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         Proclus Diadochus:     more books (21)
  1. Essays and Fragments of Proclus (Thomas Taylor) by Diadochus Proclus, 1999-09
  2. The Philosophical And Mathematical Commentaries Of Proclus On The First Book Of Euclid's Elements V1 by Diadochus Proclus, 2007-07-25
  3. Proclus on Baptism in Constantinople (Joint Liturgical Studies) by Diadochus Proclus, Juliette Day, 2005-07-01
  4. Elements of Theology by Diadochus Proclus, 1963-12
  5. Proclus Diadochus: An entry from Gale's <i>Science and Its Times</i> by Judson Knight, 2001
  6. The first book of Euclid's elements, with a commentary based principally upon that of Proclus Diadochus by Euclid, 1905
  7. Proclus Commentary on the " Timaeus " of Plato Vol 2 by Diadochus Proclus, 1998-04
  8. PROCLUS(412485): An entry from Gale's <i>Encyclopedia of Philosophy</i> by Carlos Steel, 2006
  9. In Platonis Cratylum Commentaria (Bibliotheca scriptorum Graecorum et Romanorum Teubneriana) by Proclus Diadochus, 1998-07
  10. Procli Diadochi in Platonis Rem Publican Commentarii (Proclus Diadochus's Commentary on Plato's Republic), Vol I. by Wilhelm (Ed.) Proclus Diadochus; Kroll, 1899
  11. In Platonis Rem Publicam Commentarii (Commentary on Plato's Republic), Vol. II by Wilhelm (ed.) Proclus Diadochus; Kroll, 1901
  12. Proclus Diadochus: Commentary on the First Alcibiades of Plato. by L.G. Westerink, 1954
  13. Proclus Diadochus: Commentary on the first Alcibiades of Plato by Proclus, 1954
  14. Proclus: Procli Philosophi Platonici, Commentarius in Platonis Parmenidem, Part 3 / III, (PLATO, PARMENIDES, COMMENTARY) by Victor Cousin, Editor), Procli Proclus Diadochus, 2002

61. Sayings Collected By A Professor
and purifies the intellect; she brings light to our intrinsic ideas; sheabolishes oblivion and ignorance which are ours by birth. —proclus diadochus
http://www.cs.clemson.edu/~steve/colldsay.htm
Sayings Collected by a Curmudgeonly Professor
"Being a curmudgeon is underrated" Tim Trucano
These sayings are a collection developed over many years. Originally, there was no intent to make this a scholarly work and therefore, unfortunately, many references are lacking, incomplete, flat ol' wrong. Mea maxima culpa. All contributions that strike me as part of my Weltanschauung are gratefully accepted. D. E. (Steve) Stevenson
Some Other Curmugeons
Richard Hamming George Michael More Good Stuff from George Michael Here's some great sayings by Winston Churchill
New Material
Years ago, in grade school,
Teachers used to say,
"For every problem, there's a rule,
So do it just that way."
But when I got to college
They said I always must
Apply my basic knowledge,
Since rules are to distrust.
The New Math thought that every kid
Should give real thought a try.
It didn't matter what you did Just so you told them why. Then the computers came along, And algorithms, too, Constructed so you can't go wrong No matter what you do.

62. Historians And Philosophers : A Collated Web Index : Classical Period (until AD
proclus diadochus (AD 410485) Greco-roman philosopher and mathematician.Proclus biography (HTML at MacTutor). Copyright © 1996-2005 Peter Ravn Rasmussen.
http://www.scholiast.org/history/hp-clas.html
A collated web index of significant
Historians and Philosophers
Classical Period (until AD 500)
Navigation guide:
Scholiast.org
History Historians and Philosophers Classical period (until AD 500)
NOTE: Deceased philosophers and historians are listed chronologically by year of death, whereas living individuals are listed by year of birth. Parmenides of Elea (515?-445? B.C.)
Greek philosopher Protagoras (480-411 B.C.)
Greek philosopher Herodotus (480-425 B.C.)
Greek historian

63. Jeffery C. Kalb, Jr. Thomism, Mathematics, And Science
St. Bonaventure, Jacques Maritain, St. Augustine, Plato, Blessed John DunsScotus, proclus diadochus, Antonio RosminiSerbati, and Gregory Palamas.
http://www.innerexplorations.com/philtext/jeffkalb.htm
Jeffrey C. Kalb, Jr.
Thomism, Mathematics and Science
By detailing some of my interests and writings, I hope to hear from those whose interests bear some resemblance to my own. I wish to thank Dr. Arraj for his kindness in giving individuals such as myself a forum for our ideas. My Road to Thomism I was born July 7, 1966. I studied materials science and electrical engineering at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in Troy, NY. I graduated with a B.S. in materials science in 1988 and then received a M.S. in materials science and a M.S. in electrical engineering in 1989 while studying under a graduate fellowship from the National Science Foundation. Somewhat disappointed with the state of modern physics, increasingly hostile to its foundations, and lacking the patience of a good experimentalist, I elected to terminate my fellowship and take employment as an engineer in the semiconductor industry. In 2001 I enrolled at the University of Arizona, where I am pursuing an M.A. in classics with a philology concentration. As regards my work in philosophy I have no properly academic credentials, so my writing will have to speak for itself. I began to study natural philosophy in response to an insight that both quantum and statistical mechanics are ultimately unverifiable in the empirical sense. For the last twelve years I have expanded my study, branching into many other areas, primarily within the triangle defined by metaphysics, mathematics, and natural philosophy. My mathematical considerations led me to conclude to the existence of form, which is implicitly denied by Cartesian mathematical analysis and its progeny. As I was at the same time rediscovering and deepening my Catholic faith, I was led to St. Thomas as the Church’s doctrinal norm. I was fortunate in having picked up a copy of Etienne Gilson’s "The Christian Philosophy of Saint Thomas Aquinas." It was difficult for me at first. The terms were opaque after the first reading: substance, accident, essence, quiddity, prime matter, substantial form, act-of-existence

64. Austrian Literature Online - Kataloge
Diadochussacrif PROCLUSDiadochusSphaer - 1549 proclus diadochus proclus diadochusProcli - 1591
http://webapp.uibk.ac.at/alo/cat/?id=5017624

65. PSIgate - Physical Sciences Information Gateway Search/Browse Results
proclus diadochus Born 8 Feb 411 in Constantinople (now Istanbul), Byzantium (nowTurkey) Died 17 April 485 in Athens, Greece Show birthplace location
http://www.psigate.ac.uk/roads/cgi-bin/search_webcatalogue2.pl?limit=425&term1=b

66. I. Philosophers: Bibliography. Vol. 14. The Victorian Age, Part Two. The Cambrid
proclus diadochus. The philosophical and mathematical commentaries ProclusDiadochus. The six books of Proclus on the history of Plato, translated.
http://www.bartleby.com/224/0100.html
Select Search All Bartleby.com All Reference Columbia Encyclopedia World History Encyclopedia Cultural Literacy World Factbook Columbia Gazetteer American Heritage Coll. Dictionary Roget's Thesauri Roget's II: Thesaurus Roget's Int'l Thesaurus Quotations Bartlett's Quotations Columbia Quotations Simpson's Quotations Respectfully Quoted English Usage Modern Usage American English Fowler's King's English Strunk's Style Mencken's Language Cambridge History The King James Bible Oxford Shakespeare Gray's Anatomy Farmer's Cookbook Post's Etiquette Bulfinch's Mythology Frazer's Golden Bough All Verse Anthologies Dickinson, E. Eliot, T.S. Frost, R. Hopkins, G.M. Keats, J. Lawrence, D.H. Masters, E.L. Sandburg, C. Sassoon, S. Whitman, W. Wordsworth, W. Yeats, W.B. All Nonfiction Harvard Classics American Essays Einstein's Relativity Grant, U.S. Roosevelt, T. Wells's History Presidential Inaugurals All Fiction Shelf of Fiction Ghost Stories Short Stories Shaw, G.B. Stein, G. Stevenson, R.L. Wells, H.G. Reference Cambridge History The Victorian Age, Part Two Philosophers ... BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
The Cambridge History of English and American Literature in 18 Volumes
Vol. 14. The Victorian Age, Part Two.

67. Schiller Institute Kepler Translations
When proclus diadochus had published four books on Euclid s First, he wantedtheoretical philosophy to be incorporated in the subject of mathematics by
http://www.schillerinstitute.org/transl/trans_kepler.html
Home Search About Fidelio ...
Dialogue of Cultures
Translations of Works by
Johannes Kepler
The Science of the Harmony of the World (1619) Preface to Book I
The Science of the Harmony of the World
Preface to Book I: On the Reason for the Knowledge and Proof of the Regular Plane Figures which create Harmonic Proportions, with their origin, classes, order and differences.
translated by Christopher White with the assistance of Sylvia Brewda
Introduction
In the work known as Harmonice Mundi, the German scientist and mathematician, Johannes Kepler (1571-1630) presented to the world the culminating application to questions of astronomy of the method which he had defined in his first book (Mysterium Cosmographicum
Many know of Harmonice Mundi as the work in which Kepler announced the third of his laws of planetary motion: the ratio of the cube of the (average) radius of the planet's orbit to the square of its periodic time is equal to a constant for all planets. This law, which applies as well to all the planets and systems of moons discovered since Kepler, does not however define the true importance of this work. Here, Kepler pulled together his studies in music, geometry, epistemology and astronomy and created a theory of the solar system which opens the door to critical advances in all of physics.
This ground-breaking work has never been published in English, except for Book V, which is the culmination of the entire work, but which appears mystical and unrigorous if read alone. The effect is essentially the opposite of what Kepler describes here as being done to Euclid, where the crown of the work was chopped off, here only the crown has been presented without the foundation which Kepler carefully built. Book I of Harmonice Mundi is the most difficult section to read, but provides the scientific language which Kepler will need throughout the rest of the work.

68. RENAISSANCE MAN: THE RECONSTRUCTED LIBRARIES OF EUROPEAN SCHOLARS, 1450-1700 Ser
proclus in ptolomi quadripartitum grc 8o. Bas. proclus diadochus, Paraphrasis inquatuor Ptolemi libros de siderum effectionibus.
http://www.ampltd.co.uk/collections_az/RenMan-1-3/contents-of-reels.aspx
@import url(/css/ampstyle.css); @import url(/css/general.css); A B C D ... P Q R S T U V W X Y Z RENAISSANCE MAN:
THE RECONSTRUCTED LIBRARIES OF EUROPEAN SCHOLARS, 1450-1700
Series One: The Books and Manuscripts of John Dee, 1527-1608
Part 3: REEL 41
MS Ff.6.50 (RW. DM1 a
John of Vienna Speculum elementorum
Rasis Alchimia
Rasis Flores secretorum; Interrogationes Uthesiae ad Mariam
Roger Bacon De secretis naturae
Democritus Secretum super corpus spiritum et animum
Mirer Senior Hermes De sex rerum principiis Khalid rex et Morienus Romanus Hermes Liber gratiae Ps. Avicenna Declaratio lapidis filio suo Aboali Turba philosophorum (extracta by Johannes Salernitatus?) Ps. Albertus Magnus Semita recta De aquis albis et rubeis Liber 12 aquarum; Documenta Pictagore J. Dastin Rosarius philosophorum REEL 42 N*.8.25 (C) (RW. 122) Averrhois destructio destructionu m lat: f o . ven. 1527 1. Averroes 2. Kalonymos ben Kalonymos Liber de mundi creatione physicis rationibus probata H*.1.10 (B) (RW. 223) Henrici Harphij Theologia mystica f o . Coloni. 1556 Henricus Herpf Theologi mystic libri tres.

69. MECHANICS HW
where upon Euclid answered that there was no royal road to geometry.proclus diadochus. Homework 14 Due date April 19 ps file, pdf file
http://www.physics.ucf.edu/~costas/Courses/Mechanics/HW/
MECHANICS: HW You may ask: `Why is the homework long at times? Or why is it keep coming?' To this, my answer would be: Ptolemy once asked Euclid whether was any shorter way to a knowledge of geometry than by a study of the Elements , where upon Euclid answered that there was no royal road to geometry.
Proclus Diadochus Comments, corrections, etc should be sent to

70. The Goddess Hekate
These are the Orphic Hymns, the Greek Magical Papyri, proclus diadochus’ “ToHekate and Janus”, and Sophocles’ “Hymn to Helios and Hekate”.
http://www.hermetic.com/webster/hekate-review.html
The Goddess Hekate
Published in Gnosis
Review by Sam Webster
. Edited by Stephen Ronan. Chthonios Books, 7 Tamarisk Steps, Hastings TN34 3DN, England, Tel. 0424 433302, International + 44 424 433302, 1992. 166 pp., $46. Hekate is a much heard of, but little understood, Goddess of the Pan-Hellenic pantheon. Her cult was among the most vigorous of the ancient Pagan world as evidenced by the condemnations of the 11th century Church against offerings left to Her at the places where three roads meet. Today She is mostly known as a Moon Goddess and Queen of the Witches and in some parts of the Wiccan and Goddess movements She is given great honor. Yet to penetrate Her history and the depth of Her character requires searching through hard to find and out of print source texts and reference materials. Knowing Greek is also essential. Now Stephan Ronan has gathered together the best of the classical scholarship written in English into one small handy volume, The Goddess Hekate The first half of the work consists of reprints. Ronan includes J.E. Lowe’s “Deities Invoked by Magicians (i) Hekate” from his

71. Hekate
Hymns (1). proclus diadochus (410485 AD). Hymn VI To Hekate and Janus. (Text E.Vogt Procli Hymni Weisbaden 1957). Hail, many-named Mother of the Gods,
http://www.whiterosesgarden.com/deities/DTY_Greek/GRD_hekate.htm
Hekate Other Names / Variations: Hecate Meaning of Name: "far-off", "far-darting" Pronunciation: Titles: Triformis, Tergemina, Triceps, Trimorphis, Brimo (for underworld aspect), Trivia Gender (if known): Female Connected with: Bendis (Thracian moon goddess), Luna / Selene Attributes / Spheres of Influence: Major Site of Worship: Crossroads. Temples were located throughout Greece. Name of Major Temple: n/a Symbols: Torch, Keys Appropriate Incense / Fragrances: Saffron? Appropriate Offerings: Eggs, cheese, cakes, mullet fish, garlic, honey Animals Associated with the Deity: Dogs, snakes, horses Colors Associated with the Deity: Black Plants Associated with the Deity: Oak Direction Associated with the Deity: n/a Number(s) Associated with Deity: 3 and all its multiples were sacred to Hekate Married to: n/a Children: (varies heavily by writer) Janus, Ops, Saturn

72. Astrologos Books, NY
Author, proclus diadochus. Title, The Six Books of Proclus the Platonic Successoron the Theology of Plato Translated From the Greek By Thomas Taylor.
http://www.astrologos.org/T_Z/page000337.htm
Astrologos Books 1st Page Previous Page Back to Top Next Page ... Last Page Print-to-order black and white reprints of rare, hard-to-find and out of print books Author: Rieger Julius. Title: The Silent Church; the Problem of German Confessional Witness. Description: Item No: M-33610A598738509 Price: Order now! Author: Delph Edward William. Title: The Silent Community : Public Homosexual Encounters. Description: Item No: M-92529A060809949 Price: Order now! Author: Olesen Virginia L. Title: The Silent Dialogue : a Study in the Social Psychology of Professional Socialization / By Virginia L. Olesen and Elvi W. Whittaker. Ed1 Description: Item No: M-94383A608149292 Price: Order now! Author: Westley William A. Title: The Silent Majority : [Families of Emotionally Healthy College Students] / William a Westley Nathan B Epstein. Ed1. Description: Item No: M-89005A835793478 Price: Order now! Author: Murphy David. Title: The Silent Watchdog : the Press in Local Politics. Description: Item No: M-93737A598135294 Price: Order now! Author: Lyon David. Title: The Silicon Society.

73. Astrologos Books, NY
Author, proclus diadochus. Title, The Commentaries of Proclus on the Timaeusof Plato in Five Books; Containing a Treasury of Pythagoric and Platonic
http://www.astrologos.org/T_Z/page000085.htm
Astrologos Books 1st Page Previous Page Back to Top Next Page ... Last Page Print-to-order black and white reprints of rare, hard-to-find and out of print books Author: Krutilla John V. Title: The Columbia River Treaty : the Economics of an International River Basin Development. Description: Item No: M-23607A598120661 Price: Order now! Author: Cox Ross. Title: The Columbia River; Or Scenes and Adventures During a Residence of Six Years on the Western Side of the Rocky Mountains Among Various Tribes of Indians Hitherto Unknown; Together With a Journey Across the American Continent. Volume 1 Description: Item No: M-88988A608429384 Price: Order now! Author: Cox Ross. Title: The Columbia River; Or Scenes and Adventures During a Residence of Six Years on the Western Side of the Rocky Mountains Among Various Tribes of Indians Hitherto Unknown; Together With a Journey Across the American Continent. Volume 2 Description: Item No: M-89037A608429392 Price: Order now! Author: Dearborn Benjamin. Title: The Columbian Grammar. Description: Item No: M-31977A598765492 Price: Order now!

74. Mathematics And The Greeks / Harvard University
Chapter 2 pages 32 and 37 (focus on tables); Syllabus; proclus diadochus Commentaryon Euclid s Elements copyright restriction see alternate reference
http://courses.dce.harvard.edu/~mathe6/assignments.html
Home Preview Syllabus Books ... NoFrame Handouts and Assignments
Euclid Papyrus: Caption Zoom
Archive of handouts distrubuted in class
PDF format for printer (8.5" x 11")
For upcoming topics, see Class Schedule
Final Examination was given on:
Monday May 23 in Sever 203 at 5:40pm
Week 14 Week 13 Week 12 Graduate Student Assignment : I would like graduate students to give me, by the date of the final exam [May 23], a set of 3 or so lesson plans, in which you use topics relating to Greek math, showing how you would teach (or have taught) them to students. You should feel free to be as creative as you would like with this. The main thing is that you are showing how you would present your specific topics in a way that will make them both comprehensible and enjoyable. Graeme Bird
Week 11

75. Mathematical Quotations -- P
proclus diadochus (412 485). It is well known that the man who first made publicthe theory of irrationals perished in a shipwreck in order that the
http://math.furman.edu/~mwoodard/ascquotp.html
Mathematical Quotations P
Back to MQS Home Page Back to "O" Quotations Forward to "Q" Quotations
Pascal, Blaise (1623-1662)
We are usually convinced more easily by reasons we have found ourselves than by those which have occurred to others.
Pensees. 1670. It is the heart which perceives God and not the reason.
Pensees. 1670. Man is equally incapable of seeing the nothingness from which he emerges and the infinity in which he is engulfed.
Pensees. 1670. Our nature consists in movement; absolute rest is death.
Pensees. 1670. Man is full of desires: he loves only those who can satisfy them all. "This man is a good mathematician," someone will say. But I have no concern for mathematics; he would take me for a proposition. "That one is a good soldier." He would take me for a besieged town. I need, that is to say, a decent man who can accommodate himself to all my desires in a general sort of way.
W. H. Auden and L. Kronenberger (eds.) The Viking Book of Aphorisms , New York: Viking Press, 1966. We run carelessly to the precipice, after we have put something before us to prevent us from seeing it.

76. Westerse Handschriften / Catalogi 15
proclus diadochus de Hesiodi Poesi et de Scuti argumento. Conf. Geel no. 26.RUH 21 ex Theocriti Scholiis excerpta. ex Maximi Scholiis excerpta. Conf.
http://bc.ub.leidenuniv.nl/bc/whs/catalogi/catcomp1/15.html
Universiteitsbibliotheek Bijzondere collecties Westerse handschriften Catalogi XV CODICES RUHNKENIANI (RUH) Tabula RUH 1
de Iesu Christi effigie. - de Impostore quodam.
Conf. Geel no. 21.
RUH 2
Platonis Timaeus.
Conf. Geel no. 74.
RUH 3
Platonis Epistolae.
Conf. Geel no. 75.
RUH 4
Proculani Sermo. Conf. Geel no. 16. RUH 5 Servii Grammatici Glossae. Conf. Geel no. 495. RUH 6 Index operum chymicorum. - Signa chymica. - Lexicon chymicon. - Michael Psellus de Auri fabrica. - de Musica. - de Avibus. Conf. Geel no. 196. RUH 7 Callimachi Hymni cum scholiis. - Homerici hymnus in Cererem. Conf. Geel no. 38. RUH 8 Sententiae ex variis scriptoribus. Conf. Geel no. 201. RUH 9 Pompei Commentum Artis Donati. Conf. Geel no. 486. RUH 10 Orphei Argonautica. Conf. Geel no. 29. RUH 11 Meletus Phrygius de Natura hominis. Conf. Geel no. 120. RUH 12 in Platonem scholia et adnotationes. Conf. Geel no. 90. RUH 13 Hermetis Trismegisti de Natura deorum ad Asclepium allocuta.

77. Pg 4 - Hellenic World News
From Thales of Miletus to proclus diadochus and all those in between, this isthe forum for talking about their philosophical ideas, arguments and writings.
http://www.ancientworlds.net/aw/Article/588635
Rome Hellas Egypt Mesopotamia ... Site Library Library of AncientWorlds Search Articles: Title and Summary Pg 4 - Hellenic World News Associated to Place: articles by Heraklia Aelius ( Articles Posted Jun 28, 2005 - 10:37 , Last Edited: Jun 30, 2005 General Article
Pg 1: AW Global News

Pg 2: AW Global News (cont.)

Pg 3: Roman World News

Pg 4: Hellenic World News
...
Persona Development Questions

by Anna Hippon
Reading the Life of Alexander

by Kallistos Alexandros
Interested in ancient philosophy and thought? Then Philos Sophia is the group for you! From Thales of Miletus to Proclus Diadochus and all those in between, this is the forum for talking about their philosophical ideas, arguments and writings.
Helen Theocritos
is Hellas' featured citizen for the month of July. Not only does she have one of the best homes in AW, she is an enthusiastic member of the Hellas' Welcoming Committee. She is a very friendly patron and and active member of the site, so stop by her Olympic Realm and say hi! Our neighborhood spotlight is on Cyprus this month. The third largest island in the Mediterranean has a long history and has been visited by many of the greatest including Alexander and Cleopatra, and Aphrodite made her home here. Be sure to sail on over to our newest island neighborhood!

78. Philos Sophia
From Thales of Miletus to proclus diadochus (and beyond) and all those in between,this is the forum for talking about their philosophical ideas,
http://www.ancientworlds.net/aw/Group/30948
Rome Hellas Egypt Mesopotamia ... Site Map Welcome Join the Group! Philos Sophia
For the study of ancient Greek philosophy. This group currently has Members Philosophos
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Cleomenes more... Mathites AzureEyes Ramesses more... Alerissa Nestor more... Vortigern Aedui more... Demitria Xanthippos more... Shauri Amenhotep more... antoninus Lucretius more... LadyJan Antonius more... Eurydice Eurimedon more... Phoebe Lysias more... Heraclitus Xanthippos more... Kieli Antonius more... BigFrank Cassius more... Verditius Parisii more... Maximius Flavius more... Aurora Amaru more... Tiamo Domitius more... Vespasian Flavius more... LadyDamorea Lysias more... Omicron Siamen more... Lycurgus Artistides more... All Mathitess Neophutos Above: Jacques Louis David's The Death of Socrates Please join us in a discussion of all aspects of the millennium of philosophical dominance of the Ancient Greeks. From Thales of Miletus to Proclus Diadochus (and beyond) and all those in between, this is the forum for talking about their philosophical ideas, arguments and writings. You may also be curious to know, “Why the Greeks?” We will look at Greek philosophy in its historical perspective, i.e. what events and settings gave rise to their systems for organizing the universe, their ethics, and beliefs. One and all are welcome to join us in our discussions! The Discussions of Philos Sophia:

79. Matthew Boroson
proclus diadochus, you naughty man, how you dreamed of looking up Mary?kirt asshe ascended! three Do you think I lurk by choice in the shadow of a tree?
http://members.tripod.com/g_sticks_nicholas/Matt/
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Search: Lycos Tripod TV, Movie News Share This Page Report Abuse Edit your Site ... Contact Matt Matthew Boroson THE CONFESSIONS OF ST. BOROSON
ONE
My mother and I were lonely, so she painted a face on me.
Every day this face grew more lifelike, while my real face began to
yellow like street maps in the glove compartment. And one day the
painted face began to say things only I can hear.
It tells me what to write, here in this dark room confessing.
And maybe the darkness I always feel around me is
nothing more than a tree?hadow that has gotten lost, and
somewhere a tree is weeping for its own piece of the night, which it cannot find. two If our names were Thirst and Hunger, could you taste us? Would you be able to live, loving us, drinking the misery of stones? My brother and I rise like a clamor of black butterflies, and our dark wind will extinguish the moon; listen to it now, its last crackles. If our names were Dust and Bumblebee. Every candle an anchorite ever burned to read by has left behind a residue, a saggy body of wax thugging floorwards like a

80. Proclus - MavicaNET
Biography of Proclus (411485). eng . proclus diadochus - English URLhttp//www.phys.virginia.edu/classes/109N/lectures/proclus.html
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