Star Trek: The Captain's Table
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This page was last updated on 02/20/01.
Book One of Six: War Dragons by L. A. Graf (TOS)
"I just sometimes get real tired of aliens."
"The best judge of a pirate is one of his own."
Kirk: "We call it kindness. It's a human
custom."
Kirk: "I hate waiting. More specifically, I hate
doing nothing. Even when there's not a damned thing I can do, I'd still
rather be inventing some kind of work for myself ...."
Kirk: "A Captain never has to lie ... as long as he's
careful about the promises he makes."
Sulu: "People with glass chins should refrain from piloting
ships with uncalibrated inertial dampeners."
Kirk: "... Vulcan's didn't get irked, they merely withheld
comment until they had further data."
Kirk: "This is a primarily human crew.... That means
our feelings will have an impact on the performance of our duties, even when
that's not appropriate."
Spock: "Merely because Vulcan's have chosen not to let
emotional states dictate our behavior does not mean we are incapable of
understanding them."
Kirk: "Whether or not emotions make sense, they are part of
the human equation, part of what makes humans behave and function in the ways
they do. By refusing to acknowledge human emotion as real when you deal
with the crew, you're willfully ignoring a variable, then wondering why your
sums don't add up. What matters is that humans believe in what they feel.
Humans will always have that variable in motion, whether or not you choose to
allow for it."
Schulman: "... Ockham's Razor says that the simplest
explanation is most likely to be correct."
Spock: "Contrary to human conviction, data obtained after
the fact cannot be applied retroactively."
Old Joke: What's the last thing to go through a starship
commander's mind when his ship hits a moon?
Answer: His warp drive.
Kirk: "Inspiration is nine-tenths desperation."
Kirk: "In an outfit likes Starfleet, competence is easy
come by; brilliance is only slightly harder. More valuable than either,
though, is the ability to transcend species and transfix creatures you had never
even met before. In a communications officer, that skill becomes
priceless."
Kirk: "Peaceful people didn't make threats to their less
sophisticated neighbors, especially threats they honestly had no intention of
keeping. Once you've promised something dire, you'd better be prepared to
deliver the first time they decided to test your resolve, otherwise it's as good
as making no threats at all."
McCoy: "They thought you were a girl, Jim."
Sulu: "Even a slam chance was better than not looking at
all."
Sulu: "... the easy, unthinking, natural response to a
situation could sometimes be utterly the wrong one."
Klingon proverb: "Choose your enemies more wisely than your
friends. Your friends do not come back to kill you later."
Book Two of Six: Dujonian's Hoard by Michael
Jan Friedman (TNG)
Picard: "... I think one should do whatever one can to keep
by and soul together, but I stop short of endangering the lives of others."
Robinson: "If you've got coined, buy what you like.
But don't reach into someone else's pocket."
Hompaq: "Only a coward allows himself to be herded like a
pack animal."
Picard: "Only a fool wastes his life on a useless gesture."
Picard: "... uncertainty is a terrible thing. It can
gnaw at you until your very sanity gives way."
Book Three of Six: The Mist by Dean Wesley
Smith and Kristine Kathryn Rusch (DS9)
"... sometimes wars are won in the footnotes."
Cap: "Only a coward draws on an unarmed man."
Sisko: "... leadership is one-third knowledge, one-third
common sense, and one-third a deep-in-your-heart, unprovable moment of absolute
certainty, based solely on pure gut instinct. The best leaders learn how
to separate that instinct from wishful thinking. It is, I think, the
hardest thing of all to do, even harder than preparing a beloved crew for
war."
"Add enough intoxicants, and every species reverted to
childhood."
Sisko: "... opinionated and aggressive. Those are
good traits for a warrior."
Quilli: "... in each story, the teller is allowed one
impossible thing."
Quilli: "... sometimes desperate fools make dangerous
enemies."
Ell-Lee: "Embarrassment is a good emotion. It tends
to stop a repeat of the same action."
Book Four of Six: Fire Ship by Diane Carey
(VOY)
Janeway: "Know your friends, know your enemies, know
yourself."
Janeway: "Often the truth spills from a toppled
barrel."
Janeway: "One of the principles of conflict is that you
must be willing to meet your enemy on his own level of behavior. Whether
down or up, you've got to be willing to go there."
Janeway: "Choice is the blood of life.... No choice
... no life."
Janeway: "Battle possessed undeniable intoxication for
anyone trained to do it."
Book Five of Six: Once Burned by Peter David
(New Frontier)
Mackenzie Calhoun: "You never forget the first man you
kill."
Calhoun: "Stupidity is remarkably evenhanded."
Cap: "The easy answers don't always present themselves
readily."
Cap: "No man should know his own destiny. No man can
know; otherwise he just becomes a pawn of fate and no longer a man."
Calhoun: "I acknowledge authority. I acknowledge that those
in authority have power over me. But that is not a condition that I take
either lightly or for granted, no matter how much they endeavor to drill the
chain of command into me. When those in authority are acting stupidly, I
do not feel constrained to join them. That doesn't make for good officers.
Just more stupidity. Rules and regulations are not handed down on high
from the gods. They're made by people, mortal people, no more, no less.
People who can't be expected to anticipate every eventuality. What some
individuals perceive as immutable laws that restrict our actions, I see as
guidelines that indicate what a particular body of opinion-makers believes to be
the best way of completing a mission and coming home safely. But just
because they believe it to be the best doesn't automatically make it so, and
under no circumstances is it the only one. And if there are consequences
for deviating from the limits that others have made, then I will accept those
consequences. But no one, ... is going to tell me how to live my life or
force me to do that which I know, in my heart, to be wrong. I will be
free, in thought and action."
Stephanie Kenyon (to Calhoun): "Regrets are terrible things
to have, because you know what? Life's just too damned short."
Byron: "Once someone is in power ... they tend to view
things a bit differently."
Calhoun: "They say that silence is golden. They don't
know what the hell they're talking about."
Calhoun: "... the funny thing about the road to ruin is
that you rarely stride down it. It's taken in small, delicate steps, and
you don't realize how completely doomed you are until you're much too far
along."
Calhoun: "... when you look for something, more often than
not you find it."
Calhoun: "... sometimes good people go somewhat
crazy."
Calhoun: "It's amazing how slowly you can move when you
want to go very, very quickly."
Book Six of Six: Where Sea Meets Sky by Jerry
Oltion (Pre-TOS: Capt. Pike)
Perri: "Even the most vocal advocate can harbor
doubts."
Nowan: "... a true man will rise above his bloodlust and
not let passion rule his actions."
Nowan: "To overcome one's passion is in no way cowardly.
It often requires great courage."
Nowan: "Men who need to kill things to prove themselves
have no honor."
Hompaq: "A warrior should learn to keep his mind on the
battle."