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It contains a prophecy of the future greatness of Rome, with many echoes of Virgil's Aeneid. Although the shortness of the book compared with Tibullus book 1 has led some scholars to suppose that it was left unfinished on Tibullus's death, yet the careful arrangement and length of the poems appear to indicate that it is complete in its present ...
Blunt sees echoes of this behavior in the admonitions which Paul gives the Corinthians, though he does not name them as such. Blunt also believes that similar echoes can be found in the admonitions of Jude 4-16 (which invokes both "Balaam's error" and "love feasts") and 2 Peter 2:2-21 (which repeats much of Jude's statements, including invoking ...
Some of the stories were revised for book publication. The stories follow the fortunes of various characters living on a magic-ridden far future Earth in the age of chaotic miracles between the death of the world's latest divinity, the Goddess, and the birth of a new one.
Thus poems 1.1 and 1.10 have a dozen points of contact, in more or less the same order in both poems; and the same is true of poems 1.5 and 1.6. An example of such links is asper and gloria in lines 1 and 2 of poem 1.5, and also in lines 2 and 3 of poem 1.6. [24] In book 2, poems 2.2 and 2.5, despite being of different lengths, are also ...
People say he was less than a god but more than a man. You know, like Hercules or something. ... As it turned out, the Babe would end up paying $20 to buy back the ball from a wide-eyed fan [read ...
It is less than half the length of the Cloud, appears to be the author's final work, and clarifies and deepens some of its teachings. [7] In this work, the author characterizes the practice of contemplative unknowing as worshiping God with one's "substance," coming to rest in a "naked blind feeling of being," and ultimately finding thereby that ...
When he was born, Liriope asked the prophet, Tiresias, if he would live a long life, to which he replied “so long as he never knows himself.” [2] The prophet’s words would prove to be true as, sometime after being cursed, Echo spied Narcissus, while he was out hunting deer with his companions.
In an interview with Billboard, Scannell describes The Lost Mile as "the most indulgent album I've ever made." [1] The album marks somewhat of a departure from the band's established sound, both in terms of its focus on keyboards and in relation to the length of the songs - of which only one runs for less than four minutes.