First Quote Added
April 10, 2026
Latest Quote Added
"âWhen did you last bask in the sun, friends? When did you last dare drink from a creek? When did you last risk picking fruit and eating it straight from the tree? What were your doctorâs bills last year? Which of you live in cities where you donât wear a filtermask? Which of you spent this yearâs vacation in the mountains because the sea is fringed with garbage?â"
". . . include prima facie but not ipso facto the following: (a) Homosexuality or gross indecency with another male person; (b) Possession of or trading in an illegal narcotic or other drug; (c) Living upon the earnings of prostitution; (d) Membership in the Communist Party or one of its front organizations (see schedule attached); (e) âTrainismâ; (f) Advocating the violent overthrow of the government; (g) Slandering the President of the United States; (h) . . ."
"Opening the door to the visiting doctor, all set to apologize for the flour on her handsâshe had been bakingâMrs. Byrne sniffed. Smoke! And if she could smell it with her heavy head cold, it must be a tremendous fire! âWe ought to call the brigade!â she exclaimed. âIs it a hayrick?â âThe brigade would have a long way to go,â the doctor told her curtly. âItâs from America. The windâs blowing that way.â"
"He had once, for example, put down a spokesman for the pesticide industry with a remark that people still quoted at parties: âAnd I presume on the eighth day God called you and said, âI changed my mind about insects!â â"
"And then, all of a sudden, it was as though through those dark eyes an electrical circuit had been struck. She sat fascinated. Snake-and-bird fascinated. Afterwards she could not recall the details of what he had said. She remembered only that she had been absorbed, rapt, lost, for over ten minutes by the clock. She had perceived images conjured up from the dead past: a hand trailed in clear river water, deliciously cool, while the sun smiled and a shoal of tiny fishes darted between her fingers; the crisp flesh of a ripe apple straight from the tree, so juicy it ran down her chin; grass between her bare toes, the turf like springs so that she seemed not to bear the whole of her weight on her soles but to be floating, dreamlike, in slow motion, instantly transported to the moon; the western sky painted with vast heart-tearing slapdash streaks of red below the bright steel-blue of clouds, and stars coming snap-snap into view against the eastern dark; wind gentle in her hair and on her cheeks, bearing flower perfumes, dusting her with petals; snow cold to the palm as it was shaped into a ball; laughter echoing from a dark lane where only lovers walked, not thieves and muggers; butter like an ingot of soft gold; ocean spray sharp and clean as the edge of an axe; with the same sense of safe, provided rightly used; round pebbles polychrome beside a pool; rain to which a thirsty mouth could open, distilling the taste of a continent of air . . . And under, and through, and in, and around all this, a conviction: âSomething can be done to get that back!â She was crying. Small tears like ants had itched their paths down her cheeks. She said, when she realized he had fallen silent, âBut I never knew that! None of it! I was born and raised right here in New York!â âBut donât you think you should have known it?â Austin Train inquired gently."
"The hungry sheep look up, and are not fed, But swoln with wind, and the rank mist they draw, Rot inwardly, and foul contagion spread."
"Thatâs behind me. Same as with everything else in my life, though, I approached what I learned with eyes and ears half-closed. Itâs only now I realise how dangerous and destructive Christian culture has become. If there was ever any love in it, itâs been bled out. Three major religions preach Holy War: Shintoism, Islam, and Christianity. Christianity is the only one hypocritical enough simultaneously to enjoin its followers to turn the other cheek and suffer fools gladly and the rest of it. Look at the record. Germany was a Christian country almost exactly one hundred times as long as it was Nazi. Did the Nazis undo in twelve years all the church had done in twelve centuries? No, they built on it. Hitler was a baptised Catholic and never excommunicated. When he was enlisting the support of the bishops in 1933 he promised to do nothing to the Jews that the church had not already, and kept his promise."
"âI was brought up as a Christian,â Cissy said. âSpelt K-I-L-L-J-O-Y. My mam still is one. When I said I was going to quit the church because of what Iâd learned from Val about the history of slavery, I thought she was going to kill me!â She laughed nervously. But obviously that was not a joke."
"Not that a car would have been much faster anyway, what with the police posts at state lines, the searches, the restricted zones not merely in citiesâone expected that during Augustâbut right out in the country, in agricultural areas. Because of hijackers after food trucks, of course."
"When the politicians claim that the public isnât interested any longer in environmental conservation, theyâre half right. People are actually afraid to be interested, because they suspectâI think rightlyâthat weâll find if we dig deep enough that weâve gone so far beyond the limits of what the planet will tolerate that only a major catastrophe which cuts back both our population and our ability to interfere with the natural biocycle would offer a chance of survival."
"I marvelâd how Man, by his GOD-sent wit, Thus tamâd the salamander Element And loosâd the Metal in the mountain pent To make us Saws, and Shears, and useful Plows, Swords for our hands, and Helmets for our brows, The surgeonâs Scalpel, vehicle of Health, And all our humble Tools for gaining wealth . . . âDe Arte Munificente,â Seventeenth century"
"At the big Georgia paper mill the saboteur was obviously a chemist. Some kind of catalyst was substituted for a drum of regular sizing solution and vast billowing waves of corrosive fumes ruined the plant. Anonymous calls to a local TV station claimed it had been done to preserve trees. The same day, in northern California, signs were posted on a stand of redwoods that the governor had authorized for lumbering: about two hundred of the last six hundred in the state. The signs said: FOR EVERY TREE YOU KILL ONE OF YOU WILL DIE TOO. The promise was carried out with Schmiesser machine-pistols. The actual score was eighteen people for seventeen trees. Close enough."
"Fifteen minutes out of Mexico City for Tokyo a passenger aboard a 747 screamed that he was being eaten by red-hot ants, and managed to open the emergency door at 23,000 feet. He had been to the washroom and drunk from the faucet there before takeoff. It was, after all, labeled DRINKING WATER."
"âYes? . . . Oh, Iâm very sorry to hear that. Please convey him our best wishes for a speedy recovery. But the president did ask me to pass this message informally as soon as possible; I may say he feels very strongly about the matter. Of course, not knowing if the rumor is well founded, we didnât want to handle it on an official level . . . Yes, I would be obliged if you could make sure the ambassador is told at the earliest opportunity. Tell him, please, that any attempt to nominate Austin Train for the Nobel Peace Prize would be regarded as a grave andâI quote the presidentâs actual wordâcalculated affront to the United States.â"
"âYes, for most people nowadays television is their only contact with the world beyond their work.â"
". . . that the Army is using defoliants in Honduras to create fire-free zones. This charge has been strongly denied by the Pentagon. Asked to comment just prior to leaving for Hawaii, where he will convalesce for the next two or three weeks, Prexy said, quote, Well, if you canât see them you canât shoot them. End quote. Support has been growing for a bill which Senator Richard Howell will introduce at the earliest opportunity, forbidding the issue of a passport to any male between sixteen and sixty not in possession of a valid discharge certificate or medical exemption. Welcoming the proposal, a Pentagon spokesman today admitted that of the last class called for the draft more than one in three failed to report. Your steaks are going to cost you more. This warning was today issued by the Department of Agriculture. The price of animal fodder has quote taken off like a rocket unquote, following the mysterious . . ."
"The wind was bad today. Hughâs filtermask was used up, all clogged, and he didnât have the seventy-five cents for another from a roadside dispenser, and anyway the quality of those things was lousy, didnât even last the hour claimed for them. Lousy . . . Absently he scratched his crotch. Heâd more or less got used to lice by now, of course; there just didnât seem to be any way of avoiding them. For every evil under the sun there is a remedy or thereâs none. If there is one try and find it, if there isnât never mind it. There must be a hell of a lot of evils in the world nowadays that there arenât any remedies for. Anyway: what sun? He hadnât seen the sun in fucking weeks."
"Very well, the starting point would be that claim of Professor Quarreyâs, which had been in the news at the beginning of the year, that the countryâs greatest export was noxious gas. And who would like to stir up the fuss again? Obviously, the Canadians, cramped into a narrow band to the north of their more powerful neighbors, growing daily angrier about the dirt that drifted to them on the wind, spoiling crops, causing chest diseases and soiling laundry hung out to dry. So sheâd called the magazine Hemisphere in Toronto, and the editor had immediately offered ten thousand dollars for three articles. Very conscious that all calls out of the country were apt to be monitored, sheâd put the proposition to him in highly general terms: the risk of the Baltic going the same way as the Mediterranean, the danger of further dust-bowl like the Mekong Desert, the effects of bringing about climactic change. That was back in the newsâthe Russians had revised their plan to reverse the Yenisei and Ob. Moreover, there was the Danube problem, worse than the Rhine had ever been, and Welsh nationalists were sabotaging pipelines meant to carry âtheirâ water into England, and the border war in West Pakistan had been dragging on so long most people seemed to have forgotten that it concerned a river. And so on. Almost as soon as she started digging, though, she thought she might never be able to stop. It was out of the question to cover the entire planet. Her pledged total of twelve thousand words would be exhausted by North American material alone."
"What hurt him most of all, made him feel like a sick child aware of terrible wrongness and yet incapable of explaining it to anyone who might help, was that in spite of the evidence around them, in spite of what their eyes and ears reportedâand sometimes their flesh, from bruises, stab wounds, racking coughs, weeping soresâthese people believed their way of life was the best in the world, and were prepared to export it at the point of a gun."
"This year we take our vacation somewhere else. Where is there where Americans arenât likely to be stoned by a howling mob? Spain, Greece? No, got to be out of range of the stench from the Med. Looks like we might as well stay home."
"âIt's natural for a man to defend whatâs dear to him: his own life, his home, his family. But in order to make him fight on behalf of his rulers, the rich and powerful who are too cunning to fight their own battlesâin short to defend not himself but people whom heâs never met and moreover would not care to be in the same room with himâyou have to condition him into loving violence not for the benefits it bestows on him but for its own sake. Result: the society has to defend itself from its defenders, because whatâs admirable in wartime is termed psychopathic in peace. Itâs easier to wreck a man than to repair him. Ask any psychotherapist. And take a look at the crime figures among veterans.â"
"Cham Loc knew little of affairs of state, but he was aware that whenever politicians talked about matters of inflexible principle, life was scheduled to become even more difficult that usual."
"Colin felt a shiver pass down his spine. What man, granted total power, could refrain from using it? And would not his first target inevitably be his fellow men?"
"Now, listen. Marriage is binding as a civil contract, but it hasâlike all my favorite contractsâan escape clause. I make my living by spotting them."
"Some peopleâmostly attractive womenâdonât believe attractive women can act."
"I donât believe you can cow people into loyalty. Subservience, maybe. But then you must always trust the retainer who guards your back."
"Amid the turmoil of change, old people could do no more than wonder what had hit them, and long without enthusiasm for the simpler past."
"Independence has limits. But dependence has, too. I want to set some for myself, thatâs all."
"A cripple can still be a person, but in what sense is a lunatic human? Humanityâs in the mind, in the tangle of thoughts spun by the brain, and once thatâs gone what remains is human only in outward shape."
"âWhy can I never visualize things turning out better as clearly as I can visualize the catastrophes I scraped past by a hair? âEverything for the best in the best of all possible worlds!â Hah!"
"âIf I ever get good at hospital politics, I think I shall start to hate myself."
"âBlessed are they who expect the worst, for they shall get it!"
"Iâm unattuned to happiness."
"SCANALYZER is the one single, the ONLY study of the news in depth thatâs processed by General Technicsâ famed computer Shalmaneser, who sees all, hears all, knows all save only that which YOU, Mr. and Mrs. Everywhere, wish to keep to yourselves."
"Nothing short of religion could persuade a normal girl to make herself look so awful."
"COINCIDENCE You werenât paying attention to the other half of what was going on."
"âWhat are you going to do for a career?â Diverted from his orbit, Donald binked. âWell, something which uses up a minimum of my time, I imagine. So I can use the rest to mortar up the gaps in my education.â"
"You donât have to know everything. You simply need to know where to find it when necessary."
"I love the place, and when they get love down to a bunch of factors you can analyse with a computer thereâll be nothing left of whatever makes it worth being human!"
"Weâve always cared more about property rights than human rights in this country. You should know that."
"How do you whip up resentment against absentee landlords and pocketers of bribes when the highest ambition of the people is either to become the former or be in a position to receive the latter?"
"Thereâs one bright spot in the generally gloomy picture know as the Pacific Conflict Zone. According to my calculations, by the year 2500 or so we should have killed off every last member of our species who is stupid enough to take part in so futile a pastime as this war between âideals,â and with luck they wonât have left their genes behind because theyâll typically have been killed at an age when society thinks theyâre too young to assume the responsibility of childbearing. After that we may get some peace and quiet for a change."
"Papa Hegel he say that all we learn from history is that we learn nothing from history. I know people who can't even learn from what happened this morning. Hegel must have been taking the long view."
"âI donât believe in God,â said the captain. âI wouldnât care to believe in anyone who could make such a stinking lousy species as the one you belong to.â"
"âHow does it feel to have just changed the course of history?â âI donât know what you mean,â said the navigator. âTo my way of thinking, by the time history happens Iâm going to be dead.â"
"If you want to know what's shortly due for the guillotine look for the most obvious of all symptoms: extremism. It is an almost infallible sign â a kind of death-rattle â when a human institution is forced by its members into stressing those and only those factors which are identificatory, at the expense of others which it necessarily shares with competing institutions because human beings belong to all of them."
"âI think,â Chad grunted, âthat if he [Shalmaneser, the computer] really is intelligent nobody will recognise the fact. Because we arenât.â"
"âThe whole of modern so-called civilised existence is an attempt to deny reality insofar as it exists. When did Don last look at the stars, when did Norman last get soaked in a rainstorm? The stars as far as these people are concerned are the Manhattan-pattern!â He jerked his thumb at a window beyond which the cityâs treasure-house of coloured light glimmered gaudily."
"I can make a guess. Thereâs going to be trouble. Come to think of it, thatâs a safe catch-all prophecy. Whatever happens in present circumstances thereâs going to be trouble."
"Are we not natural creatures? Are we not evolved, too? Surely all the lessons weâve learned in the past century come to a single point: we have to stop thinking of ourselves as somehow apart from nature, and recognise that weâre inseparable from it."