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oneblackline
gave
Digging Up the Dead: Uncovering the Life and Times of an Extraordinary Surgeon
by Druin Burch
read in February, 2012
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| A precise, economical, life-affirming bio of the surgeon and dissector par excellence Astley Cooper, and a vivid tour of the influence of the scientific method on the field of medicine in enlightenment Britain. The examples of 18th century surgery ar...more | |
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oneblackline
gave
The Turn of the Screw (Penguin Popular Classics)
by Henry James
recommended for:
Jacques Lacan
read in February, 2012
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| James' wealthy Victorian society functions in an imaginary image of itself. People outside this image are ghosts, ghastly... keepers of the taboos. In their natural predisposition for the imaginary, children and women of the society are vulnerable to...more | |
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oneblackline
gave
Encounters with the Soul: Active Imagination As Developed by C.G. Jung
by Barbara Hannah
read in January, 2012
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oneblackline
marked as to-read:
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“And oh, heaven - the crowded playhouse, the stench of perfume upon heated bodies, the silly laughter and the clatter, the party in the Royal box - the King himself present - the impatient crowd in the cheap seats stamping and shouting for the play to begin while they threw orange peel on to the stage.”
― Daphne du Maurier, Frenchman's Creek
― Daphne du Maurier, Frenchman's Creek
“The Louis XIII style in perfumery, composed of the elements dear to that period - orris-powder, musk, civet and myrtle-water, already known by the name of angel-water - was scarcely adequate to express the cavalierish graces, the rather crude colours of the time which certain sonnets by Saint-Amand have preserved for us. Later on, with the aid of myrrh and frankincense, the potent and austere scents of religion, it became almost possible to render the stately pomp of the age of Louis XIV, the pleonastic artifices of classical oratory, the ample, sustained, wordy style of Bossuet and the other masters of the pulpit. Later still, the blase, sophisticated graces of French society under Louis XV found their interpreters more easily in frangipane and marechale, which offered in a way the very synthesis of the period. And then, after the indifference and incuriosity of the First Empire, which used eau-de-Cologne and rosemary to excess, perfumery followed Victor Hugo and Gautier and went for inspiration to the lands of the sun; it composed its own Oriental verses, its own highly spiced salaams, discovered intonations and audacious antitheses, sorted out and revived forgotten nuances which it complicated, subtilized and paired off, and in short resolutely repudiated the voluntary decrepitude to which it had been reduced by its Malesherbes, its Boileaus, its Andrieux, its Baour-Lormians, the vulgar distillers of its poems.”
― Joris-Karl Huysmans, Against Nature
― Joris-Karl Huysmans, Against Nature
“Whatever a man knows, whatever is not mere rumbling and roaring that he has heard, can be said in three words.”
― Ferdinand Kürnberger
― Ferdinand Kürnberger
“All the Navel therefore and conjunctive part we can suppose in Adam, was his dependency on his Maker, and the connexion he must needs have unto heaven, who was the Sonne of God. For holding no dependence on any preceding efficient but God; in the act of his production there may be conceived some connexion, and Adam to have been in a moment all Navel with his Maker. And although from his carnality and corporal existence, the conjunction seemeth no nearer than of causality and effect; yet in his immortall and diviner part he seemed to hold a nearer coherence, and an umbilicality even with God himself. And so indeed although the propriety of this part be found but in some animals, and many species there are which have no Navell at all; yet is there one link and common connexion, one general ligament, and necessary obligation of all whatever unto God. Whereby although they act themselves at distance, and seem to be at loose; yet doe they hold a continuity with their Maker. Which catenation or conserving union when ever his pleasure shall divide, let goe, or separate, they shall fall from their existence, essence, and operations; in brief, they must retire unto their primitive nothing, and shrink into that Chaos again.”
― Thomas Browne, Pseudodoxia Epidemica: Or, Enquiries into Commonly Presumed Truths
― Thomas Browne, Pseudodoxia Epidemica: Or, Enquiries into Commonly Presumed Truths
“There are two things children should get from their parents: roots and wings.”
― Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
― Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
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