Differences Between the Prefatory
Absorptions and the
Intermediate
Dhyana 1254
i.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
AbhidharmakosabhasyamVol-4VasubandhuPoussinPruden1991 |
|
"
XXV
Herminius
beat his bosom:
But never a word he spake.
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Macaulay - Lays of Ancient Rome |
|
Duke Phyney with a rout
Of moe than of a
thousand
men environd round about
The valiant Persey all alone.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Ovid - Book 5 |
|
155
Seething sand, or Scylla the snare, or lonely
Charybdis?
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Catullus - Ellis - Poems and Fragments |
|
Man has but one soul, 't is ordained,
And each soul but one love, I add;
Yet souls are damned and love's profaned;
These
nightingales
will sing me mad!
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Elizabeth Browning - 4 |
|
LEILI
The serpents are asleep among the poppies,
The
fireflies
light the soundless panther's way
To tangled paths where shy gazelles are straying,
And parrot-plumes outshine the dying day.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Sarojini Naidu - Golden Threshold |
|
"32
For Marx, even the
immediate
interests of the proletariat or of a mass party are interests alien to scholarship.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Nolte - 1974 - The Relationship between "Bourgeois" and "Marxist" Historiography |
|
Naturally enough, therefore, the Greek in
marrying
looked above all
things to the chances of a worthy offspring.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Aristotle and Ancient Educational Ideals by Thomas Davidson |
|
But when he had called the
grandmother
for a long time without receiving any answer, he was obliged to go himself.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Universal Anthology - v01 |
|
Now, however, the second exercise comes in, the
living exhibition of morality of character by examples, in which
attention is
directed
to purity of will, first only as a negative
perfection, in so far as in an action done from duty no motives of
inclination have any influence in determining it.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Kant - Critique of Practical Reason |
|
' In Clarendon's account of his own early days, his
'
narrative, like the memoirs of so many successful lawyers, furnishes
us, unintentionally, with instruction as to the art of 'getting on’;
as he progresses, he falls into a way of attributing prejudice
against, or dislike of, himself to small and more or less accidental
causes (see his account of his early quarrel with Cromwell), and
begins his long list of
nolo’s
with a statement as to his resolution
not to be named secretary of state.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Cambridge History of English Literature - 1908 - v07 |
|
May the Federal
Government
require common carriers
to provide special standards of safety for its patrons?
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Beard - 1931 - Questions and Problems in American Government - Syllabus by Erbe |
|
What, then's, the
principle?
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Lucretius |
|
DON JUAN:
¿Muéstrasme
ahora Now your friendship, at the end?
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Jose Zorrilla |
|
(The office of) the accountants[3] prepared the complete accounts of the year to be submitted to the son of Heaven which were
reverently
received by the chief minister.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Confucius - Book of Rites |
|
370-372) Let the wage
promised
to a friend be fixed; even with your
brother smile--and get a witness; for trust and mistrust, alike ruin
men.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Hesiod |
|
Generated for (University of
Chicago)
on 2014-12-26 11:21 GMT / http://hdl.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Ovid - 1865 - Ovid by Alfred Church |
|
80
Up the Haymarket hill he oft
whistles
his way,
Thrusts his hands in a waggon, and smells at the hay; [30]
He thinks of the fields he so often hath mown,
And is happy as if the rich freight were his own.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
William Wordsworth |
|
’ For he that is not
satisfied
with being wicked himself here, must be tormented There with the due of the guilt of others also.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
St Gregory - Moralia - Job |
|
[469] If ever on a clear night, when Night in the heavens shows to men all her stars in their brightness and no star is borne faintly gleaming at the mid-month moon, but they all sharply pierce the
darkness
– if in such an hour wonder rises in thy heart to mark on every side the heaven cleft by a broad belt, or if someone at they side point out that circle set with brilliants – that is what men call the Milky Way.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Aratus - Phaenomena |
|
Naturally enough, therefore, the Greek in
marrying
looked above all
things to the chances of a worthy offspring.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Aristotle and Ancient Educational Ideals by Thomas Davidson |
|
The
whirling
tissue of light
is woven and grows solid beneath us ;
The sea-clear sapphire of air, the sea-dark clarity, stretches both sea-cliff and ocean.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Pound-Ezra-Umbra-The-Early-Poems-of-Ezra-Pound |
|
The way they arise is that they
alternate~
When the mind is settled it is not moving, and when it is mov- ing it is not settled.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Wang-ch-ug-Dor-je-Mahamudra-Eliminating-the-Darkness-of-Ignorance |
|
For this corruption is a
pestilence
of animals so far as they are animals ; but the other is a pestilence of men so far as they are men.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Universal Anthology - v07 |
|
This most valuable insect is found in China, on
the
mulberry
trees.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Childrens - The Creation |
|
* You provide, in accordance with
paragraph
1.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Wilde - Charmides |
|
; but this inconsiderate speech does not
constitute
the course of action of this name.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Abhidharmakosabhasyam-Vol-2-Vasubandhu-Poussin-Pruden-1991 |
|
posed here--comes about exclusively in the observing subjects, is produced exclusively by them in and from those
disconnected
elements of sensation; whereas the societal unity is realized only by its own elements, nothing else, since they are conscious and actively synthesize, and needs no spectator.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
SIMMEL-Georg-Sociology-Inquiries-Into-the-Construction-of-Social-Forms-2vol |
|
'T was not thy wont to hinder so, --
Retrieve
thine industry.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Dickinson - Three - Complete |
|
'T was not thy wont to hinder so, --
Retrieve
thine industry.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Dickinson - Three - Complete |
|
The
significance
_is_ the
poetry.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Lascelles Abercrombie - The Epic |
|
Child Verse
FROG-MAKING
O AID Frog papa to Frog mamma,
*^ " Where is our little
daughter
?
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Childrens - Child Verse |
|
Life's hopes waste all to
nothingness
away
As showers at night wash out the steps of day.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
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| Source: |
John Clare |
|
He evidently alluded
to dresses which
resemble
the surface of the waves, and which we term
'watered'; and which the Romans called 'undulatae,' from 'unda,' a
'wave.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Ovid - Art of Love |
|
By historical perspective, I am referring to ap- proaches which help us situate the thoughts of someone like
Tsongkhapa
within the historical and intellectual contexts of his time.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Tsongkhapa-s-Qualms-About-Early-Tibetan-Interpretations-of-Madhyamaka-Philosophy |
|
liT In one important sense the reference to "utopias" is misleading here because originally the literary device of a utopia was invented Just because critics were 9101
Copyright (c) 2000 Bell & Howell Information and
Learning
Company Copyright (c) New School of Social Research
?
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
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| Source: |
The-future-cannot-begin-Niklas-Luhmann |
|
One of his characteristic
spellings
is
'wright' for 'write'.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Donne - 2 |
|
Title of Play:
The
Merchant
of Venice
?
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Sandulescu-Literary-Allusions-in-Finnegans-Wake |
|
Consider also a passage from the late Ian Fleming's Moonraker:
The
amenities
of Blades, apart from the gambling!
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
re-joyce-a-burgess |
|
The Doctor's contention was that Don Anastasio
would have lived a most miserable life, ending in an early and
uncomfortable death, had not good fortune wafted him hurriedly
out of Mexico and safely deposited him in New York; where
his days were long in the land, and very
pleasant
to him in the
comfortable haven in the Casa Napoléon that he had secured by
his judicious marriage with Madame.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Warner - World's Best Literature - v14 - Ibn to Juv |
|
Such, for example, are the noble verses
that tell of the
immanence
of God in his creation at the close of the
first epistle, or the magnificent invective against tyranny and
superstition in the third (ll.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Alexander Pope |
|
The Foundation makes no representations concerning
the
copyright
status of any work in any country outside the United
States.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
French - Apollinaire - Alcools |
|
Despite this, I would argue that many, in their use of
philosophical
perspectives from their own intellectual milieu, are in reality interested in the contemporary relevance of the text.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Teaching-the-Daode-Jing |
|
En un
triangulo
puso Melando des casas pin-
tadas, la una con la puera abierta, y la otra cer-
rada.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Lope de Vega - Works - Los Pastores de Belen |
|
"The ace wins,"
remarked
Herman, turning up his card without glancing at
it.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Pushkin - Queen of Spades |
|
Who was sorry for Li, the Swift of Wing,[16]
When his white head
vanished
from the Three Fronts?
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Li Po |
|
It was left by will to
his nephew and heir John Jackson, second son of his sister Paulina,
who once occupied the curious
position
of domestic servant in her
brother's house.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Warner - World's Best Literature - v19 - Oli to Phi |
|
Ông làm quan
Thượng
thư Bộ Binh.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
stella-03 |
|
What rumour without is there
breeding?
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Pushkin - Talisman |
|
Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
prominently displaying the sentence set forth in
paragraph
1.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Austen - Northanger Abbey |
|
To what extent would your people
not suffer, and how far would the
deficiency
in
animals not go?
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Treitschke - 1915 - Confessions of Frederick the Great |
|
A chill colde sweat my sieged limmes opprest, and downe apace
From all my bodie
steaming
drops did fall of watrie hew.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Ovid - Book 5 |
|
s Patrick, who was nephew to the great Irish Apostle,
according
to Jocelin,5^ after the death of his uncle, retired to Glastonbury, and was there buried.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
O'Hanlon - Lives of the Irish Saints - v8 |
|
When Cimabue had the cry it was, it
seems, worth
thinking
of those that run; but to-day, when they can write
as well as read, one can sit with one's companions under the hedgerow
contentedly.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Yeats - Poems |
|
If but a youthful shepherd cross my path,
He singing on the way--I sadly musing,
He in his fields, I in my darksome alleys--
Then my heart murmurs: "O, ye
mouldering
towers!
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Victor Hugo - Poems |
|
Of this
subjugation
we know not
what shall be the limit; and when one knows not what the limit shall
be, he may be the ruler of a state.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Tao Te Ching |
|
And he died in the
following
manner.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Diogenes Laertius |
|
Millions of living sparks, rosy, azure,
green and golden, were whirling around the jewels like a storm of fiery
atoms, like a dizzy round of those spirits of flame which fascinate with
their brightness and their
marvellous
unrest.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Gustavo Adolfo Becuqer |
|
These
alternate
versions of the past that persist in a spectral form constitute the ontological openness of the his- torical process, as was clear to G.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Hegel - Zizek - With Hegel Beyond He |
|
Their other customs are impious and abominable, and owe
their
prevalence
to their depravity.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Tacitus |
|
We have,
each of us in his pocket, five or six millions in diamonds; you are more
clever than I; you must go and bring Miss
Cunegonde
from Buenos Ayres.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Candide by Voltaire |
|
Si venne
deducendo
infino a quici;
poscia conchiuse: <
convien di vostri effetti le radici:
per ch'un nasce Solone e altro Serse,
altro Melchisedech e altro quello
che, volando per l'aere, il figlio perse.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Dante - La Divina Commedia |
|
'' Of course it has always been possible (and it seems to have become almost intellectually fashionable as of recent) to apply the
opposite
scale of evaluation.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Gumbrecht - Incarnation, Now - Five Brief Thoughts and a Non-Conclusive Finding |
|
Thence
arose that long struggle of the Breton churches against Roman
pretensions, which is so admirably
narrated
by M.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Literary and Philosophical Essays- French, German and Italian by Immanuel Kant |
|
'
First came her damsels, a decorous file,
And then his Highness' eunuchs, black and white;
The train might reach a quarter of a mile:
His majesty was always so polite
As to announce his visits a long while
Before he came,
especially
at night;
For being the last wife of the Emperour,
She was of course the favorite of the four.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Bryon - Don Juan |
|
it
FORMS,
MEASURES
AND RHYTHMS 35
IV.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Elmbendor - Poetry and Poets |
|
One day his mother was
preparing
him for his
morning nap, when he turned and said to her,
"I don't love you, mother, I don't.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Childrens - Children's Sayings |
|
Stoddart, whose name will long live in the
satirical
verses of Moore, and others, as Dr.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Hunt - Fourth Estate - History of Newspapers and Liberty of Press - v2 |
|
Spain I
bequeath
to him, still bathed in blood
From Philip's iron hand.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Friedrich Schiller |
|
By thee the earth wide-bosom'd deep and long, stands on a basis
permanent
and strong.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Orphic Hymns |
|
He found that the kinetic "moral law" did not truly enter the interiority of a conscience of duty but that the conscience itself can be
mobilized
as a duty to make revolution.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Sloterdijk |
|
But that a downright simpleness, under the
affectation
of simplicity,
prosaic words in feeble metre, silly thoughts in childish phrases, and
a preference of mean, degrading, or at best trivial associations and
characters, should succeed in forming a school of imitators, a company
of almost religious admirers, and this too among young men of ardent
minds, liberal education, and not
------with academic laurels unbestowed;
and that this bare and bald counterfeit of poetry, which is
characterized as below criticism, should for nearly twenty years have
well-nigh engrossed criticism, as the main, if not the only, butt of
review, magazine, pamphlet, poem, and paragraph; this is indeed matter
of wonder.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Coleridge - Biographia Literaria |
|
The Kids and the sole of the
Charioteer’s
left foot and the Goat herself journey with the Bull, what time the neck and tail of Cetus, leviathan of the sky, rise from below.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Aratus - Phaenomena |
|
2, during the
first decade of the
nineteenth
century, to 20.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Sutherland - Birth Control- A Statement of Christian Doctrine against the Neo-Malthusians |
|
Certain it that our ancient plays were religious subjects, and had for their actors, not
priests, yet men
relating
the church.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Dodsley - Select Collection of Old Plays - v1 |
|
One thinks instinctively, in seeking for some adequate par-
allel, of what Goethe did with the materials of the Faust legend,
or of what Shakespeare did with the indications offered for 'King
Lear and
Cymbeline
by Holinshed's chronicle-history.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Warner - World's Best Literature - v04 - Bes to Bro |
|
The Lord was scoffed at, because His
disciples
ate with un
washed hands.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Augustine - Exposition on the Psalms - v6 |
|
Peace, Peace, she cannot hear
Lyre or sonnet,
All my
life’s
buried here,
Heap earth upon it.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Wilde - Charmides |
|
Contracted plurals, as Erinnys for Erin-
nyes or
Erinnyas
havs ys long.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Latin - Casserly - Complete System of Latin Prosody |
|
Precisely
the "people who much prefer to read Fraktur and believe they can d o so with greater ease are the ones who require more reading time.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
KittlerNietzche-Incipit-Tragoedia |
|
Nosy and me done a smash jest now Nosy sees a
tobacconist’s show-case full of them fancy boxes of Gold Flake, and ’e says,
‘By cnpes I’m gomg to ’ave some of them fags if they give me a
perishing
stretch for it 1 ’ ’e says So ’e wraps ’is scarf round ’is ’and, and we waits till
there’s a perishing great van passing as’ll drown the noise, and then Nosy
lets fly-biff We nipped a dozen packets of fags, and then I bet you didn’t see
our a — s for dust And when we gets round the corner and opens them, there
wasn’t no perishing fags inside 1 Perishmg dummy boxes I ’ad to laugh
Dorothy My knees are giving way I can’t stand up much longer
mrs Bendigo Oh, the sod, the sod 1 To turn a woman out of doors on a night
like bloody this!
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Orwell - A Clergyman's Daughter |
|
The Myths of
Objectivism
and Subjectivism
26.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Lakoff-Metaphors |
|
Their grins--
an
orchestra
of plucked skin and a million strings.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Trakl - The True Fate of the Bremen Town Musicians as Told by Georg Trakl |
|
Lest marks
unseemly
at thy porch be seen,
Which sawdust and a slave may quickly clean ?
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Warner - World's Best Literature - v14 - Ibn to Juv |
|
That one
considers
masturbation shameful is strange given that one does not consider eating and drinking shameful.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Foucault-Key-Concepts |
|
In the published
Martyrology
of
his
Abbot of Ia-Coluim-Cille.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
O'Hanlon - Lives of the Irish Saints - v9 |
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The
suggestion
is that what presences itself, even in the poem, is temporally dislocated from its essence, from the horizon that allowed it to show itself.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Trakl - Falling to the Stars- Georg Trakl’s “In Venedig” in Light of Venice Poems by Nietzsche and Rilke |
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At the same time (and in a less deductive perspective of observation), we might say that those remnants of the past that we can no longer distance although we have no function for them, together with the challenging
scenarios
in our future, seem to come together in a new, more physical environment that summons more strongly again the bodily components of our existence.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Gumbrecht - Incarnation, Now - Five Brief Thoughts and a Non-Conclusive Finding |
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The human beings could not contain their rage when
they heard this song, though they
pretended
to think it merely
ridiculous.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Orwell - Animal Farm |
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Athenian
tragedy tells the sad
tale of Thebes and the baneful war of Troy.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Claudian - 1922 - Loeb |
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ect whether or not
any of the whole of existence or any of the whole
universe
has leaked away
from the present moment of time.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Shobogenzo |
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When I say that I am
convinced
of these things I speak with too much
pride.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Wilde - De Profundis |
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The arrival
in Paris of the
revolutionary
fencing-master put the Madrid police in a
flutter.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Jose de Espronceda |
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He can neither speak nor go, nor yet
take meat; he desireth help only by his infant crying: so that a man may,
at the least way, by this conject, that this
creature
alone was born all
to love and amity, which specially increaseth and is fast knit together by
good turns done eftsoons of one to another.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Erasmus |
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(Thomas Thorpe) is to "the only
begetter
of these ensuing sonnets, Mr.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Samuel Taylor Coleridge |
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Les uns avaient la
fierte dans le regard, les autres
portaient
la honte au front.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Yeats |
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Or they characterize terrorists as
motivated
by pure 'evil'.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
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| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Richard-Dawkins-God-Delusion |
|
Apostates
only are iconoclasts.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Elizabeth Browning - 4 |
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DIoN,
111
arms, but killed none that opposed them; for Dion,
on account of his
friendship
with Synalus, had for-
bidden them.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Plutarch - Lives - v7 |
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I think it is easy to draw the
following
main consequences from this.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Foucault-Psychiatric-Power-1973-74 |
|