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On Being Ill
“literature does its best to maintain that its concern is with the mind; that the body is a sheet of plain glass through which the soul looks straight and clear, and, save for one or two passions such as desire and greed, is null, and negligible and non-existent.”
Literature
Lectures on Russian Literature: Pushkin, Gogol, Turgenef, Tolstoy
“I cannot emphasize it too strongly that our gifts-whether they consist in wealth, or in the ability to sing, to paint, to build, or to count-are not given unto us to be used for our pleasure merely, or as means of our advancement, weather social or intellectual. But they are given unto us that we may use them for helping those who need help.”
Gifts
Helping
Advancement
Russian
Ivan
Panin
Kill the Farm Boy
“Paugh!" the troll scoffed. "Romance. Kissing and folly. Where's the story, where's the philosophy? I'm a troll, and even I can't rip a bodice. You should read real literature. The classics." He held up a book called Ye Olde Clubbe of Fisticuffs. "This is one of my favorites. It's all about, like, rejecting capitalism." He held up another, the spine as yet uncracked, called Alliance of Nincompoops. "Or this one, about a misunderstood genius. You should read it. I'd love to chat about what the true meaning of success is when we're living in a world that values looks instead of substance.”
Romance
Humor
Books
Literature
Fight Club
Confederacy Of Dunces
Will My Cat Eat My Eyeballs? Big Questions from Tiny Mortals About Death
“We can't make death fun, but we can make learning about it fun. Death is science and history, art and literature. It bridges every culture and unites the whole of humanity!”
Death
Death Positive
The Sunrise's Commandment
“Literature, in sum, tries to give us the experiences of life without its sequelae or its exorbitant consequences as observed or personally paid for by the author.
Thus, when it is a successful, Literature is a laboratory of the real world.”
Literature Quotes
Writers On Writing
Reading Books
Reading Quotes
Literary Fiction
Writing Quotes
Reading For Life
Good Book Quote
On Literature
Writing Lifeing Life
Dead Toad Scrolls
“Editing a written text is a collaborative enterprise that commences with the other parties commenting up the author’s initial ideas and it can include technical assistance in correction of grammatical mistakes, misspellings, poorly structured sentences, vague or inconsistent statements, and correcting errors in citations. Editing is as much as an art form as writing a creative piece of literature. A good editor is a trusted person whom instructs the writer to speak plainly and unabashedly informs the writer when they write absolute gibberish. Perhaps the most successful relationship between a writer and an editor is the storied relationship shared by Thomas Wolfe and his renowned editor, Maxwell Perkins. By all accounts, the prodigiously talented and mercurial Wolfe was hypersensitive to criticism. Perkins provided Wolfe with constant reassurance and substantially trimmed the text of his books. Before Perkins commenced line editing and proofreading Wolfe’s bestselling autobiography Look Homeward, Angel,’ the original manuscript exceeded 1,100 pages. In a letter to Maxwell Perkins, Thomas Wolfe declared that his goal when writing “Look Homeward, Angel,” was “to loot my life clean, if possible of every memory which a buried life and the thousand faces of forgotten time could awaken and to weave it into a … densely woven web.” After looting my own dormant memories by delving into the amorphous events that caused me to lose faith in the world and assembling the largely formless mulch into a narrative manuscript of dubious length, I understand why a writer wishes to thank many people for their assistance, advice, and support in publishing a book.”
Editing
Memoir
Writers On Writing
Writing Process
Writing Advice
Acknowledgement
Editor
Memoir Writing
Essayist
Publishing Process
Animals and World Religions
“Exploring sacred teachings from around the world demonstrates that nature, including anymals, is sacred, that anymals are central to our spiritual landscape, and that we owe them respect, justice, and compassion. Religious texts remind us that we share a fundamental kinship with tabby cats, rose-ringed parakeets, and slender pygmy swordtails, and that anymals are understood to be remarkable and marvelous—superior to humans in many ways—in the world’s religious traditions. Sacred literature indicates that nonhumans and humans share the same fate after death; faiths that have a Creator teach human beings that the divine is personally invested in the life of every anymal, from the large flightless common rhea to each critically endangered Jenkin’s shrew, from a factory-farmed chicken to each bovine trucked to slaughter. Religious exemplars remind us that all species have personality and intellect—other creatures, whether insects, fish, reptiles, mammals, or birds, can offer much-needed spiritual wisdom for the betterment of humanity. Religions teach of a deep and fundamental unity on planet Earth. Interestingly, consistent with Darwin, the world’s dominant religions teach people that there is much more continuity than separation across species.”
Religion
Compassion
Spirituality
Animals
Scripture
Animal Liberation
Anymal
Comparative Religion
Ethics And Religion
Religion And Ethics
On Literature
“todo acto de apropiación implica una dosis de violencia”
Violencia
Apropiación
Ancient Egyptian Literature, Volume I: The Old and Middle Kingdoms
“Lo, none is allowed to take his goods with him,
Lo, none who departs comes back again!”
Goods
Allowed
None
Departs
Ancient Egyptian Literature, Volume I: The Old and Middle Kingdoms
“The scribe is regarded as one who hears,
For the hearer becomes a doer.”
Doer
Regarded
Scribe
Hears
Ancient Egyptian Literature, Volume I: The Old and Middle Kingdoms
“Do not tell lies against your mother,
the magistrates abhor it.
The descendant who does what is good.
His actions all emulate the past.
Do not consort with a rowdy.
It harms you when one hears of it.
If you have eaten three loaves, drunk two jugs of beer, and the belly is not sated, restrain it!
When another eats, don't stand there, beware of rushing to the table!”
Mother
Actions
Tell
Descendant
Abhor
Emulate
Rowdy
Magistrate
Consort
Ancient Egyptian Literature, Volume I: The Old and Middle Kingdoms
“The descendant who does what is good.
His actions all emulate the past.
Do not consort with a rowdy.
It harms you when one hears of it.”
Actions
Descendant
Emulate
Rowdy
Consort
Hears
Harms
Ancient Egyptian Literature, Volume I: The Old and Middle Kingdoms
“If you leave the schoolhouse when midday is called and go roaming in the streets, all will scold you in the end.
When an official sends you with a message,
Tell it as he told it,
Don’t omit, don’t add to it.
He who neglects to praise, his name will not endure ; he who is skilled in all his conduct, from him nothing is hidden, he is not 'opposed anywhere.”
School
Neglect
Conduct
Omit
Ancient Egyptian Literature, Volume I: The Old and Middle Kingdoms
“Now this peasant came petition him an eighth time; he said: “0 high steward, my lord! Men fall low through greed. The rapacious man lacks success ; his success is loss. Though you are greedy it does nothing for you. Though you steal you do not profit. Let a man defend his rightful cause!”
Success
Greed
Petition
Steal
Rapacious
Rightful
Peasent
Ancient Egyptian Literature, Volume I: The Old and Middle Kingdoms
“If you acquire, give to your fellow;
gobbling up is dishonest.”
Acquire
Dishonest
Fellow
Gobbling Up
Ancient Egyptian Literature, Volume I: The Old and Middle Kingdoms
“No hasty man attains excellence,
No impatient man is leaned upon.”
Excellence
Impatient
Hasty
Ancient Egyptian Literature, Volume I: The Old and Middle Kingdoms
“Earth’s rightness lies in justice
Speak not falsely, you are great.
Act not tightly, you are weighty
Speak not falsely, you are the balance.”
Justice
Balance
Great
Speak
Rightness
Falsely
Ancient Egyptian Literature, Volume I: The Old and Middle Kingdoms
“Telling lies is their herbage.”
Lie
Tell
Herbage
Ancient Egyptian Literature, Volume I: The Old and Middle Kingdoms
“Parrying a blow before it strikes,
Giving a commission to one who is skillful.”
Strike
Skillful
Blow
Commission
Parry
Ancient Egyptian Literature, Volume I: The Old and Middle Kingdoms
“This peasant said;
He who should rule by law commands theft, Who then will punish crime?
The straightener of another’s crookedness Supports another’s crime.”
Support
Law
Rule
Crime
Theft
Peasant
Punish
Crookedness
Ancient Egyptian Literature, Volume I: The Old and Middle Kingdoms
“He who could not find plow-oxen owns cattle.”
Cattle
Plow
Owns
Oxen
Ancient Egyptian Literature, Volume I: The Old and Middle Kingdoms
“See, he who slept wifeless found a noblewoman,
He who was not seen stands.
See, he who had nothing is a man of wealth. The nobleman sings his praise.
See, the poor of the land have become rich, The man of property is a pauper.
See, cooks have become masters of butlers,
He who was a messenger sends someone else.
See, he who had no loaf owns a barn.
His storeroom is filled with another’s goods. See, the baldhead who lacked oil
Has become owner of jars of sweet myrrh.
See, she who lacked a box has furniture.
She who saw her face in the water owns a mirror.”
Wealth
Poor
Property
Rich
Messenger
Owns
Noblewoman
Ancient Egyptian Literature, Volume I: The Old and Middle Kingdoms
“Princes in the workhouse,
He who did not sleep on a box owns a bed.
See, the man of wealth lies thirsting.
He who begged dregs has overflowing bowls.
See, those who owned robes are in rags,
He who did not weave for himself owns fine linen.
See, he who did not build a boat for himself owns ships,
Their owner looks at them: they are not his.”
Wealth
Prince
Owner
Owns
Ancient Egyptian Literature, Volume I: The Old and Middle Kingdoms
“Lo, [scribes] are slain,
Their writings stolen,
Woe is me for the grief of this time!”
Grief
Woe
Stolen
Slain
Ancient Egyptian Literature, Volume I: The Old and Middle Kingdoms
“Lo, all maidservants are rude in their speech, When the mistress speaks it irks the servants.”
Speech
Rude
Mistress
Maidservant
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