Which Twentieth Century political figure said three days before his death, “Afterwards, you rue the fact that you’ve been so kind”?
I invite you to make your guesses in a comment. I will provide the answer tomorrow.
It is reported that Immanuel Kant was so regular in his daily walks that citizens of Koningsberg could set their watches by them. I am not that regular, but you can be certain that I read some poetry and listen to some Bach every day. Sometimes I happen across a familiar poem which is like unexpectedly meeting an old friend. I did a few days ago in the SEASHELL ANTHOLOGY OF GREAT POETRY.
I don’t recall where I first read that poem, but I do recall quoting it in STORM PASSAGE during my five month passage around Cape Horn in 1975-76. Though at the time of that passage I had no love, I thought one would come, and she did.
Here is another poem I read recently in the SEASHELL ANTHOLOGY which I had not before. I do not know such sorrow.
CEASEFIRE is a fine French film about the lives in the early 1920s of two brothers who were French soldiers during WW1. One seeks escape from remembered horrors in Africa for a while. The other remains in France traumatized by those horrors for a while. They are reunited. I watched on Amazon Prime and suggest that you might find doing so time well spent.
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