alchemists
All people want to belong to some sort of hierarchy. Allow me to explain. The rich want to be the richest; the poor want to be the smartest; those who are both rich and smart want to be the better persons; the better persons want to go to heaven; those who are in heaven will look down upon those who are in hell... there is always some kind of hierarchy desired by everyone; even by those who claim the opposite of this. So how do you find true divinity? Divinity is found in those who reach down low; because it is those who are above who must reach down low, while it is those who are below who must constantly reach for what is above! And this is divinity. What is divine, is what will have a curiosity in what is below. There is no fear of becoming "tainted"; because what is lesser can never really taint what is greater. It is what is greater than is able to transform what is lesser. The alchemist must first find the mud, pick it up, before she is able to transform it into diamond.
— C. JoyBell C.
Approaching the forest from the west was no army, but a delegation of Grailsundanian master surgeons on their way to an appendix conference. . . But that isn't the craziest part of the story - oh, no, my boy, for approaching from the east was a party of itinerant watchmakers bound for the pocket-watch fair at Wimbledon. . . But not even that is the craziest part of the story! For approaching from the south were over a hundred armorers and locksmiths on their way to Corinth, where some power-hungry prince had commissioned them to build a monstrous war machine. . . Well, that would be enough crazy coincidences for an averagely crazy story, but the battle of Turn Forest involved the most improbable coincidences in the history of Ammonia. For entering the forest, this time from the north came a delegation of alchemists.
— Walter Moers
The alchemists of past centuries tried hard to make the elixir of life: ... Those efforts were in vain; it is not in our power to obtain the experiences and the views of the future by prolonging our lives forward in this direction. However, it is well possible in a certain sense to prolong our lives backwards by acquiring the experiences of those who existed before us and by learning to know their views as well as if we were their contemporaries. The means for doing this is also an elixir of life.
— Hermann Franz Moritz Kopp
We are told that in translation there is no such thing as equivalence. Many times the translator reaches a fork in the translating road where they must make a choice in the interpretation of a word. And each time they make one of these choices, they are taken further from the truth. But what we aren’t told is that this isn’t a shortcoming of translation; it’s a shortcoming of language itself. As soon as we try to put reality into words, we limit it. Words are not reality, they are the cause of reality, and thus reality is always more. Writers aren't alchemists who transmute words into the aureus essence of the human experience. No, they are glassmakers. They create a work of art that enables us to see inside to help us understand. And if they are perfect, we can see our own reflections staring back at us.
— Kamand Kojouri
We wait, starving for moments of high magic to inspire us, but life is full of common enchantment waiting for our alchemists eyes to notice.
— Jacob Nordby
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