This well considered contributed post, brimming with the wisdom of a habitual sage, is Diane Rufino s Magnus Opus.
A Re-Declaration of Independence
. think about Diane s title . it is an ominous collection of words that begs for a statement of fact, and a conclusion of performance planned for future generations of real patriots, who must heed the call to re-declare OUR independence
re-declaring their independence
from all that would control their incorruptible spirits against the pronounced, wisdom and the declared advisements by OUR Founders, a humbling history of how to sustain this Republic.
This article is dedicated to our great Founding Fathers - men who had the courage, the foresight, and the wisdom to secure the freedom that I exercise and enjoy every single day.
Engine Optimization | Lapham s Quarterly
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Sundin column: Belief in the unprovable
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All About Writing Your Will
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Upon hearing of Italo Calvino’s death in September of 1985, John Updike commented, “Calvino was a genial as well as brilliant writer. He took fiction into new places where it had never been before, and back into the fabulous and ancient sources of narrative.” At that time Calvino was the preeminent Italian writer, the influence of his fantastic novels and stories reaching far beyond the Mediterranean.
Two years before,
The Paris Review had commissioned a Writers at Work interview with Calvino to be conducted by William Weaver, his longtime English translator. It was never completed, though Weaver later rewrote his introduction as a remembrance. Still later,