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The Candle in the Wind Quotes

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The Candle in the Wind (The Once and Future King, #4) The Candle in the Wind by T.H. White
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The Candle in the Wind Quotes Showing 1-9 of 9
“If it takes a million years for a fish to become a reptile, has Man, in our few hundred, altered out of recognition?”
T.H. White, The Candle in the Wind
“Lancelot and Guenever were sitting at the solar window. An observer of the present day, who knew the Arthurian legend only from Tennyson and people of that sort, would have been startled to see that the famous lovers were past their prime. We, who have learned to base our interpretation of love on the conventional boy-and-girl romance of Romeo and Juliet, would be amazed if we could step back into the Middle Ages - when the poet of chivalry could write about Man that he had 'en ciel un dieu, par terre une deesse'. Lovers were not recruited then among the juveniles and adolescents: they were seasoned people, who knew what they were about. In those days people loved each other for their lives, without the conveniences of the divorce court and the psychiatrist. They had a God in heaven and a goddess on earth - and, since people who devote themselves to godesses must exercise some caution about the ones to whom they are devoted, they neither chose them by the passing standards of the flesh alone, nor abandoned it lightly when the bruckle thing began to fail.”
T.H. White, The Candle in the Wind
“Even his conversation was, as it were, a spoken part.”
T.H. White, The Candle in the Wind
“Do you think that they, with their Battles, Famine, Black Death and Serfdom, were less enlightened than we are, with our Wars, Blockade, Influenza, and Conscription.”
T.H. White, The Candle in the Wind
“Any one war seems rooted in its antecedents.”
T.H. White, The Candle in the Wind
“The Dark and Middle Ages! The Nineteenth Century had an impudent way with its labels. For there, under the window in Arthur's Gramarye, the sun's rays flamed from a hundred jewels of stained glass in monasteries and convents, or danced from the pinnacle of cathedrals and castles, which their builders had actually loved. Architecture, in those dark ages of theirs, was such a light-giving passion of the heart that men gave love-names to their fortresses.”
T.H. White, The Candle in the Wind
“He had conquered murder only to be faced with war. There were no laws for that.”
T.H. White, The Candle in the Wind
“Every letter written," said a medieval abbot, "is a wound inflicted on the devil.”
T.H. White, The Candle in the Wind
“You will find that when the kings are bullies who believe in force, the people are bullies too. If I don't stand for law, I won't have law among my people. And naturally I want my people to have the new law, because then they are more prosperous, and I am more prosperous in consequence.”
T.H. White, The Candle in the Wind

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