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R.w. Dickson Quotes & Sayings

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Top R.w. Dickson Quotes

R.w. Dickson Quotes By John Dickson Carr

The poor fool hadn't realized that if all mankind shares a folly or an illusion, and likes to share it even knowing what it is, then the illusion is much more valuable and fine a kind of thing than the ass who wants to upset it. — John Dickson Carr

R.w. Dickson Quotes By Gordon R. Dickson

For sooner or later, no matter what fantastic long-range weapons you mounted, the ground itself had to be taken - and for that there had never been anything but the man in the ranks. — Gordon R. Dickson

R.w. Dickson Quotes By Gordon R. Dickson

the faithholder is his faith. He and it make, not two, but a single thing. Since he and it are one, there's no way to take it from him. That makes him a very powerful opponent. In fact, it makes him an unconquerable opponent; since even death can't touch him in his most important part. — Gordon R. Dickson

R.w. Dickson Quotes By Gordon R. Dickson

The trick with modern warfare was not to outgun the enemy, but carry weapons he could not gimmick. — Gordon R. Dickson

R.w. Dickson Quotes By Alessia Dickson

Fear and paranoia are similair things, he interrupted. Both of them just so happen to be in your head. — Alessia Dickson

R.w. Dickson Quotes By Gordon R. Dickson

Live today as if it was ur last and don't ever say it is impossible cos nothing great was achieved with ease — Gordon R. Dickson

R.w. Dickson Quotes By Paul Dickson

Accuracy, Rule of, Corollary: Provided, of course, that you know there is a problem. — Paul Dickson

R.w. Dickson Quotes By Alessia Dickson

If Kurt wanted us, and if he really wanted the crystals, he would have to find us. The game was on and the clock was ticking. — Alessia Dickson

R.w. Dickson Quotes By Gordon R. Dickson

Trouble rather the tiger in his lair than the sage among his books. For to you kingdoms and their armies are things mighty and enduring, but to him they are but toys of the moment, to be overturned with the flick of a finger. — Gordon R. Dickson

R.w. Dickson Quotes By Gordon R. Dickson

Man with a crossbow in the proper position at the proper time's worth a corps of heavy artillery half an hour late and ten miles down the road from where it should be. — Gordon R. Dickson

R.w. Dickson Quotes By Gordon R. Dickson

Why should there be some sort of virtue always attributed to a frank admission of vice? — Gordon R. Dickson

R.w. Dickson Quotes By Gordon R. Dickson

A camel is a horse designed by a committee and a committee's a sweet running piece of machinery compared to any government. — Gordon R. Dickson

R.w. Dickson Quotes By John Dickson

In a morally and religiously diverse culture such as ours, humility is a much-needed key to harmony. — John Dickson

R.w. Dickson Quotes By Carter Dickson

But the curator said nothing mattered so long as it looked all right to the ignorant." [Lady Brace]
"Sort of government motto. I see." [Sir Henry Merrivale] — Carter Dickson

R.w. Dickson Quotes By Andrew Dickson White

The cardinal doctrine of a fanatic's creed is that his enemies are the enemies of God. — Andrew Dickson White

R.w. Dickson Quotes By Carter Dickson

When a man can't sleep, he won't let anybody else sleep either. If he doesn't go off to dreamland the moment his head hits the pillow, he gets frightfully annoyed and won't stay in bed. — Carter Dickson

R.w. Dickson Quotes By Gordon R. Dickson

More blood's been spilled by the militant adherents of prophets of change than by any other group of people down through the history of man. — Gordon R. Dickson

R.w. Dickson Quotes By Carter Dickson

Both Tom and I adore detective stories. Isn't that so, Tom?" [Lady Brace]
"Right!" agreed her husband ... "But they've got to be proper detective stories. They've got to present a tricky, highly sophisticated problem, which you're given fair opportunity to solve."
"And," amplified Virginia, "no saying they're psychological studies when the author can't write for beans."
"Correct!" her husband agreed again. "Couldn't care less when you're supposed to get all excited as to whether the innocent man will be hanged or the innocent heroine will be seduced. Heroine ought to be seduced; what's she there for? The thing is the mystery. It's not worth reading if the mystery is simple or easy or no mystery at all. — Carter Dickson

R.w. Dickson Quotes By Paul Dickson

The more innocuous the name of a weapon, the more hideous its impact. Some of the most horrific weapons of the Vietnam era were named 'Bambi', 'Infant', 'Daisycutter', 'Grasshopper', and 'Agent Orange'. Nor is the trend new: from the past we have 'Mustard Gas', 'Angel Chasers' (two cannonballs linked with a chain for added destruction) and 'The Peacemaker' to name but a few.) — Paul Dickson

R.w. Dickson Quotes By H. Leighton Dickson

Life turned dragons to stone. Stars to ash, gold to coal. — H. Leighton Dickson

R.w. Dickson Quotes By H. Leighton Dickson

When there are a hundred dragons in the sky, it is Hell Down and Hallow Fire. It is the winds of a hurricane and the roar of the storm. We blot out the sun, we blacken the clouds, we churn the sea like foam. It is a magnificent, terrifying sight. — H. Leighton Dickson

R.w. Dickson Quotes By Paul Dickson

No experiment is ever a complete failure. It can always be used as a bad example. — Paul Dickson

R.w. Dickson Quotes By Gordon R. Dickson

Facing facts is definitely preferable to facing defeat. — Gordon R. Dickson

R.w. Dickson Quotes By Rebecca Tsaros Dickson

That's what happens with your first love. It carves a hole in the muscle and fiber, so that you have no choice but to wear it like a birthmark. — Rebecca Tsaros Dickson

R.w. Dickson Quotes By Andrew Dickson White

The 'law of wills and causes,' formulated by Comte, ... is that when men do not know the natural causes of things, they simply attribute them to wills like their own; thus they obtain a theory which provisionally takes the place of science, and this theory forms a basis for theology. — Andrew Dickson White

R.w. Dickson Quotes By Andrew Dickson White

The great curse of theology and ecclesiasticisim has always been their tendency to sacrifice large interests to small: Charity to Creed, Unity to Uniformity, Fact to Tradition, Ethics to Dogma. — Andrew Dickson White

R.w. Dickson Quotes By Carter Dickson

I never met a gal who represented a mystery to me in quite the fetchin' way you did. It'd be dull and dreary just to find out how a crook got in and out of a locked room to steal a gold-and-jewelled cup. But it's very rummy, and fascinates the old man a bit, to wonder why a crook didn't steal a gold-and-jewelled cup he should have stolen. — Carter Dickson

R.w. Dickson Quotes By Alessia Dickson

Supernaturals is a broad term used to classify beings that include Elementals and numerous other creatures. Like what? The list is endless. Witches, Demons, Spirits, stuff like that. Wow, I commented dryly. It's like a giant Halloween party isn't it? — Alessia Dickson

R.w. Dickson Quotes By John Updike

For many years, I read mystery novels for relaxation. But my tastes were too narrow - and, having read all of Agatha Christie and John Dickson Carr, I discovered that the implausibility and the thinness of the people distracted me unduly from the plot. — John Updike

R.w. Dickson Quotes By Paul Dickson

The odds are six to five that the light in the end of the tunnel is the headlight of an oncoming train. — Paul Dickson

R.w. Dickson Quotes By Alessia Dickson

Memories, after all, were the only thing that remained of a person. — Alessia Dickson

R.w. Dickson Quotes By Ken Dickson

Belief is unprovable, but it is a stepping-stone to truth.
Faith is unshakable. It is neither belief nor truth but lights the way between them.
Truth is undeniable. It is both the intention and the end of belief, and the reward of faith. — Ken Dickson

R.w. Dickson Quotes By John Dickson

The heavens declare the glory of God; the skies proclaim the work of his hands. Day after day they pour forth speech; night after night they display knowledge. They have no speech, they use no words; no sound is heard from them. Yet their voice goes out into all the earth, their words to the ends of the world.6 — John Dickson

R.w. Dickson Quotes By Clarissa Dickson Wright

What we would think of as a beef animal had the double purpose of being a working or draught animal that could pull heavy loads. There is an old adage, "A year to grow, two years to plough and a year to fatten." The beef medieval people would have eaten would have been a maturer, denser meat than we are used to today. I have always longed to try it. The muscle acquired from a working ox would have broken down over the fattening year and provided wonderful fat covering and marbling. Given the amount of brewing that took place, the odds are that the animals would have been fed a little drained mash from time to time. Kobe beef, that excessively expensive Japanese beef, was originally obtained from ex-plough animals whose muscles were broken down by mash from sake production and by massage. I'd like to think our beef might have had a not dissimilar flavour. — Clarissa Dickson Wright

R.w. Dickson Quotes By Gordon R. Dickson

They are fools that think that wealth or women or strong drink or even drugs can buy the most in effort out of the soul of a man. These things offer pale pleasures compared to that which is greatest of them all, that task which demands from him more than his utmost strength, that absorbs him, bone and sinew and brain and hope and fear and dreams
and still calls for more. — Gordon R. Dickson

R.w. Dickson Quotes By Gordon R. Dickson

There was more to modern mining than logic. The best engineers had feel. It was a sensitivity born of experience, of talent, and even of something like love, with which they commanded, not only the mountains, but the machine they rode and directed. Now this too was added to the list of man's endeavors for which some special talent was needed. — Gordon R. Dickson

R.w. Dickson Quotes By Gordon R. Dickson

Unrivalled not only in its class, but in a class by itself. — Gordon R. Dickson

R.w. Dickson Quotes By Gordon R. Dickson

A faith-holder puts himself below his faith and lets it guide his actions. The fanatic puts himself above it and uses it as an excuse for his actions. — Gordon R. Dickson

R.w. Dickson Quotes By Gordon R. Dickson

I'm not an expert," said Cletus. "I'm a scholar. There's a difference. An expert's a man who knows a great deal about his subject. A scholar's someone who knows all there is that's available to be known about it. — Gordon R. Dickson

R.w. Dickson Quotes By Gordon R. Dickson

Now our world is at the present time firmly in the grip of a mechanical monster, whose head - if you want to call it that - is the World Engineer's Complex. That monster is opposed to us and can keep all too good a tab on us through every purchase we make with our credit numbers, every time we use the public transportation or eat a meal or rent a place to live. — Gordon R. Dickson

R.w. Dickson Quotes By Gordon R. Dickson

Some people like my advice so much that they frame it upon the wall instead of using it. — Gordon R. Dickson

R.w. Dickson Quotes By Gordon R. Dickson

I, wanderer, stand awaiting the signal. — Gordon R. Dickson

R.w. Dickson Quotes By Gordon R. Dickson

Sir Brian told him in fulsome scatological terms what he could do with his lineage. — Gordon R. Dickson

R.w. Dickson Quotes By John Gibson Paton

Among many who sought to deter me, was one dear old Christian gentleman, whose crowning argument always was, "The cannibals! you will be eaten by cannibals!" At last I replied, "Mr. Dickson, you are advanced in years now, and your own prospect is soon to be laid in the grave, there to be eaten by worms; I confess to you, that if I can but live and die serving and honouring the Lord Jesus, it will make no difference to me whether I am eaten by cannibals or by worms." — John Gibson Paton

R.w. Dickson Quotes By Carter Dickson

That's the point. If these Labour MP's were really working men, they'd have some sense. But most of 'em, or at least the ones I've met, seem to be half-baked intellectuals who've specialized in economics or some such dreary muck. — Carter Dickson

R.w. Dickson Quotes By Clarissa Dickson Wright

All field sports people are doing is turning an inevitable necessity into a pleasure. If the animal is going to be killed anyway, why not take pleasure in it? — Clarissa Dickson Wright

R.w. Dickson Quotes By Alessia Dickson

Oh you are especially priceless, he said motioning to Haven and I, widening the expanse of his grin. First you two break into my office... Haven stiffened and we briefly made eye contact. And then all four of you break into my lab. Quite a nosey lot aren't you? — Alessia Dickson

R.w. Dickson Quotes By John Dickson

while I may not be able to trace the Artist's hand at all times, I can always trust his motives. The God who is in control of all things, who acts behind the scenes in all things, is also the God who willingly suffers. He is the one I can shout at, cry with and find comfort in. — John Dickson

R.w. Dickson Quotes By John Dickson

Atheism certainly promotes a low view of humanity- how much lower can you get than thinking yourself an accidental by-product of a series of even larger accidents! — John Dickson

R.w. Dickson Quotes By Paul Dickson

Albrecht's Law: Social innovations tend to the level of minimum tolerable well being. — Paul Dickson

R.w. Dickson Quotes By Matthew Dickson

Job interview question: Q: Where do you see yourself five years from now?A: Well, five years from now I see myself being able to answer this question. — Matthew Dickson

R.w. Dickson Quotes By Clarissa Dickson Wright

Bankruptcy is like losing your virginity. It doesn't hurt the next time. — Clarissa Dickson Wright

R.w. Dickson Quotes By Carter Dickson

Not that anybody cares two pins about history in these days.We've got rid of history; history is all my eye. But I've got to tell you the facts. — Carter Dickson

R.w. Dickson Quotes By Carter Dickson

That sounds silly, doesn't it? Running away just because you don't want to hurt somebody's feelings? But did you ever think how much of our lives we spend,dodging and twisting and making things difficult for ourselves, to avoid hurting somebody's feelings. Even people with absolutely no claim on us? — Carter Dickson

R.w. Dickson Quotes By Clarissa Dickson Wright

Wolsey and Henry VIII, it has to be said, were not exceptional in their love of the table. The English of Tudor times had a reputation throughout Europe for gluttony. Indeed, overeating was regarded as the English vice in the same way that lust was the French one and drunkenness that of the Germans (although looking at the amount of alcohol consumed in England, I expect the English probably ran a close second to the Germans). — Clarissa Dickson Wright

R.w. Dickson Quotes By H. Leighton Dickson

the same with dragons. So that morning, I shook the snow from my head and gazed — H. Leighton Dickson

R.w. Dickson Quotes By Paul Dickson

In any decision situation, the amount of relevant information available is inversely proportional to the importance of the decision. — Paul Dickson

R.w. Dickson Quotes By John Dickson Carr

Paperchase. And it is on a deduction drawn from — John Dickson Carr

R.w. Dickson Quotes By John Dickson Carr

I have committed another crime, Hadley,' he said. 'I have guessed the truth again. — John Dickson Carr

R.w. Dickson Quotes By Christa Dickson

Part of liberation is being free to do your own thing and letting everyone else be free to do theirs. — Christa Dickson

R.w. Dickson Quotes By David Dickson

I have taken all my good deeds and all my bad deeds, and cast them ... in a heap before the Lord, and fled from both, and betaken myself to the Lord Jesus Christ, and in him I have sweet peace! — David Dickson

R.w. Dickson Quotes By Andrew Dickson White

Just as the line of astronomical thinkers from Copernicus to Newton had destroyed the old astronomy, in which the earth was the center, and the Almighty sitting above the firmament the agent in moving the heavenly bodies about it with his own hands, so now a race of biological thinkers had destroyed the old idea of a Creator minutely contriving and fashioning all animals to suit the needs and purposes of man. — Andrew Dickson White

R.w. Dickson Quotes By John Dickson Carr

To write good history is the noblest work of man. — John Dickson Carr

R.w. Dickson Quotes By Robert Dickson Crane

If adapted to the unique requirements of various regions and peoples of the world, such economic pluralism could have a greater global impact over the next fifty years than the collectivist economics of Marxism and neo-Marxism have had during the half century just past. — Robert Dickson Crane

R.w. Dickson Quotes By Andrew Dickson White

The establishment of Christianity ... arrested the normal development of the physical sciences for over fifteen hundred years. — Andrew Dickson White

R.w. Dickson Quotes By Andrew Dickson White

In an address before the "Academia," which had been organized to combat "science falsely so called," Cardinal Manning declared his abhorrence of the new view of Nature, and described it as "a brutal philosophy to wit, there is no God, and the ape is our Adam." ... These attacks from such eminent sources set the clerical fashion for several years. — Andrew Dickson White

R.w. Dickson Quotes By Gordon R. Dickson

Suppose it was even as you think," he went on, even more gently. "Suppose that all you say was a fact, and that our Elders were but greedy tyrants, ourselves abandoned here by their selfish will and set to fulfill a false and prideful purpose. No." Jamethon's voice rose. "Let me attest as if it were only for myself. Suppose that you could give me proof that all our Elders lied, that our very Covenant was false. Suppose that you could prove to me" - his face lifted to mine and his voice drove at me - "that all was perversion and falsehood, and nowhere among the Chosen, not even in the house of my father, was there faith or hope! If you could prove to me that no miracle could save me, that no soul stood with me, and that opposed were all the legions of the universe, still I, I alone, Mr. Olyn, would go forward as I have been commanded, to the end of the universe, to the culmination of eternity. For without my faith I am but common earth. But with my faith, there is no power can stay me! — Gordon R. Dickson

R.w. Dickson Quotes By Clarissa Dickson Wright

In the 20th century, the French managed to get a death on the myth that they produce the world's best food. The hype has been carefully orchestrated, and despite the fact that the most popular food in the last quarter has undoubtedly been Italian, the French have managed to maintain that mental grip. — Clarissa Dickson Wright

R.w. Dickson Quotes By Gordon R. Dickson

We're painted savages, nothing more, in spite of what we like to think of as some thousands of years of civilization. Only our present paint's called clothing and our caves called buildings — Gordon R. Dickson

R.w. Dickson Quotes By Allison M. Dickson

I've tried to explain to people that I don't 'love' writing any more than I 'love' breathing. It's something I do and it's something I need. If I thought about it as a love/hate thing, I probably would have quit long ago. And then died. — Allison M. Dickson

R.w. Dickson Quotes By Gordon R. Dickson

John Le Carre said that authenticity is less important than plausibility. — Gordon R. Dickson

R.w. Dickson Quotes By John Dickson Carr

We don't fall in love with a woman because of her good character. — John Dickson Carr

R.w. Dickson Quotes By Andrew Dickson White

In all modern history, interference with science in the supposed interest of religion, no matter how conscientious such interference may have been, has resulted in the direst evils both to religion and to science, and invariably; and, on the other hand, all untrammelled scientific investigation, no matter how dangerous to religion some of its stages may have seemed for the time to be, has invariably resulted in the highest good both of religion and of science. — Andrew Dickson White

R.w. Dickson Quotes By Paul Dickson

A system tends to grow in complexity instead of simplicity, until the resulting unreliability becomes intolerable. — Paul Dickson