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All that glitters isn’t gold. The Merchant of Venice
Latin Could Shakespeare read Latin? Yes. Sometimes he quoted from the Douay-Rheims. Williams Play This is the setting for “Shakeshafte” by Rowan Williams when Edmund Campion, a Jesuit priest travelling incognito from one household to another, meets a young Will Shakeshafte who has been hidden at the request of a schoolmaster in Stratford! Based on some truth, gossip, and rumour, it is an exciting play, full of suspense and drama, and Rowan has used his poetical and philosophical gifts to create Will’s depth of thought and feelings about human relationships and to elaborate on the personal choices that he has to make. https://supremacyandsurvival.blogspot.com/2016/07/campion-and-shakespeare-meet.html Rowan Williams, b. 1950, is the former Archbishop of Canterbury and a former member of the House of Lords (2003-2020). He believes Shakespeare was a Catholic. Auron presents many images: landscapes, sculptures, photos, and more. He is a writer. I own one, original landscape. The place is about three hours east.
Dear Members of the United States House of Representatives:
You have a Select Committee on the Chinese Communist Party (CCP). Pope Francis signed a secret deal with the CCP. No one knows what is in the deal. He is suspected of being a communist, a possible enemy of the US. Please establish a Select Committee on Pope Francis. Yours sincerely, Robert E Dunn America magazine published an article quoting a man who left the Catholic Church after attending the Latin Mass. He joined Quakerism, one of hundreds of heretical sects. The Jesuits shot themselves in the foot, and I am jumping up and down. Story by Pat Nugent, Nov. 28, 2017. I will not link pathetic wimps who can't shoot straight.
In the Eeyou-Istchee James Bay territory in Nord-du-Québec, the Whabouchi mine is one of the largest high-purity lithium deposits in North America and Europe. The project is the world's second richest and biggest deposit with 27.3 million tons of proven and probable reserves. So, what? Lithium-Ion batteries are rechargeable and are used in many personal electronics, such as cell phones, tablets, laptops, E-Bikes, electric toothbrushes, tools, hoverboards, scooters, and for solar power backup storage. Answered. If all you leftist-greenies are prepared to turn in all your electronic devices, fine, not I. photo courtesy of mining-technology.com and Business Wire
Isaac Newton
Albert Einstein Democritus Aristotle Galileo Galilei Rene Descartes Leonhard Euler Nikola Tesla Francis Bacon Christiaan Huygens Thomas Jefferson Linus Pauling Archimedes William Shakespeare John Neumann Enrico Fermi Blaise Pascal Richard Feynman Epicurus Thomas Edison Nicolaus Copernicus Euclid Desiderius Erasmus Sigmund Freud Thomas Hobbes Pythagoras Niels Bohr Johannes Kepler Niccolo Machiavelli Roger Bacon Plato Cicero Leo Tolstoy Charles Darwin Napoleon Bonaparte Alexander Pope John Milton Michelangelo Marie Curie Albertus Magnus Fyodor Dostoyevsky Marcus Aurelius Karl Marx Arthur Doyle Lord Byron Thomas Paine James Madison Jean-Jacques Rousseau Benjamin Franklin Alexander the Great Socrates Jonathan Swift John Locke Charlemagne Victor Hugo Euripides Wernher von Braun Thomas Wolsey Abraham Lincoln Hippocrates Ralph Emerson Ptolemy Edgar Poe George Eliot John Adams Thomas More Dante Alighieri Homer Samuel Coleridge Mary Shelley Louis Pasteur Salvador Dali Pablo Picasso Aeschylus Edwin Hubble Adam Smith Johann Bach Raphael Julius Caesar Wolfgang Mozart Isaac Asimov Thomas Aquinas Alfred Tennyson Elizabeth I Martin Luther John Quincy Adams John Calvin William of Ockham Ovid Mark Twain Thomas Malthus Edmund Burke Washington Irving Henry Wadsworth Longfellow Ernest Hemingway Maximilien Robespierre Epictetus Diego Velázquez Ben Jonson Daniel Fahrenheit Gregor Mendel Charles Dickens Geoffrey Chaucer Guglielmo Marconi Spartacus William Wordsworth Wilbur Wright Johannes Brahms Seneca Cardinal Richelieu Frederic Chopin Marquis de Sade Robert Oppenheimer George Handel Charlotte Brontë Franz Schubert Giuseppe Verdi Henry Ford Felix Mendelssohn Daniel Webster Bede Hildegard of Bingen Paul Ehrlich Woodrow Wilson Peter Tchaikovsky Sergei Rachmaninov Peter Rubens Demosthenes George Sand Cleopatra Milton Friedman William Thackeray Vladimir Lenin Titian Marco Polo Giacomo Casanova Theodore Roosevelt Alexander Fleming Josephus Gustave Eiffel Hannibal Albrecht Durer Nathaniel Hawthorne Giovanni Palestrina Anthony Van Dyck Samuel Morse Stanley Kubrick Rembrandt Horace Duns Scotus C.S. Lewis Franklin D. Roosevelt Johannes Gutenberg Claudio Monteverdi Franz Liszt Aesop Madalyn O'Hair Eduard Suess Benoit Mandelbrot Anselm of Canterbury Robert Frost Alexis Tocqueville Jean Moreau Caravaggio George Orwell William Tecumseh Sherman George Washington Dr. Seuss Walt Disney Christopher Columbus Che Guevara Charlie Chaplin Thomas of Kempis Neil Armstrong Robert Schumann Robert E. Lee Sources 1. Genius IQs of Historicals, based on the work of Genius Studies of Genius: Vol II. Catherine Morris Cox, Stanford Press, 1926 Catherine Morris Cox 2. Genius IQ Rankings, Ranked by IQ or “relative brightness or intellect” Libb Thims I counted 100 Catholics. Bet you don't know who they are. A conservative estimate of the words written by the Dominican theologian-philosopher priest from the 13th century is eight million. His last words were, “Such secrets have been revealed to me that all I have written now appears as so much straw.” Lie down on the couch and listen without thinking too much.
Aquinas read the Vulgate Bible (St. Jerome, A.D. 400). The Vulgate is a late-4th-century Latin translation of the Bible. In 382 Jerome had been commissioned by Pope Damasus I to revise the Vetus Latina Gospels used by the Roman Church. Reading anything that is not a translation of the Vulgate can mislead. Aquinas wrote encyclopedic theological treatises, such as the Summa theologiae and the Summa contra gentiles; Questions on Truth; On Being and Essence; commentaries on Aristotle and on other philosophical texts; and biblical commentaries. French, Latin, and Greek with English and Italian subtitles enliven this song from Disney's 1996 animated feature, The Hunchback of Notre Dame, sung by Jean Piat, actor, theater actor, voice actor, and writer. (My copy does not contain the Italian. For that, view on YT. The Latin comes from the Mass.) Advocacy of what? TikTok is a communist app. Want your personal information used by China? Keeping using TikTok. If you do, you are a lazy, ignorant American.
Monday morning, Christ returned to Jerusalem. According to the Synoptic Gospels, Matthew, Mark, and Luke, it is on this day that Jesus walked with firm purpose into the Temple and drove out the moneylenders, castigating them for making His Father’s house a “den of robbers.”
Jesus also began His final days giving the people a holy torrent of parables and warnings. Many of His most famous teachings and parables—such as the widow who gave two pennies, the parable of the wicked tenants, and the dispute about paying taxes to Caesar—happened during Passion week. I summarized a message from The Catholic Company. The Last Supper this Thursday is the daily Mass. We relive Passion Week every year. St. Peter's is boring. After the modernists are defeated and a new pope is elected, marches will precede him in the sedia gestatori every time he enters the basilica, 30,000 soldiers in dress uniform, bootlickers having been evicted already and no room for anybody else. He will have two altar boys dressed in junior military uniforms serving him. That's all he needs. No televisions cameras allowed. Mass will be for Almighty God and those present. Military officers and soldiers will be billeted there, take over administration of the city state, and issue a limited number of passports, and world leaders will have to beg for one. Only the Vatican Museum will entertain paying visitors. Church is not an efing museum. Vatican diplomats will live outside the walls: these men reek of perfume. Sample march...1 2 3 4 and 1 2 3 4 Discuss amongst yourselves.
Palm Sunday 3/24/2024
Most psalms were written between 1010 BC and 930, 1,000 years before Christ. Psalm 68, written by King David (born c. 1035 BC, died c. 970), told what would happen to Christ. www.newadvent.org/cathen/12533a.htm Stephaton (Steven), is the name given in Catholic tradition to the Roman soldier or bystander, unnamed in the Bible, who offered Jesus a sponge soaked in sour/bitter vinegar wine at the Crucifixion. He is frequently portrayed in art with Longinus, the Roman soldier who pierced Jesus' side with a spear. "I looked for one that would grieve together with Me, and there was none." I grieve with Him. This has been the strongest pull on me through the years, even more so now that my brother is dead. I propose that no man can be without a brother or brotherhood, and no counter-argument can succeed. In 1989, the George H.W. Bush administration banned the importation of foreign-made, semiautomatic rifles deemed not to have "a legitimate sporting use." It did not affect domestically manufactured rifles of the same type.
FBI stats 2022 (personal weapons defined as hands, fists, and feet) Number of killings Rifles of any type 541 Personal weapons 665 Knives 1,630 According to a group seeking to curtail the Second Amendment, semi-automatic military-style weapons that were formerly regulated under federal law are now legal unless banned by state or local law. By linking them, I am being fair. https://giffords.org/lawcenter/gun-laws/policy-areas/hardware-ammunition/assault-weapons/#:~:text=Thus%2C%20semi%2Dautomatic%2C%20military,by%20state%20or%20local%20law. U.S. Constitution, Second Amendment A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed. 1938 Los Angeles, CA The title, Private Eye (shamus), first appeared in a Chandler story in Dime Detective magazine in June 1938, with the words, “We don't use any private eyes in here. So sorry.” However, the origin might be the American detective agency founded by Allan Pinkerton; their motto c. 1855 was 'We never sleep', and the agency was informally known as 'The Eye.' An eye featured in a Poe short story written 1843, "The Tell-Tale Heart." See Reading List for link.
Quod erat demonstrandum
- which was to be demonstrated, an exclamation used to convey that a fact or situation demonstrates the truth of one's theory or claim, or to mark the end of a formal proof Want to see the current crew of the International Space Station and those of Missions 58-current and read their short biographies? click here issfanclub.eu/life-onboard-iss/current-iss-crew/ One of the boys I tutor would go into outer space; the other would not. I would.
How did Natalia Makarova defect? On September 4, 1970, in a decisive moment, Makarova became the first ballerina to defect from the Soviet Union. Agents from Scotland Yard arrived and took her into protection, granted asylum the next day, and whisked her into the woods outside London to evade the KGB. by Alfred Lord Tennyson
I. The plain was grassy, wild and bare, Wide, wild, and open to the air, Which had built up everywhere An under-roof of doleful gray. With an inner voice the river ran, Adown it floated a dying swan, And loudly did lament. It was the middle of the day. Ever the weary wind went on, And took the reed-tops as it went. II. Some blue peaks in the distance rose, And white against the cold-white sky, Shone out their crowning snows. One willow over the river wept, And shook the wave as the wind did sigh; Above in the wind was the swallow, Chasing itself at its own wild will, And far thro' the marish green and still The tangled water-courses slept, Shot over with purple, and green, and yellow. III. The wild swan's death-hymn took the soul Of that waste place with joy Hidden in sorrow: at first to the ear The warble was low, and full and clear; And floating about the under-sky, Prevailing in weakness, the coronach stole Sometimes afar, and sometimes anear; But anon her awful jubilant voice, With a music strange and manifold, Flow'd forth on a carol free and bold; As when a mighty people rejoice With shawms, and with cymbals, and harps of gold, And the tumult of their acclaim is roll'd Thro' the open gates of the city afar, To the shepherd who watcheth the evening star. And the creeping mosses and clambering weeds, And the willow-branches hoar and dank, And the wavy swell of the soughing reeds, And the wave-worn horns of the echoing bank, And the silvery marish-flowers that throng The desolate creeks and pools among, Were flooded over with eddying song. Composer: Camille Saint-Saëns Orchestra leader: first row, first chair violins (concertmaster) Orchestra: La Camerata y la Orquesta Piccolo de la Escuela de las Artes Teatro del Lago, Chile Artists: Punkrobot Studio Piano: foursome Tennyson wrote the poem in 1830.
Saint-Saëns composed "The Dying Swan" in 1886. Fokine choreographed a solo ballet in 1905. Have you ever read Lesson One, Sex Education, California public schools, 5th grade? Don't. It's disturbing. |
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