Michael Moorcock Quotes

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All quotes by Michael Moorcock: Destiny Lying Past more...
  • If the people at the top think that reaching for a gun will solve the problem, why shouldn't the people at the bottom think the same?

    "The Eternal Champion". Book by Michael Moorcock, 1970.
  • Introduce your main characters and themes in the first third of your novel. If you are writing a plot-driven genre novel make sure all your major themes/plot elements are introduced in the first third, which you can call the introduction. Develop your themes and characters in your second third, the development. Resolve your themes, mysteries and so on in the final third, the resolution.

  • The book trade invented literary prizes to stimulate sales, not to reward merit.

  • It's History that's caused all the troubles in the past.

  • The past is a script we are constantly rewriting.

    Michael Moorcock (2008). “Elric The Stealer of Souls”, p.21, Del Rey
  • Legends are best left as legends and attempts to make them real are rarely successful

    Michael Moorcock (2008). “Elric: The Sleeping Sorceress”, p.284, Del Rey
  • Doomed Lord's Passing. For the mind of man alone is free to explore the lofty vastness of the cosmic infinite, to transcend ordinary consciousness, to roam the secret corridors of the brain where past and future melt into one...And universe and individual are linked, the one mirrored in the other, and each contains the other.

    Michael Moorcock (2008). “Elric The Stealer of Souls”, p.385, Del Rey
  • Trapped. Sinking. Can't be myself. Made into what other people expect. Is that everyone's fate? Were the great individualists the products of their friends who wanted a great individualist as a friend?

  • Is the prisoner a prisoner because he lives in a cage or because he knows that he lives in a cage?

  • Treasures are not won by care and forethought but by swift slaying and reckless attack.

    Michael Moorcock (2008). “Elric The Stealer of Souls”, p.14, Del Rey
  • Heroes betray us. By having them, in real life, we betray ourselves.

    Michael Moorcock (1984). “The opium general and other stories”
  • It's getting late. I must return to my ship or my men will think I've drowned and be celebrating.

    "The Eternal Champion". Book by Michael Moorcock, 1970.
  • What the local politicians actually meant was that they hoped to claim the land in the name of the public and then make the usual profits privatizing it. There was a principle at stake. They had to ensure their friends and not outsiders got the benefit.

    "New Worlds (No. 4)". Science fiction anthology edited by David S. Garnett with afterword by‎ Michael Moorcock, 1994.
  • Everything means nothing that is the only truth.

    Michael Moorcock (2008). “Elric: To Rescue Tanelorn”, p.79, Del Rey
  • There was no more dangerous kind of madman than one who devoted a good brain and a courageous heart to unhealthy ambitions.

  • It is almost impossible to have a baseless snobbish opinion of the General Theory of Relativity.

    "Fantastic Metropolis", Christmas Editorial, December 9, 2001.
  • The Lords of Chaos are the enemies of Logic, the jugglers of Truth, the molders of Beauty

  • Arthuriana has become a genre in itself, more like TV soap opera where people think they know the characters. All that's fair enough, but it does remove the mythic power of the feminine and masculine principles. So I prefer it in its original form, even if you have to wade through Mallory's 'Le Morte d'Arthur' - people smashing people for pages and pages! It still has the resonances of myth about it, which makes it work for me. I don't want to know if Mordred led an unhappy childhood or not.

    "Biography/ Personal Quotes". www.imdb.com.
  • When gods die, self-respect buds', murmured Orland Fank. 'Gods and their examples are not needed by those who respect themselves and, consequently, respect others. Gods are for children, for little, fearful people, for those who would have no responsibility to themselves or their fellows.

    Michael Moorcock (1988). “The chronicles of Castle Brass”
  • And now, Elric had told three lies. The first concerned his cousin Yyrkoon. The second concerned the Black Sword. The third concerned Cymoril. And upon those three lies was Elric's destiny to be built, for it is only about things which concern us most profoundly that we lie clearly and with profound conviction.

    Michael Moorcock (2008). “Elric: The Sleeping Sorceress”, p.312, Del Rey
  • Elric knew that everything that existed had its opposite. In danger he might find peace. And yet, of course, in peace there was danger. Being an imperfect creature in an imperfect world he would always know paradox. And that was why in paradox there was always a kind of truth. That was why philosophers and soothsayers flourished. In a perfect world there would be no place for them. In an imperfect world the mysteries were always without solution and that was why there was always a great choice of solutions.

    Michael Moorcock (2009). “Duke Elric”, p.127, Del Rey
  • I know not which I prefer the look of—those who attack us or that which defends us!

    Michael Moorcock (2008). “Elric: To Rescue Tanelorn”, p.291, Del Rey
  • It remains a mystery to me why some of that [pulp] fiction should be judged inferior to the rafts and rafts of bad social [literary] fiction which continues to be treated by literary editors as if it were somehow superior, or at least worthier of our attention. The careerist literary imperialism of the Bloomsbury years did a lot to produce fiction's present unseemly polarities.

  • By means of our myths and legends we maintain a sense of what we are worth and who we are. Without them we should undoubtedly go mad.

    Michael Moorcock (2016). “Mother London”, p.274, Hachette UK
  • All Empires fall, All ages die, All strife shall be in vain. All Kings go down, All hope must fail, But Tanelorn remains Our Tanelorn remains.

  • Americans need bullshit the way koala bears need eucalyptus leaves. They've become totally addicted to it. They get so much of it back home that they can't survive without it.

    Home   Koalas   Bullshit  
    Michael Moorcock (2009). “The Best of Michael Moorcock”, p.146, Tachyon Publications
  • Man may trust man, Prince Elric, but perhaps we'll never have a truly sane world until men learn to trust mankind. That would mean the death of magic, I think.

    Michael Moorcock (2009). “Duke Elric”, p.161, Del Rey
  • What happened to fantasy for me is what also happened to rock and roll. It found a common denominator for making maximum money. As a result, it lost its tensions, its anger, its edginess and turned into one big cup of cocoa.

  • Because I had sought to challenge Destiny, Destiny had taken vengeance.

    "Phoenix in Obsidian". Book by Michael Moorcock, 1970.
  • Time is the enemy of identity

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Michael Moorcock quotes about: Destiny Lying Past