At Bemerton, sits over his book of proverbs. He wonders what outlandish phrase might shake The wind-burned, inarticulate assurance Of farmers gathered in the pews: to teach them That summer need not ...
Hercules the Archer, by Antoine Bourdelle (1909). Source: Pixabay/Gaimard The allegory of the archer features in Cicero’s On the Ends of Good and Evil, a Socratic dialogue dedicated to Brutus, ...
It starts as a whisper in the chest—an ache that isn’t yours. A colleague confides that she’s drowning at work. A friend calls in tears. The news scrolls through endless suffering. You feel it all: ...
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