“An item,” he said softly, his eyes on the disc, “that passes without provenance, pursued by many who thirst for its cold kiss, on which life and all that lay within life is often gambled. Alone, a beggar’s crown. In great numbers, a king’s folly. Weighted with ruin, yet blood washes from it beneath the lightest rain, and to the next no hint of its cost. It is as it is, says Kruppe, worthless but for those who insist otherwise.”
Source: Gardens of the Moon (1999), Chapter 7 (pp. 233-234)
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Steven Erikson 136
Canadian fantasy author 1959Related quotes

“There is hate's crown beneath which all is
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