Speaks The Nightbird Quotes

We've searched our database for all the quotes and captions related to Speaks The Nightbird. Here they are! All 21 of them:

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... some wounds refuse the remedy of time.
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Robert McCammon (Speaks the Nightbird (Matthew Corbett, #1))
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Love. What was it, really? The desire to possess someone, or the desire to free them?
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Robert McCammon (Speaks the Nightbird (Matthew Corbett, #1))
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He felt, though, that if love was the desire to possess someone, it was in reality the poor substance of self-love. It seemed to him that a greater, truer love was the desire to open a cage - be it made of iron bars or the bones of tormented injustice - and set the nightbird free.
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Robert McCammon (Speaks the Nightbird (Matthew Corbett, #1))
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It had been a joyful day for frogs and mud hens. For the human breed, however, the low gray clouds and chill rain coiled chains around the soul.
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Robert McCammon (Speaks the Nightbird (Matthew Corbett, #1))
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Matthew fell on his belly, the pain in his ribs making him curl up like a stomped worm.
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Robert McCammon (Speaks the Nightbird (Matthew Corbett, #1))
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He lit a candle, as the morning was so caliginous,
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Robert McCammon (Speaks the Nightbird (Matthew Corbett, #1))
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Because of that, there was something frightening about it … something wild and uncontrollable, something that would not be constrained by logic.
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Robert McCammon (Speaks the Nightbird (Matthew Corbett, #1))
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The evening crept up, as evenings will. In the fading purple twilight, with the last bold artist's stroke of red sun painting the bellies of clouds across the western horizon, Matthew took a lantern and went walking.
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Robert McCammon (Speaks the Nightbird (Matthew Corbett, #1))
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There was a small noiseβ€”a snake’s hiss, perhapsβ€”and the cup clamped tightly as the heated air within compressed itself. An instant after the hideous contact was made, Woodward cried out around the sassafras root and his body shivered in a spasm of pure, animal pain.
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Robert McCammon (Speaks the Nightbird (Matthew Corbett, #1))
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into the cell, put the basket down upon the magistrate’s
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Robert McCammon (Speaks the Nightbird (Matthew Corbett, #1))
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veritable
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Robert McCammon (Speaks the Nightbird (Matthew Corbett, #1))
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the paradox of Man was the fact that one might have been made in the image of God, yet it was often the most devilish of ideas that gave action and purpose to the human breed. He
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Robert McCammon (Speaks the Nightbird (Matthew Corbett, #1))
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she has a knife for a tongue,” Cherise interrupted, still eating with graceless fingers. β€œShe only apologizes when it cuts herself.
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Robert McCammon (Speaks the Nightbird (Matthew Corbett, #1))
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caliginous,
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Robert McCammon (Speaks the Nightbird (Matthew Corbett, #1))
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Why?" A great question had been asked, Matthew thought. The ultimate question, which might be asked only by explorers who would not return to share their knowledge of a new world.
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Robert McCammon (Speaks the Nightbird (Matthew Corbett, #1))
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It was an emotion, perhaps, that defied examination and could not be shaped to fit into any foursquare box of reason.
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Robert McCammon (Speaks the Nightbird (Matthew Corbett, #1))
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Tell me. What is the point of life, if truth is not worth standing up for? If justice is a hollow shell? If beauty and grace are burnt to ashes, and evil rejoices in the flames? Shall I weep on that day, and lose my mind, or join the rejoicing and lose my soul? Shall I sit in my room? Should I go for a long walk, but where might I go so as not to smell the smoke? Should I just go on, Mrs. Nettles, like everyone else?
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Robert McCammon (Speaks the Nightbird (Matthew Corbett, #1))
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Something inside him seemed molten, like blue-flamed glass being changed and reshaped by the power of a breath. It was both strengthening and weakening, thrilling and frighteningβ€”again that conjunction of God and Devil that seemed to be at the essence of all things.
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Robert McCammon
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Everyone goes on, " he repeated, with a taint of bitter mockery. "Oh, yes. They go on. With crippled spirits and broken ideals, they do go on. And with the passage of years they forget what crippled and broke them. They accept it grandly as they grow older, as if crippling and breaking were gifts from a king. Then those same hopeful spirits and large ideals in younger souls are viewed as stupid, and petty… and things to be crippled and broken, because everyone does go on." He looked into the woman's eyes. "Tell me. What is the point of life, if truth is not worth standing up for? If justice is a hollow shell? If beauty and grace are burnt to ashes, and evil rejoices in the flames? Shall I weep on that day, and lose my mind, or join the rejoicing and lose my soul? Shall I sit in my room? Should I go for a long walk, but where might I go so as not to smell the smoke? Should I just go on, Mrs. Nettles, like everyone else?
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Robert McCammon (Speaks the Nightbird (Matthew Corbett, #1))
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I shook with cold and fear, without being able to answer. After a lapse of some moments, I was again called. I made an effort to speak, and then felt the bandage which wrapped me from head to foot. It was my shroud. At last, I managed feebly to articulate, 'Who calls?' 'Tis I' said a voice. 'Who art thou?' 'I! I! I!' was the answer; and the voice grew weaker, as if it was lost in the distance; or as if it was but the icy rustle of the trees. A third time my name sounded on my ears; but now it seemed to run from tree to tree, as if it whistled in each dead branch; so that the entire cemetery repeated it with a dull sound. Then I heard a noise of wings, as if my name, pronounced in the silence, had suddenly awakened a troop of nightbirds. My hands, as if by some mysterious power, sought my face. In silence I undid the shroud which bound me, and tried to see. It seemed as if I had awakened from a long sleep. I was cold. I then recalled the dread fear which oppressed me, and the mournful images by which I was surrounded. The trees had no longer any leaves upon them, and seemed to stretch forth their bare branches like huge spectres! A single ray of moonlight which shone forth, showed me a long row of tombs, forming an horizon around me, and seeming like the steps which might lead to Heaven. All the vague voices of the night, which seemed to preside at my awakening, were full of terror. ("The Dead Man's Story")
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James Hain Friswell
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You'll recover. Ever'one goes on, as they must." "Everyone goes on, " he repeated, with a taint of bitter mockery. "Oh, yes. They go on. With crippled spirits and broken ideals, they do go on. And with the passage of years they forget what crippled and broke them. They accept it grandly as they grow older, as if crippling and breaking were gifts from a king. Then those same hopeful spirits and large ideals in younger souls are viewed as stupid, and petty... and things to be crippled and broken, because everyone does go on.
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Robert McCammon (Speaks the Nightbird (Matthew Corbett, #1))