Thursday, January 29, 2009


"Defenses conceal weaknesses, as graves and thick bottles conceal things that are buried. But though a defense may hide, it is not necessarily impenetrable, just as, though something is buried, it is not irretrievable."




"Every coincidence, improbable as it may seem in the real world, is probable and even predictable in the psyhe's hidden world. The psyche will look for what it wants in the real world; it will project what it needs into what is there."
"We assume that all human beings crave love and move toward it as instinctively as a plant inclines to the sun. But human nature can be perverted and love is too dangerously to want, in fact, it is too dangerous to want anything....but there comes a time when nature will not be denied, when, because we still "feel life at life's sources"..."






"The dead never change, because they are stopped in time. And if they remain always as they were at the moment of their death, everything about them remains as it was. Their memories can never change or fade. Because the dead are stopped, there can be no question of their forgetting, of their ceasing to love."


for 360 posting by ophelia jane julia.

Those of us who love prose and poetry find in its pleasure, wisdom and inspiration. But even the best literature cannot be compared to the value of the words of the Bible. Imagine a despairing soul on the verge of suicide picking up a book of poetry and thumbing through its pages. It's highly unlikely that even the noble thoughts of Henry W. Longfellow or John Greenleaf Whittier, to say nothing of a modern poet like T.S Eliot, would inspire him to fall on his knees and cry out to God for mercy and grace. Poetry has its honored place in our culture. But human words, however creatively woven together, can never take the place of God's Word for...

A well-turned phrase and words that rhyme

Can give us inspiration,

Yet nothing but the Word of God

Can bring us His salvation.

~~Sper~~





Have a lovely and blessed weekend ahead bloggers!


Sincerely,

Ophelia




a c k n o w l e d g e m e n t s:


oil on canvas image 1 - Lachrymae by Lord Leighton Fredric

oil on canvas image 2 - Invocation by Lord Leighton Fredric

oil on canvas image 3 - Clytie, 1892 by Lord Leighton Fredric

oil on canvas image 4 - Odalisque by Lord Leighton Fredric


Oil on canvas images were taken from http://www.illusionsgallery.com/


Featured excerpts quoted from: Introduction to Charlotte Bronte's Villette by Susan Fromberg Schaeffer