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Re: What are you reading?
I am reading Agamemnon from Lucius Annaeus Seneca, a good book from the start. This is the man of the known sentence
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That we use so often to cover our mistakes.
Read something of Seneca "The Young" for the times he saved you and you used that sentence. Maybe there are books and text of him on the Internet.
Re: What are you reading?
Quote:
Originally Posted by
pinhodecarlos
Started "The Key to Rebecca" by Ken Follett.
Finished. Next I will start "Inca - Princesse du Soliel" by Antoine Bertrand Daniel in three volumes.
Re: What are you reading?
Finished reading "Inca Vol 1 - Princesse du Soliel", next I will read "Inca Vol 2 - L'Or de Cuzco".
Re: What are you reading?
I finished reading David A. Campbell, "Greek Lyric Poetry" and I am now reading "Asterix in Spain".
One thing about art, is no matter in what style and century is written, all art moves the human emotions and one thing that one day could capture the human spirit, will capture others spirits in the future, no man is so distant from other man that can not understand the feelings that powered him to write or sketched or painting or music his feelings.
But the main thing that moves me is to understand other humans on all times. I wish I could but I am still trying. I will try that while I am alive.
I just loved Tyrtaeus, son of Archembrotus, a Laconian or Milesian elegiac poet and pipe-player. It is said that by means of his songs he urged on the Lacedaemonians in their war with the Messenians and in this way enabled them to get the upper hand. He is very ancient, contemporary with those called the Seven sages, or even earlier. He flourished in the 35th Olympiad (640–37 BC). He wrote a constitution for the Lacedaemonians, precepts in elegiac verse, and war songs, in five books.
I am loving René Goscinny and Albert Uderzo. We are all there from kat to the crazy Duke. We are all there in my mind...
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedi...rix_-_Cast.png
Now I will sing another song.
Re: What are you reading?
The very word 'secrecy' is repugnant in a free and open society; and we are as a people inherently and historically opposed to secret societies, to secret oaths, and to secret proceedings.
John F. Kennedy
A Citizen's Dissent
by Lane, Mark
Holt, Rinheart and Winston, 1968
Re: What are you reading?
O Conto da Ilha Desconhecida
The Tale of the Unknown Island
Jose Saramago
Nobel Prize
Re: What are you reading?
O Melhor de Mim
The Best of Me
Nicholas Sparks
Re: What are you reading?
Einstein's God
by Krista Tippet.
A good book with the subtitle of "Conversations about Science and the Human Spirit". A book easy to read, nothing heavy, as simple as E=mc2. Relativity speaking. :D
Re: What are you reading?
Natural Hazards: New York City vs. The Sea
In the wake of Hurricane Sandy, scientists and officials are trying to protect the largest U.S. city from future floods
By Jeff Tollefson and Nature magazine
As the humbled city begins to rebuild, scientists and engineers are trying to assess what happened during Sandy and what problems New York is likely to face in a warmer future. But in a dilemma that echoes wider debates about climate change, there is no consensus about the magnitude of the potential threats — and no agreement about how much the city should spend on coastal defenses to reduce them.
More on: http://www.scientificamerican.com/ar...ity-vs-the-sea
Re: What are you reading?
Any people anywhere, being inclined and having the power, have the right to rise up, and shake off the existing government, and form a new one that suits them better. This is a most valuable - a most sacred right - a right, which we hope and believe, is to liberate the world.
Abraham Lincoln