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Floods Quotes

Quotes tagged as "floods" Showing 1-28 of 28
Rick Riordan
“If you鈥檙e listening to this, congratulations! You survived Doomsday.
I鈥檇 like to apologize straightaway for any inconvenience the end of the world may have caused you. The earthquakes, rebellions, riots,tornadoes, floods, tsunamis, and of course the giant snake who swallowed the sun鈥擨鈥檓 afraid most of that was our fault. Carter and I decided we should at least explain how it happened.”
Rick Riordan, The Serpent's Shadow

Rick Riordan
“Our problems started in Dallas, when the fire-breathing sheep destroyed the King Tut exhibit.”
Rick Riordan, The Serpent's Shadow

Rick Riordan
“Yes, an actual full-sized camel. If you find that confusing, just think how the criosphinx must have felt.
Where did the camel come from, you ask? I may have mentioned Walt鈥檚 collection of amulets. Two of them summoned disgusting camels. I鈥檇
met them before, so I was less than excited when a ton of dromedary flesh flew across my line of sight, plowed into the sphinx, and collapsed on top
of it. The sphinx growled in outrage as it tried to free itself. The camel grunted and farted.
鈥淗indenburg,鈥� I said. Only one camel could possibly fart that badly. 鈥淲alt, why in the world鈥�?鈥�
鈥淪orry!鈥� he yelled. 鈥淲rong amulet!鈥�
The technique worked, at any rate. The camel wasn鈥檛 much of a fighter, but it was quite heavy and clumsy. The criosphinx snarled and clawed
at the floor, trying unsuccessfully to push the camel off; but Hindenburg just splayed his legs, made alarmed honking sounds, and let loose gas.
I moved to Walt鈥檚 side and tried to get my bearings.”
Rick Riordan, The Serpent's Shadow

Toni Morrison
“You know, they straightened out the Mississippi River in places, to make room for houses and livable acreage. Occasionally the river floods these places. 鈥淔loods鈥� is the word they use, but in fact it is not flooding; it is remembering. Remembering where it used to be.”
Toni Morrison

Enock Maregesi
“Mungu hutumia watu 'wajinga' na 'wapumbavu' kufanya mambo makubwa katika maisha yao na ya watu wengine. Katika Biblia, Musa aliitwa mjinga alipokiuka amri ya Farao ya kuendelea kuwafanya watumwa wana wa Israeli nchini Misri; Nuhu aliitwa mpumbavu alipohubiri kwa miaka mia kuhusu gharika, katika kipindi ambacho watu hawakujua mvua ni nini; Daudi aliitwa mjinga alipojitolea kupambana na Goliati bonge la mtu, shujaa wa Gathi; Yusufu aliitwa mjinga alipokataa kulala na mke wa bosi wake, baada ya kuwa ameuzwa na nduguze kama mtumwa nchini Misri; Abrahamu aliitwa mjinga alipoamua kuhama nchi aliyoipenda na kwenda katika nchi ya ahadi, eti kwa sababu Mungu alimwambia kufanya hivyo; Yesu aliitwa mjinga mpaka akasulubiwa aliposema yeye ni Mfalme na Mwana wa Mungu. LAKINI, Musa alitenganisha Bahari ya Shamu na kuwapeleka Waisraeli katika nchi ya ahadi, ambako aliwakomboa kutoka utumwani. Nuhu aliokoa dunia. Daudi alimshinda Goliati. Yusufu aliokoa familia yake kutokana na njaa. Abrahamu alikuwa baba wa imani. Yesu aliyashinda mauti. Wakati mwingine tunatakiwa kufanya mambo makubwa kulingana na jinsi Roho Mtakatifu anavyotutuma, bila kujali watu au dunia itasemaje.”
Enock Maregesi

“The great concerns of our time 鈥� climate change, natural resources, food production, water control and conservation, and human health 鈥� all boil down to the condition of the soil.”
Isabella Tree, Wilding

“Then throughout the day, mankind played with grenades...Cold hearted world!”
Pantera , Pantera -- The Great Southern Trendkill: Authentic Guitar TAB
tags: floods

Craig Childs
“When you place your hand in moving water, you will feel the curves of power looping your bones, addressing your skin with logarithmic sways. Magnify that ten or twenty thousand times and you will be killed by the force. Then your body will know.... But pay attention in that moment and you will feel the intelligence of water upon you. It will tell stories of itself against your body in boils and surges and vacancies.”
Craig Childs, The Secret Knowledge of Water

Tucker Elliot
“No matter the border, the Mekong has been an indiscriminate giver and taker of life in Southeast Asia for thousands of years. It鈥檚 a paradox like civilization鈥檚 other great rivers鈥攂e it the Nile, Indus, Euphrates, Ganges or China鈥檚 Sorrow the Huang He鈥攆or without its waters life is a daily struggle for survival; yet with its waters life is a daily bet that natural disasters and diseases will visit someone else鈥檚 village, because it鈥檚 not if, but when it鈥檚 going to happen that鈥檚 the relevant question.”
Tucker Elliot, The Rainy Season

Mokokoma Mokhonoana
“Some people get killed by water. Some die from dehydration.”
Mokokoma Mokhonoana

Suresh Venkanna
“Death stalks me everyday...it will eventually win ...not before I've won a million battles over it.”
Suresh Venkanna

Craig Childs
“Now come the floods. They charge down atavistic canyons drinking furiously out of thunderstorms, coming one after the next with vomited boulders and trees pounding from one side of a canyon to the other, sometimes no more than hours apart. Sometimes a hundred years apart. Sometimes a thousand. The floods always come.”
Craig Childs, The Secret Knowledge of Water

Joe Blair
“Passing sandbags is a personal thing. You're face-to-face with the person passing you the bag, as well as the person to whom you pass the bag. The line may be three hundred feet long. But it's not long for each individual. It's an intimate thing. A three-person activity. You take. You turn. You give. There is no doubt it's personal. And you get to know people. Not through conversation. But by the way they hand you the bag. The way they work. On some levels, it's a better relationship than any other I've had. There's no second-guessing. No petty games. The person receiving the bag doesn't need to ask you to receive it and the person giving you the bag doesn't expect anything in return...”
Joe Blair, By the Iowa Sea: A Memoir

Israelmore Ayivor
“I noticed that volcanoes, earthquakes and floods, though are not good events, they are better than the silence of good people when bad people take the podium. The latter are to an extent uncontrollable, but the former can be stopped.”
Israelmore Ayivor, Leaders' Frontpage: Leadership Insights from 21 Martin Luther King Jr. Thoughts

Susan Orlean
“The water dumped on the fire was now as much a problem as a solution. The librarians always worried more about floods than fire, and now they had both.”
Susan Orlean, The Library Book

Mokokoma Mokhonoana
“Drowning: When the water drinks the person or animal.”
Mokokoma Mokhonoana

“Those who flow as life flows make a flood out of the flow.”
Tamerlan Kuzgov

Missouri Williams
“...and one day the rain would wash them away entirely, the sounds of the dead city and her memories of them, and then the Matriarch would finally be free of it鈥攖he past and its language.”
Missouri Williams, The Doloriad

Graham Hancock
“The Younger Dryas impacts, and subsequent sustained cataclysm, changed the face of the earth completely and wrought particularly significant havoc across North America. We have considered the question of huge volumes of meltwater released into the Arctic and Atlantic Oceans from the destabilized ice sheet and looked at the effects on global climate. But keep in mind that those enormous floods also devastated the rich North American mainland to the south, perhaps the best and most bounteous real estate then available anywhere.
This immense and extraordinary deluge, 'possibly the largest flood in the history of the world,' swept away and utterly demolished everything that lay in its path. Jostling with icebergs, choked by whole forests ripped up by their roots, turbulent with mud and boulders swirling in the depths of the current, what the deluge left behind can still be seen in something of its raw form in the Channeled Scablands of the state of Washington today--a devastated blank slate [...] littered with 10,000-ton 'glacial erratics,' immense fossilized waterfalls, and 'current ripples' hundreds of feet long and dozens of feet high.
If there were cities there, before the deluge, they would be gone.
If there was any evidence of anything that we would recognize as technology there, before the deluge, it would be gone.”
Graham Hancock, America Before: The Key to Earth's Lost Civilization

Mokokoma Mokhonoana
“Some people drowned in the floods that were caused by the rains for which they have prayed.”
Mokokoma Mokhonoana

Craig Childs
“Water becomes filthy with desire as it gains speed into a flood. It cannot move in a straight line.... There is too much craving and energy when water moves. It wants out.”
Craig Childs, The Secret Knowledge of Water

Craig Childs
“The desire of water is scribed across the desert like graffiti, until all that is left of the desert is water.... In the scream of a flood, consummate carvings are left behind. Careful scallops are taken from the faces of canyons. This is not random work. It is artistry distilled from madness.”
Craig Childs, The Secret Knowledge of Water

Craig Childs
“Water in flood means exactly what it says. It has no hypocrisy. Even as it murders, it leaves life behind and carves elegant, intricate passages into raw stone, all the while having no debate about its intention. It is the same water that will sit complacently in a hole for months or years, the same arrangement of atoms that flows gently, singing lullabies, the same that fiercely consumes children and tears the walls from titanic canyons.”
Craig Childs, The Secret Knowledge of Water

Wis艂awa Szymborska
“As far as the eye can see, there's water and hazy horizon.
Into the ark, plans for the distant future,
joy in the difference,
admiration for the better man,
choice not narrowed down to one of two,
outworn scruples,
time to think it over,
and the belief that all this
will still come in handy someday.”
Wis艂awa Szymborska, View with a Grain of Sand: Selected Poems

Kiran Manral
“Creatures from the damp earth emerged from their homes in the ground, slithering
away on the damp overgrown grass, onto the stairs, the patio and squirming their way into the house. Survival, it was, risking
being squashed underfoot over being drowned in their homes.
Earthworms, snails, small snakes, insects. Life survived seasons and inundations, and poured itself out onto higher ground.”
Kiran Manral, More Things in Heaven and Earth

Krupa Ge
“Everyone in the city remembers the day the floodwater drained out, differently. Some were relieved, some were still in shock, some continued to look for loved ones, while others came home
to devastation. But for almost all of us it was heartbreak. The city wore its defeat for days and nights on end. For a week after the floods, on the footpaths outside most homes were stinking piles
of mattresses, pillows, quilts, cushions, straw mats, bedsheets and swollen rotting wood and food grains, and cars left open, even as the sun came down hard on us, making a mockery of it all.”
Krupa Ge, Rivers Remember: The Shocking Truth of a Manmade Flood

Stewart Stafford
“Submerged Suburbia by Stewart Stafford

Fell out of bed, dragging my soul,
Looked out the old goldfish bowl,
To see suburbia was underwater,
And I was engaged to Neptune鈥檚 daughter.

There were buses like whales,
Driven by aquatic snails,
And jellyfish squatters,
Chased by octopus coppers.

Crab and lobster schoolkids,
Scurried by making online bids,
As a serial killer shark,
Prowled for surfers before dark.

Someone let the water out,
And it all went down the spout,
Flopping fish still tarried,
But I got out of getting married.

漏 Stewart Stafford, 2022. All rights reserved.”
Stewart Stafford

“Floods? Power cuts? Inflation? The population just shrugs and keeps going. Now that鈥檚 efficient survival!”
Dipti Dhakul, Quote: +/-