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Clans Quotes

Quotes tagged as "clans" Showing 1-8 of 8
Erin Hunter
“Come on,"he meowed to Greystripe."Let's go home.”
Erin Hunter, A Dangerous Path

Nicole Sager
“Cleftlocke is on the rise.”
Nicole Sager, Cleftlocke

Laurie Halse Anderson
“I am clanless. I wasted the last weeks of August watching bad cartoons. I didn’t go to the mall, the lake, or the pool, or answer the phone. I have entered high school with the wrong hair, the wrong clothes, the wrong attitude. And I don’t have anyone to sit with.

I am Outcast.”
Laurie Halse Anderson, Speak

Enock Maregesi
“Mungu alitengeneza familia. Alitengeneza koo, makabila na mataifa, ili watu wajuane na kuheshimiana.”
Enock Maregesi

Erin Hunter
“This will not be the end of the clans as long as I have breath in my body"
~jayfeather”
Erin Hunter

Elaine  Santos
“Fear is a ladder. When you climb the ladder of fear, you reach panic. When you reach panic, you climb a bit more, and you reach chaos. Fear leads to panic, and panic leads to chaos. That’s what the future holds, Gillion.”
Elaine Santos, The Children of Allura
tags: clans

Ira Mukhoty
“Krishna sees her looking at him and Draupadi nods slightly at him and then looks back at the pyres, for she has understood a small, insidious truth. She remembers their precipitous flight from the camp in the middle of the night while her sons and brothers were left behind to be murdered in their sleep. There is no Vrishni pyre at this mass funeral and while all the major clans of the river valleys are laid low, Krishna's clansmen are unscathed. Moreover, the only heir with a claim to the throne of Hastinapur to have survived is the secret that Uttara hides in her frail body. So Krishna's nephew is dead but through his hastily arranged marriage to Uttara, the clan of the Vrishnis finally has a claim to kingship and the eternal kingmakers will at last be rajas.”
Ira Mukhoty, Song of Draupadi: A Novel

Walter Scott
“By the light which the fire afforded, Waverley could discover that his attendants were not of the clan Ivor, for Fergus was particularly strict in requiring from his followers that they should wear the tartan striped in the mode peculiar to their race; a mark of distinction anciently general through the Highlands, and still maintained by those Chiefs who were proud of their lineage, or jealous of their separate and exclusive authority.”
Walter Scott, Waverley