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When one is the agent of order and civilisation in the universe, one doesn't stoop to negotiate. Especially with nonhumans.
Ann Leckie
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Ann Leckie
Age: 58
Born: 1966
Born: March 2
Author
Novelist
Science Fiction Writer
Writer
Toledo
Ohio
Doesn
Stoop
Order
Stoops
Negotiate
Civilisation
Agent
Agents
Especially
Universe
More quotes by Ann Leckie
Without feelings insignificant decisions become excruciating attempts to compare endless arrays of inconsequential things. It's just easier to handle those with emotions.
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Surely it isn't illegal here to complain about young people these days? How cruel. I had thought it a basic part of human nature, one of the few universally practiced human customs.
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Falling didn't bother me. I could fall forever and not be hurt. It's stopping that's the problem.
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It's the people without the money and the power, who desperately want to live, for those people small things aren't small at all.
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If there was anything any Radchaai considered essential for civilised life, it was tea.
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Good necessitates evil and the two sides of that disk are not always clearly marked.
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Unity, I thought, implies the possibility of disunity. Beginnings imply and require endings.
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If you're going to make a desperate, hopeless act of defiance you should make it a good one.
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What, after all, was the point of civilisation if not the well-being of citizens?
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Things happen the way they happen because the world is the way it is.
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To be Radchaai is to be civilised.
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Translator Dlique was saying, very earnestly, “Eggs are so inadequate, don't you think? I mean, they ought to be able to become anything, but instead you always get a chicken. Or a duck. Or whatever they're programmed to be. You never get anything interesting, like regret, or the middle of the night last week.
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Let every act be just, and proper, and beneficial.
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Or is anyone's identity a matter of fragments held together by convenient or useful narrative, that in ordinary circumstances never reveals itself as a fiction? Or is it really a fiction?
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