- Ambassador Londo Mollari: My shoes are too tight.
- Vir Cotto: Excuse me?
- Ambassador Londo Mollari: Something my father said. He was old, very old at the time. I went into his room, and he was sitting alone in the dark crying. So, I asked him what was wrong, and he said, "My shoes are too tight. But, it doesn't matter, because I have forgotten how to dance." I never understood what that meant until now. My shoes are too tight. And, I have forgotten how to dance.
- Vir Cotto: I don't understand.
- Ambassador Londo Mollari: Nor should you.
- [last lines]
- Malcolm Biggs: I can't believe you did this to me, Susan. What kind of a human are you to side with -
- [looks at Delenn and Mayan]
- Malcolm Biggs: *them* ?
- Lt. Cmdr. Susan Ivanova: I find many of these people to be more human than you and your kind. But I don't suppose you'd understand that.
- Malcolm Biggs: I don't know you anymore.
- Lt. Cmdr. Susan Ivanova: I never knew you.
- Lt. Cmdr. Susan Ivanova: You're a vicious man.
- Michael Garibaldi: I'm Head of Security. It's in the job description.
- [first lines]
- Delenn: The last poem you read tonight--
- Shaal Mayan: "In the Light of Two Moons."
- Delenn: Did I not hear it when we were--?
- Shaal Mayan: Both too young to know anything about anything. We could only feel and wonder what it all meant. But you recall correctly. I did start it then, poor and groping for meaning. It has matured and changed over the years. I finally knew that it was ready last month. Tonight was its first performance.