“Pienso que te he amado siempre... pero no hablemos de lo pasado. Solamente te digo que te amo hoy y que te amaré mañana. Porque el pasado se ha ido. Los hoy y los mañanas serán todos los días que podrán ser. Y en cada uno de estos días te diré, te amo.” AmorPasadoPresente Book:Aztec Source: Aztec
“¿Perdonar? Nunca perdonéis, pero fingid que perdonáis. Decid amistosamente que perdonáis. Convenced de que habéis perdonado. Así devastador es el efecto cuando al final os lanzáis y buscáis la garganta.” Perdonar Book:Aztec Autumn Source: Aztec Autumn
“Tu haras que ese nombre sea vil, sucio y despreciable y toda la gente al decirlo escupira en el! - Mixtli a Ce-Malinali” AztecMalincheAztecaMexicasMixtli Book:Aztec Source: Aztec
“The Han language resembles no other on this earth. While I had no trouble learning to speak Mongol, and to write with its alphabet, I never learned more than a rudimentary comprehension of Han. The Mongol speech is gruff and harsh, like its speakers, but it at least employs sounds not too different from those heard in our Western languages. The Han, by contrast, is a speech of staccato syllables, and they are sung rather than spoken. Evidently the Han throat is incapable of forming more than a very few of the sounds that other people make. The sound of r, for one, is quite beyond them. My name in their speech was always Mah-ko. And, having so very few noises to work with, the Han must sound them on different tones—high, mid, low, rising, falling—to make a sufficient variety for compiling a vocabulary. It is like this: suppose our Ambrosian plainsong Gloria in excelsis had that meaning of “glory in the highest” only when sung to its traditional up and down neumes, and, if the syllables were sung in different ups and downs, were to change its meaning utterly—to “darkness in the lowest” or “dishonor to the basest” or even “fish for the frying.” ChineseMarco PoloMandarin Book:The Journeyer Source: The Journeyer
“After the survivor of the Spanish conquest has told his life's story he is convicted by the Inquisition: He posted no brief in defense or mitigation of his offenses, and when he was most solemnly advised by the Court President of the dire consequences he faced if found guilty, Juan Damasceno volunteered only one comment: "It will mean I do not go to the Christian heaven?" He was told that that would indeed be the worst of his punishments: that he would most assuredly not go to Heaven. At which, his smile sent a thrill of horror through every soul of the Court.” IfsMeanSoulStoriesChristianFoundHeavenPresidentWorstHorrorConsequenceCourtDefensePunishmentGuiltySurvivorCommentOffenseThrillConquestInquisitionJuanHis Smile Author:Gary Jennings
“Collect adventures and experiences to reminisce about…go to far places, meet new people, eat exotic foods, enjoy all varieties of women, look on unfamiliar landscapes, see new things.” PeopleLooksEnjoyAdventureVarietyLandscapeNew ThingsExoticUnfamiliarReminiscingMeeting New People Book:Aztec Source: Aztec
“Of all that I have possessed in my life, my memories are the only things remaining to me. Indeed, I believe that memories are the only real treasure any human can hope to hold always.” BelieveHumansRealMomentsI BelieveMemoriesTreasurePossessed Book:Aztec Source: Aztec
“I do not know what she was thinking, but I was remembering the years we have lived together, yet never together, and what a waste they have been--of each other, and of love, which is the most unpardonable waste there is. Love and time, those are the only two things in all the world and all of life that cannot be bought, but only spent.” ThinkingKnowsWorldYearsHas BeensTwoTogetherRememberWasteTwo ThingsTime And Love Author:Gary Jennings
“Love and time, those are the only two things in all the world and all of life that cannot be bought, but only spent.” WorldInspirationalTwoTwo ThingsTime And Love Author:Gary Jennings
“I'm a writer. I write not only for a living, I write because I'm a writer.” Writing Author:Gary Jennings