"There are few people who realize what God would make of them if they abandoned themselves into his hands, and let themselves be formed by his grace.” --- St. Ignatius Loyola
"God does not call us to do great things, but to do small things with great love". --- Mother Teresa
"The reason God put us on earth is that we might learn to love." --- George MacDonald
Wednesday, April 15, 2020
Dark Star, by Alan Furst;
In this story of Europe in the late thirties, Alan Furst portrays a grim world but one not without humanity. I haven't read John le Carre in a long time, but I remember his novels being a lot bleaker, even cynical. Furst is a first rate writer, not just cranking out thrillers. Every so often, a truly luminous passage appears like this one talking about a poem by Alexander Blok "The Scythians":
" He [Szara] would never the mysteries that these two peoples, the Russians and the Germans, shared between them. Blok had tried, as only a poet could [here it comes!]applying images, the inexplicable chemistry at the borders of language."
Isn't that marvelous; the inexplicable chemistry at the borders of language.
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