—Sven Lindquist, Exterminate All the Brutes (trans. Joan Tate)
—Irish, 12th century
—Irish, 12th century
—me
—me
Nikolai Ge, 1891
Nikolai Ge, 1891
—Sarah Bakewell, At the Existentialist Cafe
—Sarah Bakewell, At the Existentialist Cafe
—John Donne
—John Donne
—Thomas Merton, The New Man
—Thomas Merton, The New Man
—Grieving, by Cristina Rivera Garza
—Grieving, by Cristina Rivera Garza
—Gospell of Luke, 1528
—Gospell of Luke, 1528
—The Garden of Epicurus, Anatole France
—The Garden of Epicurus, Anatole France
—the city priest, Msimangu
from Cry, The Beloved Country by Alan Paton
—the city priest, Msimangu
from Cry, The Beloved Country by Alan Paton
A sense of life lived according to love.
To some it means the difference they could make
By loving others, but across most it sweeps
As all they might have done had they been loved.
—Philip Larkin, “Faith Healing”
A sense of life lived according to love.
To some it means the difference they could make
By loving others, but across most it sweeps
As all they might have done had they been loved.
—Philip Larkin, “Faith Healing”
—Keith Douglas, killed in Normandy, June, 1944
—Keith Douglas, killed in Normandy, June, 1944
MAN: To his beloved, firmly stored in eternal memory: whatever leads to that state in whose fullness nothing is lacking.
—Letters of Abelard and Heloise
MAN: To his beloved, firmly stored in eternal memory: whatever leads to that state in whose fullness nothing is lacking.
—Letters of Abelard and Heloise
—Book of Isaiah
—Book of Isaiah
—Sir Thomas Browne
—Sir Thomas Browne
—Virginia Woolf
—Virginia Woolf
—Tolkien
—Tolkien
—Jean Dutuourd, 1940, qtd in "The Price of Glory", by Alistair Horne
—Jean Dutuourd, 1940, qtd in "The Price of Glory", by Alistair Horne
—Saint Jerome, “On the Education of Little Paula” (trans. Carolinne White)
—Saint Jerome, “On the Education of Little Paula” (trans. Carolinne White)
The earth looked up in wonder at the new
Light of the shining sun, and how from clouds
The rain came down in showers, then woods arose,
And living creatures wandered on the sides
Of mountains unaware of what they were.
—Virgil, Eclogues VI
The earth looked up in wonder at the new
Light of the shining sun, and how from clouds
The rain came down in showers, then woods arose,
And living creatures wandered on the sides
Of mountains unaware of what they were.
—Virgil, Eclogues VI
But none of us will ever put his on again;
It is not just for a man to have what he takes from himself.
We shall drag them here, and through the mournful wood
Our bodies will be hung, each one upon
The thorny tree of his tormented shade.
—Inferno
But none of us will ever put his on again;
It is not just for a man to have what he takes from himself.
We shall drag them here, and through the mournful wood
Our bodies will be hung, each one upon
The thorny tree of his tormented shade.
—Inferno