Dissipatio H.G. Guido Morselli (best time to read books .txt) š
- Author: Guido Morselli
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31 solvens saeclum in favilla: From the Latin hymn Dies Irae, which begins: Dies irƦ, dies illa / Solvet sƦclum in favilla. (āThat day of wrath, that dreadful day / shall heaven and earth in ashes lay.ā) English translation: the 1962 Missal.
32 Mundus permanebit. . . . Viri . . . : āThe earth remains. . . . Men, women and children, human beings of all ages, classes, and nations shall suddenly be elevated [sublimabuntur].ā The letter from Salvian he quotes from may also be Morselliās invention.
33 Nihil huius gloriae decet peccatorem: āNothing of this glory is fitting for a sinner.ā
34 natural hominis tegumentum, quasi altera cutis: āmanās natural shell, as if another skinā
35 Deucalion: After Zeus provoked a great flood, Deucalion, who survived, was told to ācover your head and throw the bones of your mother behind your shoulder.ā (The āmotherā was Gaia and the ābonesā were rocks.) The rocks, when thrown, became human beings.
36 asylum ignorantiae: Spinoza, an āasylum of stupidityā
37 āTo drown in the abyssāheaven or hell, who caresā: From āLe voyage,ā Les Fleurs du Mal, Charles Baudelaire, tr. Robert Lowell in Marthiel & Jackson Mathews, eds., The Flowers of Evil, New Directions, 1963.
38 Beati in regno coelesti . . . : English translation, James Lehrberger, The Thomist, vol. 80, 3, July 2016.
39 Les cƩlibataires sont si malheureux: French pop song, an ironic celebration of bachelorhood, 1960, Sacha Distel. The refrain: Les cƩlibataires sont si malheureux, / Il faut bien prier pour eux, / Cars ils sont si solitaires, / Se couchant toujours seuls dans leur lit. English translation kindly provided by Susan Barba.
40 The only reality: Probably from Charles Reich, The Greening of America, 1970, translated as La nuova America, Rizzoli, 1972.
41 the logic of function and fiction: From the Diario, December 7, 1966. Morselli questioned the Hegelian approach as overly anthropomorphic, for its conviction that ābeyond the historical subject there was nothing that was not in function of man the subject or one of his āfictions,ā whether pragmatic or maybe just didactic.ā
42 Woe to him that is alone (for there is no end to his toil): Ecclesiastes 4:10.
43 matter is far more prized: āAt one end, raw, telluric matter, at the other, the finished, human object; and between these two extremes, nothing; nothing but a transit, hardly watched over by an attendant in a cloth cap, half-god, half-robot. So, more than a substance, plastic is the very idea of its infinite transformation . . .ā From Barthes, Mythologies, āPlastic,ā first English edition, 1972. Barthes, 1957; Morselli read in 1962.
44 after the Cossacks had fired on the crowd: Morselliās striking image doesnāt quite fit with the historical record. When in 1905, workers marched on the Winter Palace in St. Petersburg, they were mowed down by Cossacks with sabers before they reached the square.
45 āThe stethoscope falls on a white coatā: Most likely, the rather insipid verses quoted are Morselliās invention, possibly meant to be slightly derogatory.
46 āWhen mankind achieves true happinessā: In Constance Garnettās 1916 translation of The Possessed, āWhen all mankind attains happiness then there will be no more time, for thereāll be no need of it, a very true thought.ā
47 parking orbit: In astrophysics, a temporary orbit used in launching a satellite or vehicle into space; from the parking orbit a second launch is made to boost the object into its final orbit.
48 A parte objecti: as it exists objectively, rather than through the eyes of the observer
49 August Hermann Francke: Francke (1663ā1727) was a German Lutheran clergyman and Biblical scholar who established influential teaching methods and founded schools.
50 miniloquent: understated, retiring; the opposite of magniloquent, the word miniloquente is quite unusual in Italian, if not Morselliās invention.
51 Corvus corax, ill-omened birds of the battlefield: Carrion-eaters, ravens will feed on the bodies left out in a battlefield.
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