1. DefinitelyMaybe

    DefinitelyMaybe Contributor Contributor

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    Brilliant lines

    Discussion in 'General Writing' started by DefinitelyMaybe, Oct 17, 2015.

    Sometimes I read some really brilliant lines (or hear them on radio, TV, or film), and I wonder how someone came up with that.

    I've just heard one on Doctor Who.

    "People talk about premonition as if it's something strange. It's not. It's just remembering in the wrong direction."

    IMHO that's brilliant.

    Has anyone else got any favourite lines, or lines they are really impressed with?
     
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  2. Chinspinner

    Chinspinner Contributor Contributor

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    I've been watching The Blacklist, and I have found on several occasions that there has been a cat and mouse discussion between Reddington and his quarry. The script often subverts the anticipated profound retort with a gunshot. That is my favourite type of line- no pretentiousness or show-boating from the writers- just a swift and decisive response.
     
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  3. Inks

    Inks Senior Member

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    "What is the most cowardly and shameful thing in human conduct? It's when people with power, and those who flatter them, hide in safe places and extol war — who force patriotism and self-sacrifice on others, sending them to the battlefield to die."

    For those who like to share a drink: "Humans were drinking alcohol five-thousand years ago, and we're still drinking it now. Alcohol is humanity's friend. Can I abandon a friend?"

    LOGH - Yang Wenli.
     
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  4. DefinitelyMaybe

    DefinitelyMaybe Contributor Contributor

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    "The ships hung in the sky in much the same way that bricks don't."

    -- Douglas Adams, The Hitch-Hicker's Guide to the Galaxy.

    There are a lot of great line in THHGTTG, IMHO.
     
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  5. tonguetied

    tonguetied Contributor Contributor

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    "Why isn't anyone ever happy to see us?"

    Hopefully I have the wording close enough.
     
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  6. EdFromNY

    EdFromNY Hope to improve with age Supporter Contributor

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    From "Casablanca":

    Police officer: Captain, another visa problem has come up.
    Capt. Renault: Show her in.
     
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  7. Robert Musil

    Robert Musil Comparativist Contributor

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    I was going to reply to this thread with a line from one of the Viriconium novels (I think it's in the beginning of The Pastel City), something to the effect of "All recluses think they know themselves better than they actually do."

    But, now I can't find it. Maybe I just made it up, but I swear that's where I read it.
     
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  8. Bookster

    Bookster Banned

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    [his] father the history professor had always maintained the key to understanding our culture lay in the names of Shiloh and Antietam. It was only in their aftermath that we discovered how many of our own countrymen - who spoke the same language and practiced the same religion and lived on the same carpet-like, green, undulating, limestone-ridged farmland - we would willingly kill in support of causes that were not only indefensible but had little to do with our lives.

    James Lee Burke - Rain Gods
     
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  9. Simpson17866

    Simpson17866 Contributor Contributor

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    "Just because two people are willing to die for each other doesn't mean that they know how to live with each other"
     
  10. thirdwind

    thirdwind Member Contest Administrator Reviewer Contributor

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    "Because I could not stop for Death -
    He kindly stopped for me -"

    - Emily Dickinson
     
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  11. ShalaylaW

    ShalaylaW Member

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    "There is a passion in you that scares me"
    - This Dark Endeavor by Kenneth Oppel
     
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  12. Tella

    Tella Active Member

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    On the matter of love:

    Alchemist Boy: "I'll give you half of my life, so give me half of yours!"
    Mechanic Girl: "Argh... why are you alchemists like this... You want half? I'll give you all of it and I don't care how much I get."

    One of the final scene of Full Metal Alchemist: Brotherhood, a Japanese animation\manga series.
    Basically by the alchemist law of equivalent exchange says that in order to create something, another thing of equivalent value must be offered, hence the alchemist's way of thinking.
     
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  13. Aaron Smith

    Aaron Smith Banned Contributor

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    "When enough years had gone by to enable us to look back on them..."

    To Kill a Mockingbird.
     
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  14. davidov

    davidov Member

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    You just take an idea and chisel away at it. It doesn't have to be an earth-shattering idea, but if you distil it down to the right words it usually sounds pretty good. Of course, you need to have the ideas in the first place, but writing is all about ideas, if you ask me.
     
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  15. davidov

    davidov Member

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    I reckon this could work the other way too: you can turn a simple, profound idea, if it is rich enough, into an entire book. Say, for instance, one day you jotted down in your journal: "People are blind to uncertainty". With a bit of scholarship and added water you could develop that idea into a whole book (except in this case Taleb has already done it with The Black Swan).
     
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  16. Ivana

    Ivana Senior Member

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    “In racing, they say that your car goes where your eyes go. The driver who cannot tear his eyes away from the wall as he spins out of control will meet that wall; the driver who looks down the track as he feels his tires break free will regain control of his vehicle.”
    “The car goes where the eyes go.”
    Garth Stein, "The art of racing in the rain"
     
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  17. Tella

    Tella Active Member

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    "There is no limit to us, we have the power of love."
    One Piece, second opening intro, English dub.

    It sure is cliche, but it sure is true. Love is often associated with a merging into infinity or eternity. The context of this line, though, has to do with friendship - true friendship. One Piece has a way of taking a cliche and flipping it upside down, this is one of them.
     
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  18. Tella

    Tella Active Member

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    "Do you to build a snowman? It doesn't have to be a snowman..."
    Do I really need to? Fine - Frozen, Disney.

    I haven't watched Frozen honestly, but I had a chance of hearing that line and it conquered me. It is an instance of veiled honesty. It's a child telling her sister "It's not the snowman I want - it's you..." and I find it deeply touching and literary. Funny how an unintentional nuance gets you like that ;)
     
    Last edited: Oct 26, 2015
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  19. Simpson17866

    Simpson17866 Contributor Contributor

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    No, I'm pretty sure that was intentional ;)
     
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  20. ShalaylaW

    ShalaylaW Member

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    "How gratifying for once to know
    That those above will serve those down below!"

    "Because in all of the whole human race
    Mrs. Lovett, there are two kinds of men and only two
    There's the one staying put in his proper place
    And the one with his foot in the other one's face
    Look at me, Mrs Lovett, look at you.
    No, we all deserve to die
    Even you, Mrs Lovett, even I!"
    - Sweeney Todd

    I don't think I have to say much about these lines. I love that movie, and everything has this gruesome, darkly comical, deep sadness to it that rings true.
     
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  21. Genghis McCann

    Genghis McCann Active Member

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    "When I get home from the pub tonight I'm going to give my wife a good listening-to."
     
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  22. DefinitelyMaybe

    DefinitelyMaybe Contributor Contributor

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    From a cartoon by William Hamilton, quoted in "What If: Writing Exercises for Fiction Writers" by Bernays and Painter.

    "Frances, can I get back to you? Gordon ran away with the babysitter and I'm trying to see if there's a short story in it."

    :D :D :D
     
  23. Alejandro89

    Alejandro89 Member

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    Does this happen to anyone else. You know, you are writing and you finish a line and, in just a dozen words, it expresses so much about you that it is strange, as if you were pouring your innermost feelings and it makes you uncomfortable because you feel that if anyone reads it they will know to much about you? A moment of perfect honesty only you know about in a single sentence. I think that sometimes makes writing scary.
     
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  24. Feo Takahari

    Feo Takahari Senior Member

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    I think pain calls to pain. If you're writing about something very painful to yourself, the readers who will best understand it will be those who have similar trauma and can relate to where you're coming from. The same probably goes for dreams and ideals, though I don't have as much experience with them.
     
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  25. SethLoki

    SethLoki Retired Autodidact Contributor

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    To me, 'innermost feelings' is too vague; it doesn't quite encapsulate what's given over, especially if you write and cover a lot of emotional ground with your 'fiction'. Yes, to go deep (as someone here coined) you're surrendering the workings of your mind, your thought trains, your opinions, your biases, your insecurities, your prejudices, your sexual preferences... Of course all these come out dressed as the characters you create and their behaviour mightn't be yours—but readers are quite canny at picking the persona of the writer out of these clothes. You're putting yourself up for judgement by family, friend, acquaintance and stranger alike.

    I've had it from the mouth of a well respected author that 'it ain't no casual undertaking' — and I agree.
     
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