Originally Posted by
Gilliatt Gurgle
Just finished Marcus Tulius Cicero – “On Moral Duties”
and St. Augustine – “The Confessions”
A couple of quotes from St. Augustine that inspired me:
“I developed a passion for stage plays, with the mirror they held up to my own miseries and the fuel they poured on my flame. How is it that a man wants to be made sad by the sight of tragic sufferings that he could not bear in his own person? Yet the spectator does want to feel sorrow, and it is actually a feeling of sorrow that he enjoys. Surely this is the most wretched lunacy”
“I have seen the lines drawn by architects, some as fine as a spider web; but the truths are different, they are not the images of such things as the eye of my body has shown me. To know them is to recognize them interiorly without any concept of any kind of body whatsoever…Let whoever does not see these truths laugh at me for talking thus; while he laughs at me I shall feel sorry for him”
1. James Fennimore Cooper - "Last of the Mohicans"
2. Ian Fleming's "Goldfinger"
3. Karel Čapek - R.U.R. (Rossum's Universal Robots)
4. Anton Checkhov's "Ward No 6" and "On the Road"
5. William Somerset Maugham – “The Moon and Sixpence”
6. Dante Alighieri – “The Inferno”
7. Thor Heyerdhal – “The RA Expeditions”
8. Marcus Tulius Cicero – “On Moral Duties”
9. St. Augustine – “The Confessions”
Given the recent furor over FF&H, I have decided to introudce myself to all three of them concurrently and see what all the fuss is about. I thought Hemingway would make 11, so I will make him 12. Therefore I will first complete my eleven with:
10. F. Scott Fitzgerald – “The Great Gatsby”
11. William Faulkner – “Absalom, Absalom!"
Hemingway...?? not sure which one to go with at this time.
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