keep drawing breath and lose all fashion sense forever
more."
Others
Ponder Stibbons
It's not true that thaumic radiation damages the *Bark* brain! I've
been exposed for months and every day and in every way, I am
getting better and better and better! They laughed at me and said I
was mad you know. Have a nice day! Have a nice day! Have real,
real, real nice night, no day *woof* haha!
Dead Collector: Bring out yer dead, bring out yer living
dead!
Dibbler: Banged grains, lovingly swept off the warehouse
floor.
St. Ungalant (Who appears to be talking to an invisible person
called "Angus")
Angus! Don't put those in there, you know they breed like
flies!
Oh, they are flies! Well, bring the popcorn and we'll
watch them!
Conversations
Death: I'm about to have a chunder in a minute.
Rincewind: A chunder? What's a chunder?
Death: I don't know, but it sounds interesting.
Rincewind: HEX, please can you tell me the answer to the
question "why"?
HEX rattles for a bit and then goes silent.
Rincewind: Well?
Skazz: It make take some time for HEX to come up with the
answer.
Rincewind: How long will this take?
(Skazz pulls out a small stone circle and uses it like a
calculator)
Skazz: Lets see...I think it'll take a few aeons.
Rincewind: Ians?
Skazz: Nope. Aeons or age of the world, probably about 2 million
years. would you like a cup of something while you wait?
Rincewind: Hemshock?
Skazz: Ah, I don't think we have any of that in stock.
Skazz: (reading out the answer to the question "why")
It says "because" and then it says: blip blip blip Out Of Cheese
Error blip blip blip Unrecoverable Application Error blip blip blip
Cannot Find Drive Z blip blip blip Please Reboot Universe blip blip
blip Redo From Start blip blip blip.
Rincewind: Oh blip!
Mrs.Cake: Is it? ooh, I havn't been outside.
Rincewind: Hello there, nice day! Eh?
Mrs.Cake: What? How dare you!
Rincewind: I believe you're fouling up this whole
conversation!
Mrs.Cake: What do you mean "how do I do it"?
Rincewind: You really are messing up this whole conversation. How
are you managing to do it?
Mrs.Cake: Why, yes I am actually. Why, does it show?
Rincewind: She's telling me the answers before I even know what I'm
gonna say! Is she a clairvoyant?
Mrs.Cake: Well, I'm glad we can put that whole messy business
behind us. I'm sorry, sometimes I forget I've left it on you
see.
Rincewind: Hello there, nice day! Oh, dammit! We're back here
again!
Mrs.Cake: What? Hang on, I'll just turn my precognition off.
(Turns it off) That's much better.
Mrs.Cake: Quite well, thank you. Well go on, ask it. I get a
migraine if people don't ask the right questions once the answers
have come.
Rincewind: Hello Mrs.Cake, how are you?
Mrs.Cake: That's better.
(Rincewind climbs out of the ship's cargo bay, where all the
corpes are held)
Rincewind(To Pirate): Um, Hello there, I say!
Pirate: Aaaahhhh!!! It be the dreaded pirate orange beard, back
from Davie Jones's bathroom!
(Jumps off the ship and into the sea)
Rincewind: Why is it that everyone I meet seems to be either mad or
want to kill me? Anyway, it seems I'm in control now.
Discworld
Noir
Lewton: I've had some bad days since I started work as a private
investigater. But I've never woken up dead before.
External
links