John Wyndham Quotes

We've searched our database for all the quotes and captions related to John Wyndham. Here they are! All 100 of them:

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When a day that you happen to know is Wednesday starts off by sounding like Sunday, there is something seriously wrong somewhere.
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John Wyndham (The Day of the Triffids)
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It must be, I thought, one of the race's most persistent and comforting hallucinations to trust that "it can't happen here" -- that one's own time and place is beyond cataclysm.
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John Wyndham (The Day of the Triffids)
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And we danced, on the brink of an unknown future, to an echo from a vanished past.
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John Wyndham (The Day of the Triffids)
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The essential quality of life is living' the essential quality of living is change; change is evolution; and we are part of it.
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John Wyndham (The Chrysalids)
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Some quotations," said Zellaby, "are greatly improved by lack of context.
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John Wyndham (The Midwich Cuckoos)
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If you run away from a thing just because you don't like it, you don't like what you find either.
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John Wyndham (The Chrysalids)
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Knowledge is simply a kind of fuel; it needs the motor of understanding to convert it into power.
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John Wyndham (The Midwich Cuckoos)
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Anybody who has had a great treasure has always led a precarious existence.
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John Wyndham (The Day of the Triffids)
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Why should I? I've done nothing to be ashamed of. I am not ashamed - I am only beaten
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John Wyndham (The Chrysalids)
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Knowing makes all the difference... It's the difference between just trying to keep alive, and having something to live for
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John Wyndham (The Chrysalids)
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There was often a great deal of grown-up fuss that seemed disproportionate to causes.
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John Wyndham (The Chrysalids)
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It's humiliating to be dependent, anyway, but it's still a poorer pass to have no one to depend on.
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John Wyndham (The Day of the Triffids)
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Children have a different convention of the fearful until they have been taught the proper things to be shocked at.
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John Wyndham (The Day of the Triffids)
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We all have our youthful follies, embarassing to recall -- but people somehow find it hard to dismiss as a youthful folly anything that has happened to be a financial success.
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John Wyndham (The Day of the Triffids)
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If you want to keep alive in the jungle, you must live as the jungle does.
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John Wyndham (The Midwich Cuckoos)
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Most people […] prefer to be coaxed or wheedled, or even driven. That way they never make a mistake: if there is one, it's always due to something or somebody else
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John Wyndham (The Day of the Triffids)
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I don't think it had ever occurred to me that man's supremacy is not primarily due to his brain, as most of the books would have one think. It is due to the brain's capacity to make use of the information conveyed to it by a narrow band of visible light rays. His civilization, all that he had achieved or might achieve, hung upon his ability to perceive that range of vibrations from red to violet. Without that, he was lost.
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John Wyndham (The Day of the Triffids)
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I shall pray to God to send charity to this hideous world, and sympathy for the weak, and love for the unhappy and unfortunate. I shall ask Him if is indeed His will that a child should suffer and its soul be damned for a little blemish on the body....And I shall pray Him, too, that the hearts of the self-righteous may be broken...
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John Wyndham (The Chrysalids)
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Find a nice, self sufficient hilltop, and fortify it.
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John Wyndham (The Kraken Wakes)
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The dove is not a coward to fear the hawk; it is simply wise.
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John Wyndham (The Midwich Cuckoos)
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…after all, what is a planet but an island in space?
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John Wyndham (The Midwich Cuckoos)
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So you're in love with her?' she went on. A word again ... When the minds have learnt to mingle, when no thought is wholly one's own, and each has taken too much of the other ever to be entirely himself alone; when one has reached the beginning of seeing with a single eye, loving with a single heart, enjoying with a single joy; when there can be moments of identity and nothing is separate save bodies that long for one another ... When there is that, where is the word? There is only the inadequacy of the word that exists. 'We love one another,' I said.
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John Wyndham (The Chrysalids)
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Why should they be afraid of us? We aren’t hurting them,’ she broke in. β€œI’m not sure that I know why,’ I told her. β€˜But they are. It’s a feel-thing not a think-thing. And the more stupid they are, the more like everyone else they think everyone ought to be. And once they get afraid they become cruel and want to hurt people who are different –
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John Wyndham (The Chrysalids)
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It is because nature is ruthless, hideous, and cruel beyond belief that it was necessary to invent civilisation.
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John Wyndham (The Midwich Cuckoos)
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In my experience,’ he told me, β€˜if you run away from a thing just because you don’t like it you don’t know what you find either. Now running to a thing, that’s a different matter, but what would you want to run to?
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John Wyndham (The Chrysalids)
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The clock is the most sacred thing in a hospital
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John Wyndham (The Day of the Triffids)
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Darling, whose book is this to be?" "Ostensibly yours, my sweet" "I see -- rather like my life since I met you?" "Yes darling
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John Wyndham (The Kraken Wakes)
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Until then I had always thought of loneliness as something negativeβ€”an absence of company, and, of course, something temporary... That day I had learned that it was much more. It was something which could press and oppress, could distort the ordinary and play tricks with the mind. Something which lurked inimically all around, stretching the nerves and twanging them with alarms, never letting one forget that there was no one to help, no one to care. It showed one as an atom adrift in vastness, and it waited all the time its chance to frighten and frighten horriblyβ€”that was what loneliness was really trying to do; and that was what one must never let it do...
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John Wyndham (The Day of the Triffids)
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But not she. Her eternity is an article of her faith. Great wars and disasters can ebb and flow, races rise and fall, empires wither with suffering and death, but these are superficialities: she, woman, is perpetual, essential; she will go on for ever.
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John Wyndham (The Midwich Cuckoos)
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Personal honesty takes time to assert itself - if it is ever allowed to.
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John Wyndham (The Midwich Cuckoos)
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When almost half a lifetime has been spent in one conception of order, reorientation is no five-minute business.
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John Wyndham (The Day of the Triffids)
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... the more complex they made their world, the less capable they were of dealing with it. They had no means of consensus. They learnt to co-operate constructively in small units; but only destructively in large units. They aspired greedily, and then refused to face the responsibilities they had created. They created vast problems, and then buried their heads in the sands of idle faith.
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John Wyndham (The Chrysalids)
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You'd expect her to see reason,' he muttered. I don't see why. Most of us don't - we see habit. She'll oppose any modification, reasonable or not, that conflicts with her previously trained feelings of what is right and polite - and be quite honestly convinced that she's showing steadfast strength of character. . .
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John Wyndham (The Day of the Triffids)
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Nobody is going to be muddle-headed enough to confuse ignorance with innocence now - it's too important. Nor is ignorance going to be cute or funny anymore. It is going to be dangerous, very dangerous.
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John Wyndham (The Day of the Triffids)
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It was all conveyed by the nicest, almost indetectably refined blend of sympathy and bitchiness...
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John Wyndham (Chocky)
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You don't seriously suggest that thet're talking when they make that rattling noise.
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John Wyndham (The Day of the Triffids)
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I'm a reliable witness, you're a reliable witness, practically all God's children are reliable witnesses in their own estimation--which makes it funny how such different ideas of the same affair get about.
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John Wyndham (The Kraken Wakes)
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I suppose a book is still a book, even if no one but the author and his wife reads it," she said.
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John Wyndham (The Kraken Wakes)
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But it is an inescapable conclusion that life has to be dynamic and not static. Change is bound to come one way or another.
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John Wyndham (The Day of the Triffids)
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There is an inability to sustain the tragic mood, a phoenix quality of the mind. It may be helpful or harmful, it is just a part of the will to surviveβ€”yet, also, it has made it possible for us to engage in one weakening war after another. But it is a necessary part of our mechanism that we should be able to cry only for a time over even an ocean of spilt milkβ€”the spectacular must soon become the commonplace if life is to be supportable.
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John Wyndham
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And again there are no words. Words exist that can, used by a poet, achieve a dim monochrome of the body's love, but beyond that they fail clumsily. My love flowed out to her, hers back to me. Mine stroked and soothed. Hers caressed. The distance - and the difference - between us dwindled and vanished. We could meet, mingle, and blend. Neither one of us existed any more; for a time there was a single being that was both. There was escape from the solitary cell; a brief symbiosis, sharing all the word ...
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John Wyndham (The Chrysalids)
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There must, I think, be a great many people who go around just longing to be baffled...
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John Wyndham (The Kraken Wakes)
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a sort of botanical glory-hole
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John Wyndham (The Day of the Triffids)
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We've got to believe that God is sane, Davie boy. We'd be lost indeed if we didn't do that.
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John Wyndham (The Chrysalids)
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I'm quite sure there is a simple way. The trouble is that simple ways so often come out of such complicated research.
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John Wyndham (The Day of the Triffids)
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My protective coloration isn't intended to deceive you, my sweet. It is intended to deceive me.
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John Wyndham (The Kraken Wakes)
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It’s not my fault if I’m not any good at things like that.” β€œI’ll differ there,” Coker told her. β€œIt’s not only your faultβ€”it’s a self-created fault. Moreover, it’s an affectation to consider yourself too spiritual to understand anything mechanical. It is a petty and a very silly form of vanity. Everyone starts by knowing nothing about anything, but God gives himβ€”and even herβ€”brains to find out with. Failure to use them is not a virtue to be praised;
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John Wyndham (The Day of the Triffids)
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The simple rely on a bolstering mass of maxim and precept, so do the timid, so do the mentally lazy – and so do all of us, more than we imagine.
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John Wyndham (The Day of the Triffids)
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And your oil engines are just a deplorable perversion – dirty, noisy, poisonous, and the cars you drive with them are barbarous, dangerous...” Chocky in "Chocky
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John Wyndham (Chocky)
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I was hiding from them even while I moved among them.
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John Wyndham (The Day of the Triffids)
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They haven't God's word like they thought: God doesn't have any last word. If He did He'd be dead. But He isn't dead; and He changes and grows, like everything else that's alive
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John Wyndham (The Chrysalids)
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But, as I understand it, your God is a universal God; He is God on all suns and all planets. Surely, then, He must have universal form? Would it not be a staggering vanity to imagine that He can manifest Himself only in the form that is appropriate to this particular, not very important planet?
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John Wyndham (The Midwich Cuckoos)
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You know, one of the most shocking things about it is to realize how easily we have lost a world that seemed so safe and certain." She was quite right. It was that simplicity that seemed somehow to be the nucleus of the shock. From very familiarity one forgets all the forces which keep the balance, and thinks of security as normal. It is not.
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John Wyndham (The Day of the Triffids)
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There is no conception more fallacious than the sense of cosiness implied by "Mother Nature". Each species must strive to survive, and that it will do, by every means in its power, however foul - unless the instinct to survive is weakened by conflict with another instinct.
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John Wyndham (The Midwich Cuckoos)
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Half the political intelligentsia who talk to a working audience don’t get the value of their stuff acrossβ€”not so much because they’re over their audience’s heads, as because half the chaps are listening to the voice and not to the words, so they knock a big discount off what they do hear because it’s all a bit fancy, and not like ordinary, normal talk.
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John Wyndham (The Day of the Triffids)
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It seemed to me an odd view to take - rather as if one should protest that one didn't LIKE the idea of dying or being born. I preferred the notion of finding out first how it would be, and then doing what one could about the parts of it one disliked most.
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John Wyndham (The Day of the Triffids)
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It must be, I thought, one of the race’s most persistent and comforting hallucinations to trust that β€œit can’t happen here”—that one’s own little time and place is beyond cataclysms. And now it was happening here.
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John Wyndham (The Day of the Triffids)
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The essential quality of life is living; the essential quality of living is change; change is evolution: and we are part of it. The static, the enemy of change, is the enemy of life, and therefore our implacable enemy.
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John Wyndham
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Your work is to survive. Neither his kind, nor his kind of thinking will survive long. They are the crown of creation, they are ambition fulfilledβ€”they have nowhere more to go. But life is change, that is how it differs from the rocks, change is its very nature. Who, then, were the recent lords of creation, that they should expect to remain unchanged?
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John Wyndham (The Chrysalids)
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Pretty nearly any stroke of fate can be made to look like a funny coincidence if you try hard enough and wait long enough.
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John Wyndham
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It’s humiliating to be dependent, anyway, but it’s a still poorer pass to have no one to depend on.
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John Wyndham (The Day of the Triffids)
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You are judging by social rules and finding crime. I am considering an elemental struggle, and finding no crime - just grim, primeval danger
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John Wyndham (The Midwich Cuckoos)
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As a race, we have allowed ourselves to become accustomed to the idea that the proper way to die is in bed, at a ripe age. It is a delusion. The normal end for all creatures comes suddenly.
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John Wyndham (The Kraken Wakes)
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The Old People brought down Tribulation, and were broken into fragments by it. Your father and his kind are a part of those fragments. They have become history without being aware of it. They are determined still that there is a final form to defend: soon they will attain the stability they strive for, in the only form it is grantedβ€”a place among the fossils.
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John Wyndham (The Chrysalids)
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Β β€œYour Tim is so unmistakably a healthy extravert type. Mens stulta in corpore sano, and all that.” β€œExactly,” she agreed.
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John Wyndham (Chocky)
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The alternative is the sword over your heads,' he said. 'I know,' I agreed unhappily. 'But that isn't the way. A sword inside us would be worse.
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John Wyndham (The Chrysalids)
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When I was quite small I would sometimes dream of a city - which was strange, because it began before I even knew what a city was.
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John Wyndham (The Chrysalids)
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seem to
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John Wyndham (The Chrysalids)
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Babies, in a world that already has far too many, remain desirable.
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John Wyndham (Chocky)
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In Oppley they're smart, and in Stouch they're smarmy, but Midwich folk are just plain barmy
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John Wyndham (The Midwich Cuckoos)
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every day it was tomorrow that I’d be able to do it, and each day it became more difficult.
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John Wyndham (The Day of the Triffids)
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Don't you sometimes wish that you had been born into the Age of Reason, instead of into the Age of the Ostensible Reason?
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John Wyndham (The Kraken Wakes)
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All my life I have been surrounded by things I'd rather not know too much about, so I have come to feel that truth made naked without purpose is really a wanton.
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John Wyndham
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We are not shut away into individual cages from which we can reach out only with inadequate words.
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John Wyndham
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When people live their lives by their beliefs objective reality is almost irrelevant. β€˜That’s
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John Wyndham (Chocky)
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Odd, don’t you think? We could drown a litter of kittens that is no sort of threat to us – but these creatures we shall carefully rear.
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John Wyndham (The Midwich Cuckoos)
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Once an idea has been planted no one can tell when and where it will stop growing.
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John Wyndham (Trouble with Lichen)
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Reality is relative. Devils, evil spirits, witches and so on became real enough to the people who believed in them. Just as God is to people who believe in Him. When people live their lives by their beliefs objective reality is almost irrelevant.
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John Wyndham (Chocky)
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Moreover, I was beginning to experience something new - the fear of being alone. I had not been alone since I walked from the hospital along Piccadilly, and then there had been bewildering novelty in all I saw. Now,for the first time I began to feel the horror that real loneliness holds for a species that is by nature gregarious. I felt naked, exposed to all the fears that prowled...
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John Wyndham
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And so the one in our garden continued its growth peacefully, as did thousands like it in neglected spots all over the world. It was some little time later that the first one picked up its roots and walked.
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John Wyndham (The Day of the Triffids)
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To deprive a gregarious creature of companionship is to maim it, to outrage its nature. The prisoner and the cenobite are aware that the herd exists beyond their exile; they are an aspect of it. But when the herd no longer exists, there is, for the herd creature, no longer entity, a part of no whole; a freak without a place. If he cannot hold on to his reason, then he is lost indeed; most utterly, most fearfully lost, so that he becomes no more than the twitch in the limb of a corpse.
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John Wyndham (The Day of the Triffids)
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I'm not romancing. I'm talking about the inevitable time when, unless we do something to stop it, men will be hunting men through the ruins, for food. We're letting it drift towards that, with an evil irresponsibility, because with our ordinary short lives we shan't be here to see it. Does our generation care about the misery it is bequeathing? Not it. "That's their worry," we say. "Damn our children's children; we're all right.
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John Wyndham (Trouble with Lichen)
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You can't kill an idea the way they try to. You can keep it down awhile, but sooner or later it'll come out. Now what you've got to understand is that the wheel's not evil. Never mind what the scared men all tell you. no discovery is good or evil until men make it that way." -The Wheel, John Wtndham
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John Wyndham (The Seeds of Time)
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My great-aunt, and other people's great-aunts, won all the rights that women need ages ago. All that's been lacking since then is the social courage to use them. My great-aunt and the rest thought that by technically defeating male privilege they'd scored a great victory. What they didn't realize is that the greatest enemies of women aren't men at all, they are women: silly women, lazy women, and smug women.
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John Wyndham (Trouble with Lichen)
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The definition of Man recited itself in my head... And God created man in His own image. And God decreed that man should have one body, one head, two arms and two legs: that each arm should be joined in two places and end in one hand: that each hand should have four fingers and one thumb: that each finger should bear a flat finger-nail...Then God created woman, also, in the same image, but with these differences, according to her nature: her voice would be of higher pitch than man's: she should grow no beard: she should have two breasts... And any creature that shall seem to be human, but is not formed thus is not human. It is neither man, nor woman. It is a blasphemy against the true image of God, and hateful in the sight of God.
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John Wyndham (The Chrysalids)
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The only sounds in the cave were the hopeless, abandoned sobbing, and plop-plop-plop of the drips. Petra looked at us, then at the figure on the bed, then at us again, expectantly. When neither of us moved she appeared to decide that the initiative lay with her. She crossed to the bedside and knelt down concernedly beside it. Tentatively she put a hand on the dark hair. 'Don't,' she said. 'Please don't.' There was a startled catch in the sobbing. A pause, then a brown arm reached out round Petra's shoulders. The sound became a little less desolate ... it no longer tore at one's heart: but it left it bruised and aching..
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John Wyndham (The Chrysalids)
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In temperate countries, where man had succeeded in putting most forms of nature save his own under a reasonable degree of restraint, the status of the triffid was thus made quite clear. But in the tropics, particularly in the dense forest areas, they quickly became a scourge.
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John Wyndham (The Day of the Triffids)
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sham idealists: the quite large number of people who profess ideals as a form of premium for other-life insurance, and are content to lay up slavery and destitution for their descendants so long as they are enabled to produce personal copybooks of elevated views at the gate of heaven.
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John Wyndham (The Midwich Cuckoos (RosettaBooks into Film))
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In loyalty to their kind they cannot tolerate our rise; in loyalty to our kind, we cannot tolerate their obstruction. They are the crown of creation, they are ambition fulfilled β€” they have nowhere more to go. But life is change, that is how it differs from the rocks, change is its very nature
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John Wyndham
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Can you imagine us tolerating any form of rival intelligence on earth, no matter how it got here? Why, we can’t even tolerate anything but the narrowest differences of views within our own race. No,’ he shook his head, β€˜no, I’m afraid Bocker’s idea of fraternization never had the chance of a flea in a furnace.
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John Wyndham (The Kraken Wakes)
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They stamp on any change: they close the way and keep the type fixed because they've got the arrogance to think themselves perfect. As they reckon it, they. and only they, are in the true image; very well, then it follows that if the image is true, they themselves must be God: and, being God, they reckon themselves entitled to decree, "thus far, and no farther." That is their great sin: they try to strangle the life out of Life.
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John Wyndham (The Chrysalids)
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Marvelously clear-fretted in the unsmoked air, the Abbey rose, silver-grey. It stood detached by the serenity of age from the ephemeral growths around it. It was solid on a foundation of centuries, destined, perhaps, for centuries yet to preserve within it the monuments to those whose work was now all destroyed. I did not loiter there. In years to come I expect some will go o look at the old Abbey with romantic melancholy. But romance of that kind is an alloy of tragedy with retrospect. I was too close.
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John Wyndham (The Day of the Triffids)
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What do you think it is that makes a man" I started on the Definition. He cut me of after five words. "It is not!" he said. "A wax figure could have all that, and he'd still be a wax figure, wouldn't he?" ... "Well, then, what makes a man a man is something inside him." "A soul?" I suggested. "No... souls are just counters for churches to collect, all the same value, like nails. No, what makes man man is mind; it's not a thing, it's a quality, and minds aren't all the same value; they're better or worse, and the better they are, the more they mean.
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John Wyndham
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There is an inability to sustain the tragic mood, a phoenix quality of the mind. It may be helpful or harmful, it is just a part of the will to survive – yet, also, it has made it possible for us to engage in one weakening war after another. But it is a necessary part of our mechanism that we should be able to cry only for a time over even an ocean of spilt milk – the spectacular must soon become the commonplace if life is to be supportable.
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John Wyndham (The Day of the Triffids)
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To deprive a gregarious creature of companionship is to maim it, to outrage its nature. The prisoner and the cenobite are aware that the herd exists beyond their exile; they are an aspect of it. But when the herd no longer exists, there is, for the herd creature, no longer entity. He is a part of no whole, a freak without a place. If he cannot hold onto his reason, then he is lost indeed: most utterly and most fearfully lost, so that he becomes no more than the twitch in the limb of a corpse. It
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John Wyndham (The Day of the Triffids)
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There’s a whole lot of people don’t seem to understand that you have to talk to a man in his own language before he’ll take you seriously. If you talk tough and quote Shelley they think you’re cute, like a performing monkey or something, but they don’t pay any attention to what you say. You have to talk the kind of lingo they’re accustomed to taking seriously. And it works the other way too. Half the political intelligentsia who talk to a working audience don’t get the value of their stuff acrossβ€”not so much because they’re over their audience’s heads, as because half the chaps are listening to the voice and not to the words, so they knock a big discount off what they do hear because it’s all a bit fancy, and not like ordinary, normal talk.
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John Wyndham (The Day of the Triffids)
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There is an inability to sustain the tragic mood, a phoenix quality of the mind. It may be helpful or harmful, it is just a part of the will to surviveβ€”yet, also, it has made it possible for us to engage in one weakening war after another. But it is a necessary part of our mechanism that we should be able to cry only for a time over even an ocean of spilt milkβ€”the spectacular must soon become the commonplace if life is to be supportable. Under a wide blue sky where a few clouds sailed like celestial icebergs the cities became a less oppressive memory, and the sense of living freshened us again like a clean wind. It does not, perhaps, excuse, but it does at least explain why from time to time I was surprised to find myself singing as I drove.
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John Wyndham (The Day of the Triffids)
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We are explorers. We are at present, as far as we know, the only explorers of the universe. For a long time we thought that ours was the only planet that could support life. Then we found others that could – a few. For still longer we thought we were unique – the only intelligent form of life – a single, freakish pinpoint of reason in a vast, adventitious cosmos – utterly lonely in the horrid wastes of space.… Again we discovered we were mistaken… But intelligent life is rare… very rare indeed… the rarest thing in creation… But the most precious… For intelligent life is the only thing that gives meaning to the universe. It is a holy thing, to be fostered and treasured. Without it nothing begins, nothing ends, there can be nothing through all eternity but the mindless babblings of chaos… Therefore, the nurture of all intelligent forms is a sacred duty. Even the merest spark of reason must be fanned in the hope of a flame. Frustrated intelligence must have its bonds broken. Narrow-channelled intelligence must be given the power to widen out. High intelligence must be learned from. That is why I have stayed here.
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John Wyndham
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Sophie dear,' I said. 'Are you in love with him - with this spider-man?' 'Oh, don't call him that - please - we can't any of us help being what we are. His name's Gordon. He's kind to me, David. He's fond of me. You've got to have as little as I have to know how much that means. You've never known loneliness. You can't understand the awful emptiness that's waiting all round us here. I'd have given him babies gladly, if I could. ... I - oh, why do they do that to us? Why didn't they kill me? It would have been kinder than this...' She sat without a sound. The tears squeezed out from under the closed lids and ran down her face. I took her hand between my own. I remembered watching. The man with his arm linked in the woman's, the small figure on top of the pack-horse waving back to me as they disappeared into the trees. Myself desolate, a kiss still damp on my cheek, a lock tied with a yellow ribbon in my hand. I looked at her now, and my heart ached.
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John Wyndham (The Chrysalids)
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We have both been given the same wish to survive, We are all, you see, toys of the life-force. It made you numerically stronger, but mentally undeveloped. It made us mentally strong but physically weak: now it has set us at one another, to see what will happen. A cruel sport perhaps, from both our points of view, but a very very old one. Cruelty is as old as life itself. There is some improvement: humour and compassion are the most important of human inventions; but they are not very firmly established yet, though promising well. But the life-force is a lot stronger than they are; and it won't be denied its blood-sports.
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John Wyndham (The Midwich Cuckoos)