Do those things that incline you toward the big questions, and avoid the things that would reduce you and make you trivial.
George Saunders (via observando)
Keni
Jules of Nature
we're not kids anymore.
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Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
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@chaostodiscipline-blog
Do those things that incline you toward the big questions, and avoid the things that would reduce you and make you trivial.
George Saunders (via observando)
Peder Monsted (Danish, 1859-1941)
A forest stream, oil on canvas, 85 x 50,9 cm. 1895.
There are people whose minds have ceased to be content with modern negation, and who, feeling the need for something that our own period cannot offer them, see the possibility of an escape from the present crisis only in one way, through a return to tradition.
- René Guénon
“Of course, it is likely enough, my friends,” he said slowly, “likely that we are going to our doom: the last March of the Ents. But if we stayed at home and did nothing, doom would find us anyway, sooner or later.”
- J.R.R. Tolkien
“The European tragedy is this: man has been disintegrated, uprooted, transformed into a number on the electoral roll and a number in the queue at the factory gates. What this disintegrated man is crying out for is to feel the ground under his feet again, to be put in harmony once more with a collective destiny, a common destiny, or simply–calling things by their right names–with the destiny of his Patria.”
— - José Antonio Primo de Rivera
Doom still hangs on a thread. Yet hope there is still, if we can but stand unconquered for a little while.
J.R.R. Tolkien
I am a spear that roars for blood.
- The Song of Amergin
Baron Ungern, The Last Stand, by D. Shmarin, 2002.
Coronation of the Virgin, Queen of Heaven (detail) / Le Couronnement de la Vierge, Reine des Cieux (détail) // ca. 1845 // Romain Cazes // Musée du Louvre
“You must follow him along the way of the cross, choosing to be crucified in his way, not yours.” - St. Catherine of Siena
You sense Time and yet have not sensed this Heart?
Hans Urs von Balthasar, Heart of the World (via spiritandteeth)
A prayer in the cloisters of a Franciscan friary, Italian School, 19th Century
“Not a single nation has ever been founded on principles of science or reason. There has never been an example of it, except for a brief moment, through folly. Socialism is from its very nature bound to be atheism, seeing that it has from the very first proclaimed that it is an atheistic organisation of society, and that it intends to establish itself exclusively on the elements of science and reason. Science and reason have, from the beginning of time, played a secondary and subordinate part in the life of nations; so it will be till the end of time. Nations are built up and moved by another force which sways and dominates them, the origin of which is unknown and inexplicable: that force is the force of an insatiable desire to go on to the end, though at the same time it denies that end. It is the force of the persistent assertion of one’s own existence, and a denial of death. It’s the spirit of life, as the Scriptures call it, ‘the river of living water’, the drying up of which is threatened in the Apocalypse. It’s the aesthetic principle, as the philosophers call it, the ethical principle with which they identify it, ‘the seeking for God’, as I call it more simply. The object of every national movement, in every people and at every period of its existence is only the seeking for its god, who must be its own god, and the faith in Him as the only true one. God is the synthetic personality of the whole people, taken from its beginning to its end. It has never happened that all, or even many, peoples have had one common god, but each has always had its own. It’s a sign of the decay of nations when they begin to have gods in common. When gods begin to be common to several nations the gods are dying and the faith in them, together with the nations themselves. The stronger a people the more individual their God. There never has been a nation without a religion, that is, without an idea of good and evil. Every people has its own conception of good and evil, and its own good and evil. When the same conceptions of good and evil become prevalent in several nations, then these nations are dying, and then the very distinction between good and evil is beginning to disappear. Reason has never had the power to define good and evil, or even to distinguish between good and evil, even approximately; on the contrary, it has always mixed them up in a disgraceful and pitiful way; science has even given the solution by the fist. This is particularly characteristic of the half-truths of science, the most terrible scourge of humanity, unknown till this century, and worse than plague, famine, or war.”
— Fyodor Dostoyevsky, The Possessed (via alexandrahesse)
Saint Chapelle by Archigeek