Wit And Wisdom Of Discworld

Wit And Wisdom Of Discworld by Terry Pratchett

Book: Wit And Wisdom Of Discworld by Terry Pratchett Read Free Book Online
Authors: Terry Pratchett
Tags: Non-Fiction
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doing is moving around slowly and eating things,’ said the Dean.
    ‘Put a pointy hat on it and it’d be a faculty member,’ said the Archchancellor.
    *
    Miss Flitworth had said that before they could start a graveyard in these parts they’d had to hit someone over the head with the shovel.
    *
    People have believed for hundreds of years that newts in a well mean that the water’s fresh and drinkable, and in all that time never asked themselves whether the newts got out to go to the lavatory.
    *
    The ability of skinny old ladies to carry huge loads is phenomenal. Studies have shown that an ant can carry one hundred times its own weight, but there is no known limit to the lifting power of the average tiny eighty-year-old Spanish peasant grandmother.

    ‘Why are you called One Man Bucket?’
    in my tribe we’re traditionally named after the first thing the mother sees when she looks out of the teepee after the birth. it’s short for One-Man-Pouring-a-Bucket-of-Water-over-Two-Dogs.
    ‘That’s pretty unfortunate,’ said Windle.
    it’s not too bad, said One-Man-Bucket. it was my twin brother you had to feel sorry for. she looked out ten seconds before me to give him his name.
    ‘Don’t tell me, let me guess,’ Windle said. ‘Two-Dogs-Fighting?’
    Two-Dogs-Fighting? Two-Dogs- Fighting? said One-Man-Bucket. wow, he’d have given his right arm to be called Two-Dogs-Fighting.

    In the Ramtop village where they dance the real Morris dance, for example, they believe that no one isfinally dead until the ripples they cause in the world die away - until the clock he wound up winds down, until the wine she made has finished its ferment, until the crop they planted is harvested. The span of someone’s life, they say, is only the core of their actual existence.

    ‘Who’s playing the maracas?’
    Death grinned.
    M ARACAS ? I DON’T NEED … MARACAS.

    In the village in the Ramtops where they understand what the Morris dance is all about, they dance it just once, at dawn, on the first day of spring. They don’t dance it after that, all through the summer. After all, what would be the point? What use would it be?
    But on a certain day when the nights are drawing in, the dancers leave work early and take, from attics and cupboards, the other costume, the black one, and the other bells. And they go by separate ways to a valley among the leafless trees. They don’t speak. There is no music. It’s very hard to imagine what kind there could be.
    The bells don’t ring. They’re made of octiron, a magic metal. But they’re not, precisely, silent bells. Silence is merely the absence of noise. They make the opposite of noise, a sort of heavily textured silence.
    And in the cold afternoon, as the light drains from the sky, among the frosty leaves and in the damp air, they dance the other Morris. Because of the balance of things.
    You’ve got to dance both, they say. Otherwise you can’t dance either.
    † Someone who will put certainly salt and probably pepper on any meal you put in front of them whatever it is and regardless of how much it’s got on it already and regardless of how it tastes. Behavioural psychiatrists working for fast-food outlets around the universe have saved billions of whatever the local currency is by noting the autocondimenting phenomenon and advising their employers to leave seasoning out in the first place. This is really true.

 
    I T seemed an easy job … After all, how difficult could it be make sure that a servant girl doesn’t marry a prince? But for the witches Granny Weatherwax, Nanny Ogg and Magrat Sarlick, travelling to the distant city of Genua, things are never that simple…
    Servant girls have to marry the Prince. That’s what life is all about. You can’t fight a Happy Ending.
    At least, tip Until now…
    Just superstition. But a superstition doesn’t have to be wrong.
    *
    Bad spelling can be lethal. For example, the greedy Seriph of Al-Ybi was once cursed by a badly educated

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