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Meredith - Poems |
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Ye ignorant and idle
fishermen!
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Warner - World's Best Literature - v07 - Cic to Cuv |
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»
And some one came out of the cheers in the street,
With a face pale as stone, to say
something
to me.
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Warner - World's Best Literature - v05 - Bro to Cai |
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There are a few
things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm
electronic
works
even without complying with the full terms of this agreement.
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Robert Forst - North of Boston |
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" No, I
positively
assure you, not very easily.
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Cicero- Letters to and from Cassius |
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337 "Se accommodaret,"
accommodate
himself.
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Calvin Commentary - Acts - c |
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But let your
cushions
swell with Leuconian wool, and soft purple covers adorn your couches; and let a favourite share your couch, who, when mixing the Caecuban wine for your guests, tortures them with the ruddiest of lips, how earnestly then will you desire to live thrice as long as Nestor; and study to lose no part of a single day!
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Martial - Book XI - Epigrams |
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It lacks proof on many points, but depends on the evidence of the people of Heracleia and particularly - the theme that
permeates
the whole speech - on his reputation as a talented poet and a charming scholar.
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Roman Translations |
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"[1]
The
Imagination
modifies images, and gives unity to variety; it sees all
things in one, _il piu nell' uno_.
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Coleridge - Table Talk |
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Then kissed the king of kin renowned,
Scyldings' chieftain, that
choicest
thane,
and fell on his neck.
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Beowulf, translated by Francis Gummere |
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Oh, from out the sounding cells,
What a gush of euphony
voluminously
wells!
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Edgar Allen Poe |
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The honorable orators,
Always the honorable orators,
Buttoning the buttons on their prinz alberts,
Pronouncing the syllables "sac-ri-fice,"
Juggling
those bitter salt-soaked syllables--
Do they ever gag with hot ashes in their mouths?
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American Poetry - 1922 |
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I call
to mind such a case many years ago of an English authoress, well known
in her day, who wrote such beautiful child tales,
touching
and lovely in
every possible way.
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Twain - Speeches |
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Cum
gravi\us
dor\so subi\h onus.
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Latin - Elements of Latin Prosody and Metre Compiled with Selections |
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Bernardo
m'accennava, e sorridea,
perch' io guardassi suso; ma io era
gia per me stesso tal qual ei volea:
che la mia vista, venendo sincera,
e piu e piu intrava per lo raggio
de l'alta luce che da se e vera.
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Dante - La Divina Commedia |
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A line
just
distinguishes
it.
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Gertrude Stein - Tender Buttons |
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The
'Qur'an' might well suffice as a directive code for a small body of
men whose daily life was simple, and whose
organization
was of the
crudest kind.
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Warner - World's Best Literature - v02 - Aqu to Bag |
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Only the ABC "20120" program of May 12, 1983,
explored
the Soviet motive in any depth, despite the constant mass-media reiteration of the SHK line.
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Manufacturing Consent - Chomsky |
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Are you, too, going to-night to
the
Christmas
Eve Mass?
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Gustavo Adolfo Becuqer |
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There are
imitations
of Whitman
that are formless: one feels no will or purpose in them; they make
no more impact upon the reader's mind than vapor upon his hand.
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Warner - World's Best Literature - v27 - Wat to Zor |
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'
It is unwise to insist on
doctrinal
points as vital to religion.
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James Russell Lowell |
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He that relieves another upon the bare suggestion
and bowels of pity doth not this so much for his sake as for
his own; for by
compassion
we make others' misery our own, and
so, by relieving them, we relieve ourselves also.
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Warner - World's Best Literature - v05 - Bro to Cai |
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Let them try to enable us to anticipate
future virtues, or virtues that will never be found
on earth, although they may exist
somewhere
in
the world !
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Nietzsche - v09 - The Dawn of Day |
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A thousand
different
odors meet
And mingle in its rare perfume,
Such as the winds of summer waft
At open windows through a room!
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Longfellow |
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TO PHILLIS, TO LOVE AND LIVE WITH HIM
Live, live with me, and thou shalt see
The
pleasures
I'll prepare for thee:
What sweets the country can afford
Shall bless thy bed, and bless thy board.
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Robert Herrick - Lyric Poems |
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The warders at the gates, the kitchen-maids,
The very beggars would stand off from me,
And I, their queen, would climb the stairs alone,
Pass through the banquet-hall, a loathed thing,
And seek my chambers for a hiding-place,
And I should find them but a sepulchre,
The very rushes rotted on the floors,
The fire in ashes on the
freezing
hearth.
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Sara Teasdale - Helen of Troy |
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Besides these men who, fighting the battle of life, are not
entirely absorbed by the passion of love-for, even in the sketch of
the murderous Sforza, much stress is laid by the poet on his war-
like
qualities
and the astuteness of the Italian politician who,
standing between the French king and the emperor, knows how
to reconcile his loyalty with his advantage—we find among
Massinger's lovers, also, the conventional types of the contem-
porary drama : the devoted lover who lives on the smile of
his lady, such as Ladislaus, the humble husband of the proud
Honoria, Caldorio and the over-bashful Hortensio, and young
libertines like Adorio and Alonzo, whose conversion, usually, is
as incredible as it is sudden.
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Cambridge History of English Literature - 1908 - v06 |
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First of all, won't the madness be
contagious?
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Foucault-Psychiatric-Power-1973-74 |
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Supported or super- vised by the executives of the USPD (Independent
Socialist
Party), the in- spectorate of the technical division of the signal corps (Itenacht) founded a Central Broadcasting Bureau (ZFL), which on November 25 was granted a broadcasting license by the executive committee of the workers and soldiers council.
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Kittler-Gramophone-Film-Typewriter |
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7
Alexander
withstood them with equal spirit, fighting alone against thousands.
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Justinus - Epitome of Historae Philippicae |
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N, THE HERMIT
At Ch'ang-an--a full foot of snow;
A levee at dawn--to bestow
congratulations
on the Emperor.
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Waley - 170 Chinese Poems |
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Rilke's
suspicion
of Trakl's work, ("Wer mag er gewesen sein?
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Trakl - Falling to the Stars- Georg Trakl’s “In Venedig” in Light of Venice Poems by Nietzsche and Rilke |
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' Would a
British Foreign
Secretary
in 1879, ^89, or 1899 have
said the same of a Russo-German alliance?
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Robertson - Bismarck |
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My answer is that hyper-communication erodes those
contours
that used to give form, drama, and flavor to my everyday life.
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Gumbrecht - Infinite Availability - On Hyper-Communication and Old Age |
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They don't
understand
that it's an honour to them and
not to me!
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Dostoevsky - White Nights and Other Stories |
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Iret adhuc in verba dolor, ni Iuppiter alto
coepisset solio (voces
adamante
notabat
200
Atropos et Lachesis iungebat stamina dictis) :
" nec te, Roma, diu nec te patiemur inultam,
Africa.
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Claudian - 1922 - Loeb |
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But of
all kinds of ambition, what from the refinement of the times, from
different systems of criticism, and from the
divisions
of party, that
which pursues poetical fame is the wildest.
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Oliver Goldsmith |
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It is a
dangerous
thing to reform anyone.
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Oscar Wilde - Aphorisms, the Soul of Man |
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A gradual path: first
accumulate
enough merit through the various virtuous methods, then combine it with the gradual development of the wisdom based on emptiness, the only final antidote.
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Aryadeva - Four Hundred Verses |
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Hence it is deduced that both religious and profane dramatic representations were then exhibited, and it has been also
asserted that actors by
profession
were known at the same time.
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Dodsley - Select Collection of Old Plays - v1 |
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14948 (#532) ##########################################
14948
JOHANN LUDWIG TIECK
"At the dawn of day I rose, and scarcely knowing what I
did,
unfastened
the door of our little hut.
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Warner - World's Best Literature - v25 - Tas to Tur |
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org
For
additional
contact information:
Dr.
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A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man by James Joyce |
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o f g i v i n g u p Pratimok~a v o w s a r e s e v e r a l : o n e g i v e s b a c k h i s precepts, after sincere reflection, in the presence of anyone [capable of] understanding,31 or deserts the
suitable
environment [for living the religious life],32 or commits an Expulsion offence,33 or becomes hermaphrodite,34 or rejects the life of virtue altogether.
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Richard-Sherburne-A-Lamp-for-the-Path-and-Commentary-of-Atisha |
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One can claim with some justice that Finnegans Wake describes not a subject, but "the creative
becoming
of being as a continuous becoming," and yet such a claim does not
Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner.
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Brett Bourbon - 1996 - Constructing a Replacement for the Soul |
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The
unfortunate
and abject heir ;
Guardians most fit to entertain
The orphan of the hurricane.
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Marvell - Poems |
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148 PHILOSOPHY AND MORALS-
remarked in the men of
literature
and the
philosophers, also discovers itself among the
men of science.
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Madame de Stael - Germany |
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160
Last, sly Veiento with Catullus came,
Deadly Catullus, who, at beauty's name
Took fire,
although
unseen: a wretch, whose crimes
Struck with amaze even those prodigious times.
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Satires |
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"But I can't understand it,"
repeated
the Blastoderm.
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Kipling - Poems |
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Hops are
spongy thmgs-you can crush a bushel of them into a quart pot if you choose,
so after each scoop one of the pickers would lean over into the bm and stir the
hops up to make them he looser, and then the measurer would hoist the end of
the bm and shake the hops
together
again Some mornings he had orders to
‘take them heavy’, and would shovel them in so that he got a couple of bushels
at each scoop, whereat there were angry yells of, ‘Look how the b— ’s ramming
them down’ Why don’t you bloody well stamp on thenP’ etc.
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Orwell - A Clergyman's Daughter |
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1 Has it a
speaking
virtue?
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Robert Herrick - Lyric Poems |
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Nietzsche probably went too far when he suggested that the defanging of men was the premeditated project of a group of pastoral breedersöthat is, a project of
clerical
or Pauline insight that foresaw everything that men might be capable of if they were free and left to themselves, and so instituted compensatory and preventative measures against it.
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Sloterdijk - Rules for the Human Zoo |
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(Alcools: Le Pont Mirabeau)
Under the Mirabeau flows the Seine
And our amours
Shall I remember it again
Joy always followed after Pain
Comes the night sounds the hour
The days go by I endure
Hand in hand rest face to face
While underneath
The bridge of our arms there races
So weary a wave of eternal gazes
Comes the night sounds the hour
The days go by I endure
Love vanishes like the water's flow
Love vanishes
How life is slow
And how Hope lives blow by blow
Comes the night sounds the hour
The days go by I endure
Let the hour pass the day the same
Time past returns
Nor love again
Under the Mirabeau flows the Seine
Comes the night sounds the hour
The days go by I endure
Twilight
(Alcools: Crepuscule)
Brushed by the shadows of the dead
On the grass where day expires
Columbine strips bare admires
her body in the pond instead
A charlatan of
twilight
formed
Boasts of the tricks to be performed
The sky without a stain unmarred
Is studded with the milk-white stars
From the boards pale Harlequin
First salutes the spectators
Sorcerers from Bohemia
Fairies sundry enchanters
Having unhooked a star
He proffers it with outstretched hand
While with his feet a hanging man
Sounds the cymbals bar by bar
The blind man rocks a pretty child
The doe with all her fauns slips by
The dwarf observes with saddened pose
How Harlequin magically grows
Clotilde
(Alcools: Clotilde)
The anemone and flower that weeps
have grown in the garden plain
where Melancholy sleeps
between Amor and Disdain
There our shadows linger too
that the midnight will disperse
the sun that makes them dark to view
will with them in dark immerse
The deities of living dew
Let their hair flow down entire
It must be that you pursue
That lovely shadow you desire
The White Snow
(Alcools: La blanche neige)
The angels the angels in the sky
One's dressed as an officer
One's dressed as a chef today
And the others sing
Fine sky-coloured officer
Sweet Spring when Christmas is long gone
Will deck you with a lovely sun
A lovely sun
The chef plucks geese
Ah!
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Appoloinaire |
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Eine
Fallstudie
zu Louis-Ferdinand Ce?
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| Source: |
Gumbrecht - Publications.1447-2006 |
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But the years of travel, rather than university studies,
completed an education based on the
classical
training of a
German Gymnasium (Darmstadt) in the latter half of the nine-
teenth century.
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Stefan George - Studies |
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Cum scholte latis genus htesit agris,
Nota quae sedes fuerat bubulcis ;
Cum, tog^ abjecta, pavidus
reliquit
Oppida doctus.
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| Source: |
Marvell - Poems |
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Leconte de Lisle (1818-1894)
Leconte de Lisle
'Leconte de Lisle'
Library of the World's best Literature, Ancient and Modern (p579, 1896)
Internet
Book Archive Images
The Jaguar's Dream
Beneath the dark mahoganies, creepers in flower
Hang in the heavy, motionless, fly-filled air,
Twining among the tree-stumps, falling where,
They cradle the brilliant parrot, the quarreller,
The wild monkeys, spiders with yellow hair.
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| Source: |
19th Century French Poetry |
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That's all that's left already of our true play,
Where the pure poet's gesture, humble, vast
Must deny the dream, the enemy of his trust:
So that on the morning of his exalted stay,
When ancient death is for him as for Gautier,
The un-opening of sacred eyes, the being-still,
The solid tomb may rise,
ornament
this hill,
The sepulchre where lies the power to blight,
And miserly silence and the massive night.
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| Question: |
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| Source: |
Mallarme - Poems |
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University of Chicago Press:
Excerpts
from Modern Trends in Islam by H.
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Said - Orientalism - Chapter 01 |
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Stormed by the
Samnites
after the Caudine victory, i.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Source: |
The history of Rome; tr. with the sanction of the ... v.5. Mommsen, Theodor, 1817-1903 |
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How comes it then that they prove so
much
stronger
than you?
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Epictetus |
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Luhmann, Niklas, The Future Cannot Begin: Temporal
Structures
in Modern Society , Social Research, 43:1 (1976:Spring) p.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
The-future-cannot-begin-Niklas-Luhmann |
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He has a fouth o' auld nick-nackets:
Rusty airn caps and jinglin jackets,
Wad haud the
Lothians
three in tackets,
A towmont gude;
And parritch-pats and auld saut-backets,
Before the Flood.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Robert Burns - Poems and Songs |
|
Marks, notations and other marginalia present in the original volume will appear in this file - a reminder of this book's long journey from the
publisher
to a library and finally to you.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Childrens - Longfellow - Child's Hour |
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As to what regards the commonwealth (for this is by no means to be omitted since he never
neglected
it), he behaved with such public spirit that while others excited seditions from views of profit or ambition, he exposed his life for the safety of his country.
| Guess: |
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| Source: |
Universal Anthology - v04 |
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When they had
assembled
together
the Fox proposed that they should all do away
with their tails.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Aesop's Fables by Aesop |
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) The reason is
apparently
that the technology and geography of war- fare, at least for a war between anything like equal powers dur- ing the century ending in World War II, kept coercive violence from being decisive before military victory was achieved.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Schelling - The Diplomacy of Violence |
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If a man have a
crooked, ill-favored wife, who yet in his eye may stand in competition
with Venus, is it not the same as if she were truly
beautiful?
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Erasmus - In Praise of Folly |
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Do not say
"I love her for her smile--her look--her way
Of speaking gently,--for a trick of thought
That falls in well with mine, and certes brought
A sense of
pleasant
ease on such a day"--
For these things in themselves, Belovèd, may
Be changed, or change for thee,--and love, so wrought,
May be unwrought so.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Elizabeth Browning - 4 |
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Only a few, such as Noam Chomsky and some recent
monotonous
thinkers, have been almost as successful in their reconstructions as earlier generations—even if only in outsider markets.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Sloterdijk - Rage and Time |
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I will bewail without ceasing, and
By these feelings of unbearable suffering,
Like a sick and dying man whose
strength
is exhausted, I will experience gasping, clenching of teeth, and thea
cracking of the skin,
Flesh emerging from the wounds, broad cracks of the
skin: the eight (cold hells).
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| Question: |
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| Source: |
Jig-Me-Lingpa-The-Dzogchen-Innermost-Essence-Preliminary-Practice |
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' What instinct of
mankind is
gratified
by such words?
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Treitschke - 1914 - His Doctrine of German Destiny |
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It is true that the tongue of the
muse had at no time been wholly silent; that now and then a burst of
sublime woe, like the song of "Mary, weep no more for me," and of
lasting
merriment
and humour, like that of "Tibbie Fowler," proved
that the fire of natural poesie smouldered, if it did not blaze; while
the social strains of the unfortunate Fergusson revived in the city,
if not in the field, the memory of him who sang the "Monk and the
Miller's wife.
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Robert Burns- |
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Benign stars, whose apparition renders the gourmands
of every category sparkling, radiant, and
quivering!
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Warner - World's Best Literature - v04 - Bes to Bro |
|
Lilacs in dooryards
Holding quiet conversations with an early moon;
Lilacs watching a
deserted
house
Settling sideways into the grass of an old road;
Lilacs, wind-beaten, staggering under a lopsided shock of bloom
Above a cellar dug into a hill.
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| Source: |
American Poetry - 1922 |
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"
A
whitebeard
stood hushed on the pathway, the flesh
of his face as dried grass,
And in folds round his eyes and his mouth, he sad
as a child without milk;
And the dreams of the islands were gone, and I knew how
men sorrow and pass,
And their hound, and their horse, and their love, and their eyes
that glimmer like silk.
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| Question: |
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| Source: |
Yeats - Poems |
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excellent
I yes, yes, carry her to him, hamper
him by all means, ha!
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Richard Brinsley Sheridan |
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My memory
Is still
obscured
by seeing your coming
And going.
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| Question: |
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| Source: |
Paul Eluard - Poems |
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Who dare reproach the Genoese Calvin for
burning the
physician
Servetus at the stake?
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Human, All Too Human- A Book for Free Spirits by Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche |
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Three have already been
mentioned, and I do not think it is insular prejudice which
inclines
me
to regard Alcuin as the central figure.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Cambridge Medieval History - v3 - Germany and the Western Empire |
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I have heard you praised
For giving gifts; and you will pardon us,
Although
I cannot go into your house.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Yeats |
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A fisherman at that moment passed,
and going
directly
to the water's side, be-
gan unfastening a little wherry which
- : '.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Childrens - Tales of the Hermitage |
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They are led by a new class, a "tiny
seed," as Lenin put it,41 that means to
transform
and will transform everything.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Nolte - 1974 - The Relationship between "Bourgeois" and "Marxist" Historiography |
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Generated for (University of
Chicago)
on 2015-01-02 09:07 GMT / http://hdl.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Catullus - Stewart - Selections |
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" This refers to the monks who assassinated Maudgalyayana and who
affirmed
the non-existence of past action:
yat karmdbhyatitam tan ndsti.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Abhidharmakosabhasyam-Vol-3-Vasubandhu-Poussin-Pruden-1991-PDF-Search-Engine |
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There would have been something
sad, unutterably dreary, in all this, had I not been conscious that it
lay at my own option to recall
whatever
was valuable in the past.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Hawthorne - Scarlett Letter |
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For Neumann, one's journey through life is to recapture this lost wholeness (returning to the root, the Dao) in full
consciousness
and to see, in the transparency of the world, the numinous substratum (Dao) and that the human is an aspect of numinous existence.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Teaching-the-Daode-Jing |
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That is my lord-
Leonatus?
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Shakespeare |
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Princeton:
Princeton
University Press.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Schwarz - Committments |
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It would require first to
renounce
a habitual false denigration.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Sloterdijk - Rules for the Human Zoo |
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Why, then, the
excitement, why the
protests?
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Soviet Union - 1931 - Fighting the Red Trade Menace |
|
Apples on the small trees
are hard,
too small,
too late ripened
by a
desperate
sun
that struggles through sea-mist.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
H. D. - Sea Garden |
|
Italian friend- liness meant much to Germany in March and
September
1938; but after all, the support given was only moral.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Propaganda - 1939 - Foreign Affairs - Will Hitler Save Democracy |
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Touquedillon
related all this to Picrochole, and more and more
exasperated his courage, saying to him, These clowns are afraid to some
purpose.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Gargantua and Pantagruel by François Rabelais |
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Im
Holunder
vor der Kammer
Kla?
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Trakl - Dichtungen |
|
This
gave rise to the
following
dream:
_She was sitting with her husband in the theater; the one side of the
stalls was quite empty.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Dream Psychology by Sigmund Freud |
|
For him, the existence of radical evil is
accompanied
by the experience of the radical absence of meaning.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
The Totalitarian Mind - Fischbein |
|
by Bernd
Schoeller
(Frankfurt a.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Trakl - ‘. . Und Gassen enden schwarz und sonderbar’- Poetic Dialogues with Georg Trakl in the 1930s and 40s |
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But now a cry of
distress
calleth me hastily
away from thee.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Nietzsche - v11 - Thus Spake Zarathustra |
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The State hath given you license to stay on land, for the space of six
weeks; and let it not trouble you, if your
occasions
ask further time,
for the law in this point is not precise; and I do not doubt, but my
self shall be able, to obtain for you such further time, as may be
convenient.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Bacon |
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— a guide to the
understanding
of the Homeric
question, iii.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Nietzsche - v18 - Epilogue, Index |
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