Sado-masochist, if you must be cynical, since Christians believe that he became part of his own creation and suffers with it. Whatever it means and whyever it is, as Fudgetusk said "He takes all the...
Type: Posts; User: Whifflingpin; Keyword(s):
Sado-masochist, if you must be cynical, since Christians believe that he became part of his own creation and suffers with it. Whatever it means and whyever it is, as Fudgetusk said "He takes all the...
Without checking, is it Tristram Shandy?
For me - "All traces of the paintings of saints on the lower panels have vanished."
Some old Devon Churches - John Stabb
By coincidence, the church...
I found "unrelentingly tragic" too much when I tried to read it. It's obviously time for a second attempt.
Tristram Shandy - Laurence Sterne
Oroonoko - Aphra Benn
Decline & Fall of the Roman Empire - Gibbon ( a "must-read" for its language as much as its history.)
She could inform a Horseman Riding By.
just a footnote: Sinai is obviously the plural of sinus; but let the reverse be true also, then sinus is both the plural and singular of Sinai and vice or worser, and infinitely or reflexively...
Britain's problem is that it has lost a layer of discrimination (or maybe hypocrisy) that is essential to the democratic function. "Everyone" has always assumed that politicians at all levels are...
"I've been wondering what that special place in hell looks like, for those who promoted #Brexit, without even a sketch of a plan how to carry it out safely."
Hardly an arrogant comment, and one that...
Eothen by Kinglake.
"The only one I care about is salvation from myself and …"
I am sure that is only a fraction of what you care about, given that you proclaim yourself to be on a trading mission. If, however, it...
No need to get fussed - maybe a more acceptable phrase might be "it is in our nature to sin." The idea of Jesus as Saviour balancing Adam as Sinner simply means that while it is in our nature to sin...
Act 1, scene 4 -
"MACBETH
The service and the loyalty I owe,
In doing it, pays itself. Your highness' part
Is to receive our duties; and our duties
Are to your throne and state children and...
I've a better than average knowledge of Shakespeare's historical background, and I'm not totally ignorant of Macbeth's. Feel free to enlighten me further.
James VI of Scotland & I of England had...
Everyone makes cultural assumptions, but Shakespeare was perfectly able and willing to challenge the assumptions of his own culture, (Shylock's great speech in "Merchant of Venice" being, perhaps,...
"What you seem to be describing is an alternate view in which the Gospel of Thomas was produced by extracting Jesus' sayings from the Canonical Gospels and interpreting the sayings in a gnosticizing...
"conundrums do not imply salvation only for the knowing few."
True enough, and there are many reasons why historical sayings might have been obscure to their original hearers and even more so to...
"It was one of the original series of writings that the early emerging Church chose to reject."
"Chose to reject" may be too strong a phrase. "Chose not to include as essential" would be more...
Where's Lokasenna? He could probably give a comprehensive explanation of the relationships between 10th century West Saxon and modern Icelandic.
"What is the Exeter Book?"
The Exeter Book is a manuscript book dating from 10th or early 11th century held in the library of Exeter Cathedral, Devon, England.
It is quite possibly the most...
It is clearly a derivation from Anglo-Saxon poetry. Compare it with this bit of "The Wanderer" from the Exeter Book - see the repeated "where...where...where?" and look out for eorl and theoden.
...
but, after the ball is over, what then, huh?
Start with 2 x B / w metres, if B is the breaking strain of the string and w is the weight per metre. That's just a first thought, but I've no doubt that some Newton will give a much better answer.
There is a famous Anglo-Saxon poem of that name (also known as "The Wanderer.") Its original (or earliest known copy, at least) is in a 10th century manuscript book in the library of Exeter...
Infants (babies) are an alien species, like cats or dogs. (IIRC, the word "infant" actually means "without speech.") Any novel about them would have to be a beast fable like "White Fang" or such. ...
Try Genesis chapter 24.