Dragons
The Note-Books of Samuel Butler (1912), Part X - The Position of a HomoUnius Libri
“True dragons are Danish and speak Danish, a tongue that the Danes themselves describe as less a language than a throat disease. To attract a dragon, one chains a naked maiden to a rock. The maiden must be chained to the rock in such a way that every part of her is visible to the dragon. Many famous paintings demonstrate the technique; Ingres’s Angelica Saved by Ruggiero is an example. After the dragon has inspected your maiden to its heart’s content, you issue one of the conventional formal challenges, in Danish—’Jeg udfordre dig til ridderlig camp’ is the way one usually puts it—and then the fight begins.”
Source: The King (1990), p. 39.
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Donald Barthelme 67
American writer, editor, and professor 1931–1989Related quotes
“To have dragons one must have change; that is the first principle of dragon lore.”
Source: The Night Country
Often misattributed to but inspired by GK Chesterton:
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Coraline (2002)
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