“I decided to start a war, father", I said, cheerfully, "it's so much more interesting than peace.”
Bernard Cornwell“Nor did he care about his childhood, for certainly I never heard him speak of it. I once questioned him about his early days and he would not answer. ‘What is the egg to the eagle?’ he asked me…”
Bernard Cornwell, The Winter King“What I mean by that is that the point of life, as I see it, is not to write books or scale mountains or sail oceans, but to achieve happiness, and preferably an unselfish happiness.”
Bernard Cornwell“Don't tell me the moon is shining, show me the glint of light on broken glass.”
Bernard Cornwell“That joy. That madness. The gods must feel this way every moment of every day. It is as if the world slows. You see the attacker, you see him shouting, though you hear nothing, and you know what he will do, and all his movements are so slow and yours are so quick, and in that moment you can do no wrong and you will live forever and your name will be blazoned across the heavens in a glory of white fire because you are the god of battle.”
Bernard Cornwell“So we rode through a broken gate in a broken wall into a broken town, and it was dusk, and the day's rain had finally lifted, and a shaft of red sunlight came from beneath the western clouds as we entered the ruined town. We rode straight into the light of that swollen sun which reflected from my helm that had the silver wolf on its crest, and it shone from my mail coat and from my arm rings and from the hilts of my two swords, and someone shouted that I was the king. I rode Witnere, who tossed his great head and pawed at the ground, and I was dressed in my shining war glory.”
Bernard Cornwell“Writing is a solitary occupation.”
Bernard Cornwell“I decided to start a war, father", I said, cheerfully, "it's so much more interesting than peace.”
Bernard Cornwell“We should know who they are," I said, "before we kill them. That's just being polite.”
Bernard Cornwell, The Flame Bearer“He has a mouth, lord," Gerbruht said."I envy him," I said."Envy him, lord?""Most of us have to lower our trews to shit.”
Bernard Cornwell, The Flame Bearer“Father Hobbe, his cassock skirts hitched up to his waist, was fighting with a quarterstaff, ramming the pole into French faces. ‘In the name of the Father,’ he shouted, and a Frenchman reeled back with a pulped eye, ‘and of the Son,’ Father Hobbe snarled as he broke a man’s nose, ‘and of the Holy Ghost!”
Bernard Cornwell, The Archer's Tale