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* Hapshetsut Nebet
Quotations: from the sublime to the desperately sad to the frankly ridiculous
February 1 , 2005
9 Posted at 06:00 EST

Those who can make you believe absurdities can make you commit atrocities.
~Voltaire

Plato was a bore.
~Friedrich Nietzsche

Death has a tendency to encourage a depressing view of war.
~Donald Rumfeld

Social order at the expense of liberty is hardly a bargain.
~Marquis de Sade

Our enemies...never stop thinking about new ways to harm our country and our people, and neither do we.
~George Bush

It is the job of thinking people not to be on the side of the executioners.
~Albert Camus

I contend that we are both atheists. I just believe in one fewer god than you do. When you understand why you dismiss all the other possible gods, you will understand why I dismiss yours.
~Sir Stephen Henry Roberts

Man will never be free until the last king is strangled with the entrails of the last priest.
~Denis Diderot

If you think education is expensive, try ignorance.
~Derek Bok

August 11 , 2003
8 Posted at 02:55 EST
Skill without imagination is craftsmanship and gives us many useful objects such as wickerwork picnic baskets. Imagination without skill gives us modern art ~ Tom Stoppard
August 8 , 2003
7 Posted at 03:45 EST
So that the gross of the people were carried off in these two months; for, as the whole number which was brought in to die of the plague was but 68,590, here is 50,000 of them, within a trifle, in two months; I say 50,000, because, as there wants 295 in the number above, so there wants two days of two months in the account of time.

Now when I say that the parish officers did not give in a full account, or were not to be depended upon for their account, let any one but consider how men could be exact in such a time of dreadful distress, and when many of them were taken sick themselves and perhaps died in the very time when their accounts were to be given in; I mean the parish clerks, besides inferior officers; for though these poor men ventured at all hazards, yet they were far from being exempt from the common calamity, especially if it be true that the parish of Stepney had, within the year, 116 sextons, gravediggers, and their assistants; that is to say, bearers, bellmen, and drivers of carts for carrying off the dead bodies.

Indeed the work was not of a nature to allow them leisure to take an exact tale of the dead bodies, which were all huddled together in the dark into a pit; which pit or trench no man could come nigh but at the utmost peril. I observed often that in the parishes of Aldgate and Cripplegate, Whitechappel and Stepney, there were five, six, seven, and eight hundred in a week in the bills; whereas if we may believe the opinion of those that lived in the city all the time as well as I, there died sometimes 2000 a week in those parishes; and I saw it under the hand of one that made as strict an examination into that part as he could, that there really died an hundred thousand people of the plague in that one year whereas in the bills, the articles of the plague, it was but 68,590.

If I may be allowed to give my opinion, by what I saw with my eyes and heard from other people that were eye-witnesses, I do verily believe the same, viz., that there died at least 100,000 of the plague only, besides other distempers and besides those which died in the fields and highways and secret Places out of the compass of the communication, as it was called, and who were not put down in the bills though they really belonged to the body of the inhabitants. It was known to us all that abundance of poor despairing creatures who had the distemper upon them, and were grown stupid or melancholy by their misery, as many were, wandered away into the fields and Woods, and into secret uncouth places almost anywhere, to creep into a bush or hedge and die.

The inhabitants of the villages adjacent would, in pity, carry them food and set it at a distance, that they might fetch it, if they were able; and sometimes they were not able, and the next time they went they should find the poor wretches lie dead and the food untouched. The number of these miserable objects were many, and I know so many that perished thus, and so exactly where, that I believe I could go to the very place and dig their bones up still; for the country people would go and dig a hole at a distance from them, and then with long poles, and hooks at the end of them, drag the bodies into these pits, and then throw the earth in from as far as they could cast it, to cover them, taking notice how the wind blew, and so coming on that side which the seamen call to windward, that the scent of the bodies might blow from them; and thus great numbers went out of the world who were never known, or any account of them taken, as well within the bills of mortality as without.

Daniel Defoe, A Journal of the Plague Year, 1665 (extract)

August 7 , 2003
6 Posted at 02:34 EST
Mortal as I am, I know that I am born for a day. But, when I follow at my leisure the serried multitude of the stars in their circular course, my feet no longer touch the ground ~ Ptolemy
August 5 , 2003
5 Posted at 23:34 EST
I sing the body electric,
The armies of those I love engirth me and I engirth them,
They will not let me off till I go with them, respond to them,
And discorrupt them, and charge them full with the charge of the soul
~ Walt Whitman
August 4 , 2003
4 Posted at 02:58 EST
In a mad world only the mad are sane ~ Akira Kurosawa
August 1 , 2003
3 Posted at 04:14 EST
There are painters who transform the sun to a yellow spot, but there are others who with the help of their art and their intelligence, transform a yellow spot into the sun ~ Pablo Picasso
July 31 , 2003
2 Posted at 03:16 EST
The advantage of a bad memory is that one enjoys several times the same good things for the first time ~ Friedrich Nietzsche
July 30 , 2003
1 Posted at 02:03 EST
When you hit your thumb with an 8 pound hammer, it's nice to be able to blaspheme. It takes a very strong, special 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" ~ Terry Pratchett

If you need to visualize the soul, think of it as a cross between a wolf howl, a photon, and a dribble of dark molasses. But what it really is, as near as I can tell, is a packet of information. It's a program, a piece of hyperspatial software designed explicitly to interface with the Mystery. Not a mystery, mind you, the Mystery. The one that can never be solved. Data in our psychic program is often nonlinear, nonhierarchical, archaic, alive, and teeming with paradox. Simply booting up is a challenge, if not for no other reason than that most of us find acknowledging the unknowable and monitoring its intrusions upon the familiar and mundane more than a little embarrassing. More immediately, by waxing soulful you will have granted yourself the possibility of ecstatic participation in what the ancients considered a divinely animated universe. And on a day to day basis, folks, it doesn't get any better than that ~ Tom Robbins

I went to a convent in New York and was fired finally for my insistence that the Immaculate Conception was spontaneous combustion ~ Dorothy Parker

I am enough of an artist to draw freely upon my imagination. Imagination is more important than knowledge. Knowledge is limited. Imagination encircles the world ~ Albert Einstein

Consistency is the last refuge of the unimaginative ~ Oscar Wilde







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