“Now he wondered what use it would be. For Kaspar’s death would not bring back his father, Elk’s Call at Dawn, or his mother, Whisper of the Night Wind. His brother, Hand of the Sun, and his little sister Miliana would remain dead. The only time he would hear the voice of his grandfather, Laughter in His Eyes, would be in his memory. Nothing would change. No farmer outside Krondor would suddenly stand up in wonder and say, “A wrong has been righted.” No boot-maker in Roldem would look up from his bench and say, “A people has been avenged.”
Raymond E. Feist“There were two things going on: 1) I had already established in my own mind where I wanted to go with the next series, and having James around as a Grey Eminence would have complicated matters. He had had an amazing life and it was time to bid him good-bye.”
Raymond E. Feist“Forgive me, Magnus.’‘I don’t know if I can.’‘You must.’Still looking into the distance, he said, ‘You need my forgiveness?’‘No. I’m dead. You can do nothing for me. You need to forgive me so you can live.”
Raymond E. Feist“In Tsurani culture, forgiveness was simply a less shameful form of weakness than capitulation.”
Raymond E. Feist“Don't assume the world evolved in the order in which you discovered it.”
Raymond E. Feist“Chumaka ended with a quotation from a play that Jiro favored. “ ‘Small acts partner small houses and small minds'.”
Raymond E. Feist, Mistress of the Empire“Of all the weaknesses that beset a man, vanity is the most deadly. For through vanity can a wise man turn to folly.”
Raymond E. Feist, Exile's Return“Never think taking a life is easy. Do that and in a way they win.”
Raymond E. Feist, Honored Enemy“He likes to humble our foes by making them seem ridiculous. As he said to me the other day, ‘Kill a man, and you cede him honor in the eyes of the gods. Laugh at him and you shame him'.”
Raymond E. Feist, Mistress of the Empire“Most of us move through life with little chance to learn much about ourselves. We know some things we like and some things we dislike, we have a few ideas about what makes us happy, and we die in ignorance regarding anything profound within ourselves.”
Raymond E. Feist, The King's Buccaneer