One becomes sated with platitudes no less than honey, so that one often breaks another's bones in one's vexation.

One becomes sated with platitudes no less than honey, so that one often breaks another's bones in one's vexation.

Jack Vance
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But when the wizard is onstage as the main character, you have to adopt what I call the Jack Vance Rule. I call it this because Jack Vance is the first author successfully and adroitly to have applied this rule in his The Dying Earth. The Jack Vance Rule is: (1) The wizard has to be able to do something unusual, or else he is not a wizard, (2) he cannot do everything, or else there is no drama; therefore (3) the story teller has to communicate to the reader whatever the dividing line is that separates what the wizard can do from what he cannot do, so that the reader can have a reasonable expectation of knowing what the wizard can and cannot do.

John C. Wright, Transhuman and Subhuman: Essays on Science Fiction and Awful Truth
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But I'm so slow on it because I find it terribly hard writing blind on computers. The computer speaks to me, but it's just so slow, I'm so terribly slow using it.

Jack Vance
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What is peace? Balance three iron skewers tip to tip, one upon the other; at the summit, emplace an egg, so that it too poises static in mid-air, and there you have the condition of peace in this world of men.

Jack Vance
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Law cannot reach where enforcement will not follow. —Popular aphorism.

Jack Vance
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Until work has reached its previous stage nympharium privileges are denied to all.

Jack Vance
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Twango's hospitality, though largely symbolic, does him credit.

Jack Vance
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One becomes sated with platitudes no less than honey, so that one often breaks another's bones in one's vexation.

Jack Vance
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Good music always defeats bad luck.

Jack Vance
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Freedom, privileges, options, must constantly be exercised, even at the risk of inconvenience. Otherwise they fall into desuetude and become unfashionable, unorthodox—finally irregulationary.

Jack Vance, Emphyrio
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If religions are diseases of the human psyche, as the philosopher Grintholde asserts, then religious wars must be reckoned the resultant sores and cankers infecting the aggregate corpus of the human race. Of all wars, these are the most detestable, since they are waged for no tangible gain, but only to impose a set of arbitrary credos upon another's mind.

Jack Vance, The Face
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