Join us on a literary world trip!
Add this book to bookshelf
Grey
Write a new comment Default profile 50px
Grey
Subscribe to read the full book or read the first pages for free!
All characters reduced
The Silence and the Word - A poetic philosophical journey - cover

The Silence and the Word - A poetic philosophical journey

Francesco Sartori

Publisher: Teo Lux

  • 0
  • 0
  • 0

Summary

A NEW MYSTICAL AND METAPHYSICAL POETRYBETWEEN ÉRŌS, AGÁPĒ AND THÁNATOSMystical Language and the ineffableThe mutation of érōs into thánatosHistorical nihilism as a denial of human destinyThe Dimensions of Agápico LoveThánatos and némesis.The Realism of the MysticPoetic Language and self-referentialityThe Via Lucis (The Way of Light)Love betrayed and rediscovered:  Hesychasm and contemplative silence.The Via Crucis (The Way of the Cross)The Via Pulchritudinis (The Way of Beauty) and Hesychasm.LITERARY BIOGRAPHY  OF AUTHOR
Available since: 05/27/2025.
Print length: 68 pages.

Other books that might interest you

  • Julia or The Convent of St Claire - Poem by a 18th Century female author who was also an abolitionist pioneer - cover

    Julia or The Convent of St...

    Amelia Opie

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Amelia Alderson, an only child, was born on the 12th November 1769 in Norwich, England. 
    After the death of her mother on New Year’s Eve 1784 she became her father's housekeeper and hostess. 
    The young Amelia was energetic, attractive, and an admirer of fashion.  She spent much of her youth writing poetry and plays and putting on local amateur theatricals.  At 18 she had published anonymously ‘The Dangers of Coquetry’. 
    Amelia married in the spring of 1798 to the artist John Opie at the Church of St Marylebone, in Westminster, and together they lived in Berners Street where Amelia was already living. 
    Her next novel in 1801 ‘Father and Daughter’, was very popular even though it dealt with such themes as illegitimacy, a socially difficult subject for its times.  From this point on published works were far more regular.  The following year her volume ‘Poems’ appeared and was again very popular.  Novels continued to flow and she never once abandoned her social activism and her call for better treatment of women and the dispossessed in her works.  She was also keenly involved in a love of society and its attendant frills. 
    Encouraged by her husband to write more she published Adeline Mowbray in 1804, an exploration of women's education, marriage, and the abolition of slavery.  
    Her husband died in 1807 and she paused from writing for a few years before resuming with further novels and poems.  Of particular interest was her short poem ‘The Black Man's Lament’ in 1826.  Her life now was in the main spent travelling and working for charities and against slavery.  She even helped create a Ladies Anti-Slavery Society in Norwich which organised a parliamentary petition of 187,000 names of which hers was the first name. 
    After a visit to Cromer, a seaside resort on the North Norfolk coast, she caught a chill and retired to her bedroom.  
    Amelia Opie died on the 2nd December 1853 in Norwich.  She was 84.
    Show book
  • The Iliad - cover

    The Iliad

    Homer

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Immerse yourself in the epic grandeur of The Iliad by Homer, one of the greatest masterpieces of ancient literature. This timeless epic poem transports listeners to the heart of the Trojan War, where gods and mortals clash in a dramatic tale of heroism, honor, and fate. 
    Follow the legendary warrior Achilles as his wrath shapes the course of the war, leading to fierce battles, tragic losses, and unforgettable acts of bravery. Witness the struggles of iconic figures like Hector, Agamemnon, and Odysseus, as their destinies intertwine amidst the chaos of war and the will of the gods. 
    Expertly narrated to capture the rhythm and intensity of Homer’s original verse, this audiobook brings to life the grandeur of ancient Greece, filled with vivid imagery, powerful emotions, and timeless themes of pride, loyalty, and the human condition. 
    Start listening to The Iliad today and experience the epic saga that has inspired generations for over 2,000 years!
    Show book
  • Tears Laughs and Dreams - A Poetry Collection - cover

    Tears Laughs and Dreams - A...

    Alicia Rades

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Experience the tears, listen to the laughter, and follow the dreams of one young author’s journey through life in this collection of short poems.
    Show book
  • WHERE ELSE - An International Hong Kong Poetry Anthology - cover

    WHERE ELSE - An International...

    Jennifer Wong, Tim Tim Cheng,...

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Featuring both established and emerging Hong Kong poets across generations and continents, this unique anthology offers a glimpse into an exciting, diverse range of voices that make up the diasporic imagination of the contemporary Hong Kong poetry community. Adopting a diasporic approach, the anthology encompasses both native Hong Kong writers as well as expatriate and mixed-race voices who were born or have lived in the city.
    With a preface from the Hong Kong-born, California-based poet Marilyn Chin and a joint introduction from the co-editors, the anthology sheds light on some poignant, wide-ranging themes such as migration, identity, gender, language, belonging, environment that underpin the city of Hong Kong, a place situated uniquely between the East and the West, in the 21st century. The book also features a selection of artworks from some of Hong Kong's most talented artists, inviting the reader to make connections between the visual images and the text.
    Show book
  • Laughing Boy - (stage version) - cover

    Laughing Boy - (stage version)

    Stephen Unwin

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    'So much magic. So much love. So much laughter. So much work. So much rage. And so many tears.'
    Connor is, well, Connor. He loves buses, Eddie Stobart and Lego. He also has learning disabilities. When he dies an entirely preventable death in NHS care, his mum, Sara, can't get a straight answer as to how it happened.
    But Sara and her family won't stop asking questions and soon an extraordinary campaign emerges. Demanding the truth, it uncovers a scandal of neglect and indifference that goes beyond Connor's death to thousands of others.
    Sara Ryan's impassioned, frank and surprisingly funny memoir Justice for Laughing Boy is adapted for the stage by Stephen Unwin. It was first performed at Jermyn Street Theatre, London, in 2024, in a co-production with Theatre Royal Bath.
    Show book
  • Sensitive to Temperature - cover

    Sensitive to Temperature

    Serena Alagappan

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Sensitive to Temperature seeks out the precariousness and sensitivities of language, as well as the fragilities of the world it represents. These are eco-poems that experience time on a human and non-human scale, from the movements of rock to the sources of rivers.
    Show book