George R.R. Martin Quote
The air smelled of paper and dust and years. Jon plucked a scroll from a bin, blew off the worst of the dust. A corner flaked off between his fingers as he unrolled it. Look, this one is crumbling, he said, frowning over the faded script.Be gentle. Sam came around the table and took the scroll from his hand, holding it as if it were a wounded animal. The important books used to be copied over when they needed them. Some of the oldest have been copied half a hundred times, probably.Well, don’t bother copying that one. Twenty-three barrels of pickled cod, eighteen jars of fish oil, a cask of salt . . .An inventory, Sam said, or perhaps a bill of sale.Who cares how much pickled cod they ate six hundred years ago? Jon wondered.I would. Sam carefully replaced the scroll in the bin from which Jon had plucked it. You can learn so much from ledgers like that, truly you can. It can tell you how many men were in the Night’s Watch then, how they lived, what they ate . . .They ate food, said Jon, and they lived as we live.You’d be surprised. This vault is a treasure, Jon.If you say so. Jon was doubtful. Treasure meant gold, silver, and jewels, not dust, spiders, and rotting leather.I do, the fat boy blurted. He was older than Jon, a man grown by law, but it was hard to think of him as anything but a boy. I found drawings of the faces in the trees, and a book about the tongue of the children of the forest . . . works that even the Citadel doesn’t have, scrolls from old Valyria, counts ofthe seasons written by maesters dead a thousand years . . .The books will still be here when we return.If we return . . .
The air smelled of paper and dust and years. Jon plucked a scroll from a bin, blew off the worst of the dust. A corner flaked off between his fingers as he unrolled it. Look, this one is crumbling, he said, frowning over the faded script.Be gentle. Sam came around the table and took the scroll from his hand, holding it as if it were a wounded animal. The important books used to be copied over when they needed them. Some of the oldest have been copied half a hundred times, probably.Well, don’t bother copying that one. Twenty-three barrels of pickled cod, eighteen jars of fish oil, a cask of salt . . .An inventory, Sam said, or perhaps a bill of sale.Who cares how much pickled cod they ate six hundred years ago? Jon wondered.I would. Sam carefully replaced the scroll in the bin from which Jon had plucked it. You can learn so much from ledgers like that, truly you can. It can tell you how many men were in the Night’s Watch then, how they lived, what they ate . . .They ate food, said Jon, and they lived as we live.You’d be surprised. This vault is a treasure, Jon.If you say so. Jon was doubtful. Treasure meant gold, silver, and jewels, not dust, spiders, and rotting leather.I do, the fat boy blurted. He was older than Jon, a man grown by law, but it was hard to think of him as anything but a boy. I found drawings of the faces in the trees, and a book about the tongue of the children of the forest . . . works that even the Citadel doesn’t have, scrolls from old Valyria, counts ofthe seasons written by maesters dead a thousand years . . .The books will still be here when we return.If we return . . .
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About George R.R. Martin
In 2005, Lev Grossman of Time called Martin "the American Tolkien", and in 2011, he was included on the annual Time 100 list of the most influential people in the world. He is a longtime resident of Santa Fe, New Mexico, where he helped fund Meow Wolf and owns the Jean Cocteau Cinema. The city commemorates March 29 as George R. R. Martin Day.