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Robert Charles Wilson quotes - page 4
His fertility cycles meant little to him. In his lifetime, he knew, he might make only one or two real contributions to the City's genetic continuity, his viral gametes combining with others in the bodies of the night feeders to become morphologically active. It was abstractly pleasing, though, to realize he had cast his own essence into the ocean of probability, where it might come floating back unknown to him, as a fresh citizen with new and unique ideas and odors.
Robert Charles Wilson
The problem was the Voxish prophecies. Our founders had written them into the Coryphaeus as unalterable axioms-embedded truths, permanently exempt from debate or revision. That hadn't mattered when the rapture of the Hypotheticals was a distant goal toward which we moved in gradual increments. But now we had come to the blunt end of the question. Prophecy had collided with reality, and the obvious inference-that the prophecies might have been mistaken-was a possibility the Coryphaeus was forbidden to consider.
Robert Charles Wilson
The essence of life is change, he said, and the essence of eternal life is eternal change.
Robert Charles Wilson
The planet doesn't hate you,” Theo had once said. "But its intimacies are fatal.
Robert Charles Wilson
What was time, after all, except a lead-footed march from the precincts of youth into the country of the grave? Time was the force that crumbled granite, devoured memory, and seduced infants into senility-as implacable as a hanging judge and as poetic as a tank.
Robert Charles Wilson
Bloody indeed,” the President said. "But we're not a nation that flinches at blood, nor are we a people constrained by feminine delicacy. To us all is permitted-even cruelty, yes, even ruthlessness-for we're the first in the world to raise the sword not in the name of enslaving and oppressing anyone, but in the name of freeing them from bondage. We must not be miserly with blood! Let there be blood, if blood alone can drown the old secular world. Let there be pain, and let there be death, if pain and death will save us from the twin tyrannies of Atheism and Europe.
Robert Charles Wilson
Zoe slowed but didn't stop. She kept her hands in front of her, still a judicious distance from the animal. But close enough to smell it. Close enough to see the steam rising from its warm underbelly into the night air. Four billion years of un-Earthly evolution had shaped this aggregate of cells, this beast. She looked at it. And, amazingly, it looked at her. An impossible distance from the planet of her birth, this miracle had happened: Clay had made life. Life regarded life. First light, Zoe thought.
Robert Charles Wilson
There were times when his life had seemed to him like one prolonged act of sleepwalking.
Robert Charles Wilson
He was not accustomed to thinking about these things so bluntly, but the facts were as obvious as they were painful.
Robert Charles Wilson
The afternoon is too tempting to be denied. It isn't Paradise here, or even close, but the mimosa is in bloom and the air from the sea is cool and pleasant. On days like this I think of poor old Magnus Stepney's evolving Green God, harking us all up to Eden. The Green God's voice is faint enough that few of us hear it clearly, and that's our tragedy, I suppose, as a species-but I hear it very distinctly just now. It asks me to step into the sunshine, and I mean to do its bidding.
Robert Charles Wilson
Nobody wants to conduct an autopsy on a dead saint.
Robert Charles Wilson
Deacon Hollingshead: "The history of the world is written in Scripture, and it ends in a Kingdom.” Julian Comstock: "The history of the world is written in sand, and it evolves as the wind blows.”.
Robert Charles Wilson
Life invented it first, Zoe thought, like so many other things. Like eyes: Turning photon impacts into neurochemical events with such subtlety that a frog can target a fly and a man can admire a rose.
Robert Charles Wilson
All the brands and flavors of Big Salvation. At the last minute we would devise a technological fix and save ourselves. Or: the Hypotheticals were benevolent beings who would turn the planet into a peaceable kingdom. Or: God would rescue us all, or at least the true believers among us. Or. Or. Or. Big Salvation. It was a honeyed lie. A paper lifeboat, even if we were killing ourselves trying to cling to it. It wasn't the Spin that had mutilated my generation. It was the lure and price of Big Salvation.
Robert Charles Wilson
She gave me a disdainful look. "Please don't make facile judgments about things you don't understand.”.
Robert Charles Wilson
Sometimes the conscience makes demands that are non-negotiable. Courage has nothing to do with it. We weren't here because we were brave. We were here because we had to be here.
Robert Charles Wilson
I suppose he could have said this more gently, but what would be the point?
Robert Charles Wilson
The awful thing about lying was that it became a habit, then a reflex, as automatic as the blinking of the eyes or the voiding of the bowels. Lying was the Terrestrial disease, his mother used to say.
Robert Charles Wilson
Sandra had spent her days rendering pass/fail verdicts over troubled minds, applying tests most functional adults easily passed. Is the subject oriented to time and place? Does the subject understand the consequences of his actions? But if she could give the same test to humanity as a whole, Sandra thought, the outcome would be very much in doubt. Subject is confused and often self-destructive. Subject pursues short-term gratification at the expense of his own well-being.
Robert Charles Wilson
I gather we're not the most craven species in the galaxy, but we're not the most angelic by a long shot.
Robert Charles Wilson
They allow us access to the experience of the past-the only kind of time machine we are ever likely to have.
Robert Charles Wilson
Perpetual peace is a dream,” he said, "as much as we may yearn for it-but war! War is an integral part of God's ordering of the universe, without which the world would be swamped in selfishness and materialism. War is the very vessel of honor, and who of us could endure a world without the divine folly of honor? That faith is especially true and adorable which leads a soldier to throw away his life in obedience to a blindly accepted duty, in a cause he little understands, during a campaign of which he has little notion, under tactics of which he does not see the use. On the field of battle, where a man lives or dies by the caprice of a bullet or the verdict of a bayonet, life is at its best and healthiest.
Robert Charles Wilson
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