In life I think it can be a name of a person, not a place, which can give
a sense to everything you find. –
John Berger’s To the Wedding (1995)
Partial tilt-in sash of the first theater of the world, where
Abraham Ibn
Ezra (1098-1164 C.E) found the Moon
First, within grasp of six
obeloi of the occasional
drachma for two-rowed
barley of malting, for forming yeast rounds
Known affectionately to us as
barolo levees—
Notelet of “I”
walking the
decumano framed by the
Porta Borsari (1144 C.E.), at last toward the holiest
threshold of a house, or boat, with its sealed hull's monocoque
Of an egg—Sheathing the Piper PA-18 Super Cub, with its empty make and
model
recovered from
L’Eclisse
(
1962)—Not mentioned for that tenth day of September (1961), of not meeting,
but for its field in Boscomantico, where its enivrant
Had overdrawn the
River Cuckmere (1939); remarkably similar to the ensuing
Piedmontese outlet—Before Paul Nash’s
entrenched new world, Eric Ravilious
Pulling the estuaries of Morecambe, at the
Midland Hotel’s best
imitation
of the downwarped raised rims of carborundum and columns of crushed
blue glass;
Eric Ravilious and Tirzah Garwood inundated the pavilion in white-capped waves
bearing their sargassum to the parterre d’eau of the patron tables (
1933), with
Eric Gill’s sculpted seahorses upon arrival of enivrant
Windsors—Wallis; having witnessed two plane crashes, insisted they sail
with the stray stones they collected, which later endowed the Pasteur
Institute—Being
Of the horse (
סוס)
at canter, with 40 percent on the forehand and 60 percent on the hind, where
its weight sits girthed by the consonant “W” reproduced in the
Gill Sans fascia
of
Penguin Books (1935); followed by the
Pelican
(
1937) and
Puffin (
1940) imprints,
where it is read of Ettore Bugatti's
RAILCAR monocoque (1933)
Gliding along hydraulic clutches and reversible gears, from the
Le pur sang des automobiles (1924)
advertised by a horse, whose longer, and finer
cold-weather coat lathers and
foals windswept legs of its tight confinement of eleven months that get up and
walk after ratios of sixty breaths—Roux and Yersin
tested van Behring’s
antiserum on such locomotives (1890), and delivered us
from Hugo’s
sparrow hawk of the shadows,
diphtheria (
1877), whose absorption of hen tetanus antitoxin
through porous monocoque
Covered for
Curwen Press, as Benzoni’s 1565 account of Columbus making an
egg stand on its end, or Vasari’s origin of the
Duomo of Santa Maria del Fiore,
through a
surround of chalazae,
News
Letter 6, within, a six-pointed star—After rounds,
They are received at the desk, within sight of
a marquetry picture of camels with pyramids, and the wood finishes
as scraped sepia of the Naqada ostrich
egg’s fan of Fayoum up the Nile delta
toward the Giza pyramids Firth dated centuries before their construction
(1907)—Striving to remember all before her husband became lost in a Lockheed
Hudson flying over Greenland (
1942),
Tirzah Garwood makes
Trains and Horses (1944) and the twin lamplight of the 21st
letters, shin, for their creation, after Rilke’s
Sonnets to Orpheus, Part Two XII,
where everything shines as it disappears (1922)—For their son, when
she collaged the interior of Eric’s train
compartment with the white horse of
Uffington, and, as if signaled by the three, to give of herself, anyhow
(1939)—Surest as Ravilious had made the flight school’s handling of a
Tiger Moth (1942), she writes
the commonest yellow-underwing asleep in the shadow of the curtain (1942); the Emperor transliterates as the
Saturn peacock flying to the
Moon’s
Height over the counterpane, where the sleepers awake—By the
thirteenth
sonnet, beside the Ahlbergs’s
Each Peach Pear Plum (1979); reread for the hiding stories, and double in meaning,
strewn around the enivrant
Barchino of our waking, the young catkins on the
pulled willow for snow,
with its root verb for peace, salutation, and valediction into the stream’s
unreckoned horsepower; all this is a picture—Piovanelli, or
dunlin, layover in the
arboreo the D’Este partially drained for
arborio rice, until then these predawn hours
far from the ocean, the being
Overheard by a plover from its scrape
nest; the sound it makes displaying its burnished
back as a wound—What had intended to be a walk, is mistaken for a vagrancy, or
an inconsistency of being
Produced by Jean Ferrero, the signalman, with iron-bound Zdena, whose
samizdat
Tsvetaeva weighs Pushkin’s equestrian
statue against the girl speaker’s rupture
of a doll, (
1921)—Toward the
monocoque
Of the greenhouses by the Venetians putting their sand and
wrack to best
use; the same quality reaching Antwerp in the
1550s and the conveyance is a comparable
Duty Boat (1940) with an infinite cable
up the River Scheldt beyond the former bridge in Tournai enivrant
Tanks had brought
down (1918)—What is left unbidden is
tzippora, the female
bird, which had not
been delivered that line in Deuteronomy (22:6-7), and could not be more
thoughtful of its young in luring the hunter to herself—Of Hannah, or Anne,
considered by Dürer (
1519), where he visited the
site in Düren not far from the
cylinders the
Zerkall-Buetten, whose mould-made paper impressed the limited
woodcut of Eric Ravilious’s
Bird Boy Nesting (1927) returning the
fallen clutch—Dürer’s
Stork (1515) is
chasidah, kindness, for those who
raise their young on roofs, from which is heard the cries of a human child; fully-fledged,
which feed their parents, and otherwise silent, by the clacks of their beaks, as
political situations turn out to be most often oppressive in their rounds—
Using the
head’s dopamine binding potential; the letter upon which all that is
ennobling and unbecoming in the darkness of the human profile, to elucidate
further applications of
carborundum, the
scourer of
friezes, and semiconductor
matched for the flagrant ground of Pisciarelli’s
Aquae Tauri stabilizing the wide aerial band of the
Lockheed Hudson’s first flight, 10 December 1938, from discharges of the Leyden
jar of
von Kleist (1745) and
van Musschenbroek (
1745) cohering in Branly’s
radio-
conductor
(1890), and then from Marconi’s wireless telegraph across the Channel (29 March
1899)—
Ten days that
follow the New Moon
Emptying all that is said in the
spell of
Ninon, to penetrate the
five souls on
this day, with tenth
consonant,
quert, of the
apple tree of Kandinsky’s
Promenade (1902)—Alessandro
Manzoni’s
Renzo had seen stepping out of the
Full Moon
Tavern (1628) along tortuous roads leading
from the Milan cathedral with its
octagon under the dome Pietro della Valle recognized in the Akkadian
eight-pointed
tesserae of Abraham’s Ur competing in his depiction of the
standard Persian
cat (1626)—The fourth-century
Battistero, which could have
been a makeshift sheep dipping pen, with new construction overhead by the
consort of Beatrice, the youngest
D’Este, Ludovico Sforza (1500-1508)—The
betrothed; for the time being,
Flown from the Lombardy stricken by
plague (1630)—Among them, Rudolf Steiner’s
Kraljevec; then an Austrian dependency, into the woodblock linings of Manzoni’s
1820
readership for his seven rounds
Of Anthroposophy just one iteration conserved in
A Farmhouse Bedroom (1930s)
and
The Bedstead (1939); so much debris
rebuilt by its demolishers adapting plane production for monocoque
Housing—What is constant in the blackout of Kandinsky’s figurative period is an
apple tree flanked by the couple, and shared knowledge of its star-pattern's invisible
orchard, toward the five points of
Villa Savoye (1929)—With the first
reinforced concrete
construction,
béton
Coignet, on then teeming
72 rue de Charles-Michels (1855) Le Corbusier used
the bird at the end of his
hand (1948)—Blaise
Cendrars, writing from the Somme,
the
severed hand’s abstracted fourteen of
remembered Orion,
mounting the heavens (1915), and the
divine Time, or Kairos, until it became the 28-meter
Open Hand Monument, in
Chandigarh (1964, 1972, 1985)—Resonant to
the
2600-cycle tone connection of a phone call, the seeming enivrant
Slumping roof of
Chapelle Notre-
Dame-du-Haut (1954) composes two concrete
membranes fitting together the
thenar and
proximal palmar, life and headlines—Inset
on the facing wall, the 14 May 1955 window the maker signed, after recognizing
himself in its face
three times—The month of the mazal ox and Miriam’s well, Eric
Ravilious
Made more radiant in black ink,
Untitled (Sun and Moon over Hill) (1928), from the
vantage of Dürer’s
Alpine Landscape (1495) at nightfall, or a dark sunrise in
the valleys taken on the journey to Venice—In the byre of Hull’s Mill,
Eric
Ravilious
Tucks
Two Cows (1935) that
would be recognizable to the
Amsterdam Marranos from Lisbon as the
alef,
locking the infinite in its horns, but accepting its soundless company for its
own—Had Lucas van Leyden had the opportunity to glance upon the master’s
Last Supper (1510) with a crescent moon
In
earthshine, where consciousness lies submerged in the outgoing cargoes
of sole and hake to England (June 1521), and understood the
wave-enivrant
Letter qof, of a consecrated
thing, while
held apart,
qadesh, pariah—With
no desire for the gold tubes stringing together the hammered leaves of the
world in a
Piadena display, nor the simultaneous
contrast of
Sonia Delaunay’s
printed cotton georgette,
Design 1293
(1912)—Understood, is the copper plate of
The Milkmaid, with the cartogram
whose date is one of the 72 names (1510); one and ten being
The same; Lucas van Leyden,
who later tried the Calvinists; fomenting
against gradual loss of the language, by placing the
tetragram on the
Last Judgment panel (1526-7), sat for his portrait, and thus supplemented
the
ream to Nürnberg with Katherina, the dairymaid (1521)—Rounding
The eighth month of
Ziv, and perennially failing others's stained-glass
pains, it will be marked instead on the
elytra of a rose chafer, after the stag
beetle, which
contains in its metatibial spur an overhang of an ear, the “
D” of
his identifier (1505)—Interrupted now, by the whine of the flexible
monocoque
Fuselage as the wheels touch down on
Guglielmo Marconi airport, for the
telegrapher who expired from a series of heart attacks (1937) following
membership of Mussolini’s Gran Consiglio (1922)—Covered in the veritable dust
bowl of Canaan, through the forced air of a plane mate monocoque docking with a
shudder, the same for the misnomer for the twosome themselves
spilling over with
milk and honey more precious to us, since the bachelor Eric Ravilious
Dozed in
The Attic Bedroom, Brick House, Great Bardfield (1931)—June’s itinerary allows for a few days for
Juliet's House mortared
in love letters, and being the waypoint toward Gorino
Ferrarese, with only the intense, enivrant vines cordoned on the sand offering
sea-breezes resistance—
That day, we inscribe in a compass the same significance as a pilgrimage
noticing the full moon’s glimmer on the tin
notice hung from our window frame,
of the
saintly eyes interred in a Venetian
sestiere
undamaged and unmoved by oxen that made way for a
train station—
41 comments:
https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B3DfyJRIT4jycWZNZE1naWtCdUU/view?usp=sharing
With scarab beetle, I will put Exercise 54 here, too.
https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B3DfyJRIT4jycml0UzN0N1hLbkk/view?usp=sharing
"I like everything you've said to me so far, I like everything you're inventing, and I have nothing to add. Except, maybe, about the navel. To your mind, the model of a navel-less woman is an angel. For me, it's Eve, the first woman. [...]If I am to believe the Bible, other cords too: with a little man or a little woman attached to each cord. Men's bodies were left with no continuation, completely useless, whereas from out of the sexual organ of every woman there came another cord, with another woman or man at the end of each one, and all of that, millions and millions of times over, turned into an enormous tree, a tree formed from the infinity of bodies, a tree whose branches reached to the sky. [...] "
Alain again: 'In the past, love was the celebration of the individual, of the inimitable, the tribute to a unique thing, a thing impossible to replicate. But not only does the navel not revolt against repetition, it is a call for repetitions! And in our millennium, we are going to live under the sign of the navel. [...] [A]ll of us setting our sights not on the beloved woman but on the same small hole in the middle of the belly, the hole that represents the same sole meaning, the same goal, the sole future of all erotic desire.'"
—Milan Kundera's The Festival of Insignificance
The meaning of cerceau, which came from an estimation of Saturn's growth rings (again). Anyhow, I just read the latest in my collection, Georgie and the Buried Treasure (1979), with the wisdom of rabbits showing the source.
https://s-media-cache-ak0.pinimg.com/236x/a3/7e/e0/a37ee09964ad7d622f25fcdfc8ac2075.jpg
"But to return to the question of my own personality, I see that I set myself a task of distance from objects of closest attachment. In which, Mr. Sammler, outer space is an opposite--personally, an emotional pole. One is born between his mother's legs, afterward persisting outward. To see the sidereal archipeligoes is one thing, but to plunge into them, into a dayless, nightless universe , why that, you see, makes sea-depth petty, the leviathan no more than a polliwog--"
Mr. Sammler's Planet (1969)
https://books.google.com/books?id=WRQcAQAAMAAJ&q=%22It+was+a+fancy+flag,+green+and+white,+with+the+caduceus,+the+emblem+of+healing,+in+the+centre.%22&dq=%22It+was+a+fancy+flag,+green+and+white,+with+the+caduceus,+the+emblem+of+healing,+in+the+centre.%22&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjJncvQquvKAhWIJCYKHRAXBKoQ6AEIJjAA
https://books.google.com/books?id=KPZ1CQAAQBAJ&lpg=PT19&dq=%22Art%20was%20born%2040%2C000%20years%20ago%2C%20in%20John%20Berger's%20phrase%20'like%20a%20foal%20that%20can%20walk%20straight%20away'%22&pg=PT19#v=onepage&q=%22Art%20was%20born%2040,000%20years%20ago,%20in%20John%20Berger's%20phrase%20'like%20a%20foal%20that%20can%20walk%20straight%20away'%22&f=false
http://www.bloomsbury.com/uk/the-most-perfect-thing-9781408851265/
http://phenomena.nationalgeographic.com/2016/03/09/the-earth-has-lungs-watch-them-breathe/?utm_source=Facebook&utm_medium=Social&utm_content=link_fb20160422ph-earthlungs&utm_campaign=Content&sf24790914=1
Thank you, for reminding me. This is a potential key:
http://qz.com/421855/hermann-zapf-the-font-designer-behind-palatino-and-zapf-dingbats-has-died-at-96/
https://books.google.com/books?id=TT_qtYhp9c4C&lpg=PA204&dq=dalet%20door&pg=PA204#v=onepage&q=dalet%20door&f=false
This arrived, and I was surprised by its heft. I will also consider this an imperative reading, for in-depth analysis, when school docenting leaves off on May 26th.
http://artsfuse.org/122931/fuse-poetry-review-breathturn-into-timestead-a-magnificent-guide-to-the-enigmatic-poetry-of-paul-celan/
I still want to explore Paul Nash, but the surrealistic boulders and coppicing belies some
darker moments in his biography. I will think around these facets.
"Happiness, like life itself, was a fragile as a bird's heartbeat, as fleeting as bluebells in the wood, but while it lasted, Fox Corner was an Arcadian Dream" (38).
An inheritor of Samuel Palmer and Paul Nash:
http://www.artslant.com/global/artists/show/153788-kit-boyd?tab=PROFILE
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9PcJR5MWrzc
Base 9 of the Pascaline.
https://books.google.com/books?id=-h3hBwAAQBAJ&lpg=PA38&dq=yod%20hand&pg=PA39#v=onepage&q=yod%20hand&f=false
https://schabrieres.wordpress.com/2016/07/14/jim-harrison-pivoines-peonies-2009/
https://schabrieres.wordpress.com/2016/07/22/paul-celan-decape/
https://books.google.com/books?id=pTW3BQAAQBAJ&lpg=PR46&dq=Breathturn%20into%20Timestead%20%22Weggebeizt%20vom%20Strahlenwind%20deiner%20Sprache%22&pg=PA19#v=onepage&q=Breathturn%20into%20Timestead%20%22Weggebeizt%20vom%20Strahlenwind%20deiner%20Sprache%22&f=false
Thank you, for reminding me to take up this text.
https://books.google.com/books?id=pTW3BQAAQBAJ&lpg=PR57&dq=Fadensonnen%20Sun%20threads&pg=PR57#v=onepage&q=Fadensonnen%20Sun%20threads&f=false
I will study the volume for sometime, but now, I understand how rereading these poems advanced the notion of muons, which are formed from cosmic rays.
https://www.timeanddate.com/eclipse/lunar/2016-september-16
http://sciencepole.com/gwenda-morgan/
John Berger's Ways of Seeing-like:
https://youtu.be/caUVnq-O1Z8
Yes, I want to explore the Elytra bee pavilion, sometime.
https://www.vam.ac.uk/articles/about-the-elytra-filament-pavilion
https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B3DfyJRIT4jyQ0tTR2RnRWl6UFk/view?usp=sharing
https://books.google.com/books?id=pTW3BQAAQBAJ&lpg=PA179&dq=Celan%20%22The%20seedlings--causa%20secunda%22&pg=PA179#v=onepage&q=Celan%20%22The%20seedlings--causa%20secunda%22&f=false
I am quite fond of Agnes Miller Parker's prints in Fiona Stafford's The Long, Long Life of Trees:
https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B3DfyJRIT4jyc3JQdEFGRXhkSFk/view?usp=sharing
https://books.google.com/books?id=ReW7DAAAQBAJ&lpg=PP1&dq=The%20Long%2C%20Long%20Life%20of%20Trees&pg=PP1#v=onepage&q=The%20Long,%20Long%20Life%20of%20Trees&f=false
https://youtu.be/viU1P9EbUzg
https://www.theparisreview.org/blog/2017/06/06/o-majestic-poet/
https://books.google.com/books?id=EH7caLK9p8oC&lpg=PT101&dq=novalis%20blue%20flower%20dream&pg=PT101#v=onepage&q=novalis%20blue%20flower%20dream&f=false
https://blog.nmwa.org/2015/04/21/the-magic-of-daisy-makeig-jones/
21st January 2019 16.00 UT – The Beehive Cluster is 0.6 deg. north of the Moon.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kbxtVX-fZwg
Tim Birkhead's The Most Perfect Thing, then.
I like Millais's intense palette with ultraviolet purple and yellow be in "The Blind Girl" (1854-1856). It is complicated, and not merely sentimental or moralizing. He painted a work for and against John Gould, the ornithologist, whom he visited with his son prior to his death in 1881, "The Ruling Passion" (1885).
Exercise 87. Transcending loss.
https://www.wikiart.org/en/john-everett-millais/the-blind-girl-1856
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Ruling_Passion#/media/File%3AJohn_everett_millais_ruling_passion.jpg
"Perhaps Millais best represents this misfortune by placing a butterfly on the girl's shawl. A certain sense of rarity and specialness in this occurrence leads the viewer again to recognize the terrible situation of the girl's blindness. The butterfly lies close to her physically, yet she cannot appreciate or even have awareness of its presence and beauty. The tiny detail, then, represents the theme and emotions inherent in Millais's painting as a whole. Sublime splendor surrounds this girl and is even embodied by her physical attractiveness yet, for her, all of this will remain beyond conception."
http://www.victorianweb.org/painting/millais/paintings/may3.html
https://lafeber.com/pet-birds/species/lady-gouldian-finch/
Exercise 87 uses the rainbow or halation in cold moonlight and the yellow-purple contrasts citing Millais as source material. Even proceeding with a sense of skepticism that any of these aspects can be achieved is preferred over not trying at all. That is why it is an Exercise.
https://1drv.ms/u/s!AsA4BY25Ql_1lVzO3vOFdrlnzI4J
Angus Hyland's The Book of the Flower (2019)
https://phys.org/news/2020-06-spectacular-bird-eye-view-hummingbirds-diverse.html
"The experiments revealed that hummingbirds can see a variety of nonspectral colors, including purple, ultraviolet+green, ultraviolet+red and ultraviolet+yellow. For example, hummingbirds readily distinguished ultraviolet+green from pure ultraviolet or pure green, and they discriminated between two different mixtures of ultraviolet+red light—one redder, one less so."
https://www.pnas.org/cgi/doi/10.1073/pnas.1919377117
http://www.victorianweb.org/painting/millais/paintings/29.html
Cresting on the new moon energy, I awoke, and the first book I opened to was a collection of Thomas Hardy's short stories I bought with an entailment without any foreknowledge, and I turned to a "A Mere Interlude" (October 1885). I had searched for some continuity with Eric Ravilious, Antonioni's La Notte (1961) and the poetics of space. I also found the signposts of "August" and "coffin" from the persistent Lenormand dualities. The Hardy story sets up the most difficult relationship impasse, and points toward an even better resolution. We would both contend that the project of education is not a trivial undertaking.
The particulars of "A Mere Interlude" and La Notte are not applicable, but there is room here, and it demands expansion with the photography of John Ravilious (!), Lassister's gold reef, facultative myrmecophily, vibrative communication between the larval blue butterflies and ants, chine hull architecture (to echo the monocoque fuselage), Herodotus's gold-mining ants...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sq2iZmEmF8A
https://inews.co.uk/news/long-reads/james-ravilious-countryside-photography-99510
"IT was often said, and oftener surmised that Baptista Trewthen was a young woman with scarcely emotions or character. There was nothing in her to love, and nothing to hate—so ran the general opinion. That she showed few positive qualities was true. The colours and tones which changing events paint on the faces of active womankind were looked for in vain upon hers. But still waters run deep; and no crisis had come in the years of her early maidenhood to demonstrate what lay hidden within her, like metal in a mine.
[...]
The obstinacy of age had, in short, overmastered its complaisance, and the young woman said no more. The simple course of telling him that in the adjoining room lay a corpse which had lately occupied their own might, it would have seemed, have been an effectual one without further disclosure, but to allude to that subject, however it was disguised, was more than Heddegan's young wife had strength for. Horror broke her down. In the unexpected contingency one thing only presented itself to her paralysed regard—that here she was doomed to abide, in a hideous contiguity to the dead husband and the living."
https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/A_Mere_Interlude
https://www.ribaj.com/culture/exhibition-review-becky-beasley-eric-ravilious-towner-art-gallery-eastbourne-interiors-post-war
https://www.bitterlemonpress.com/products/james-ravilious
https://www.canadianarchitect.com/michelangelo-antonionis-poetics-of-space/
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2WeidpPfPk8
https://www.upperthames-butterflies.org.uk/butterflies
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/BF01922410
https://geology.utah.gov/map-pub/survey-notes/glad-you-asked/glad-you-asked-do-ants-mine-gold/
https://www.google.com/books/edition/Rama_II/oFJtwEunm4oC?hl=en&gbpv=1&dq=Rama%20II%20Clark%20Lee%20%22cylinder%22&pg=PR3&printsec=frontcover&bsq=cylindrical
http://www.dalkeyarchive.com/product/nothing/
https://www.dalkeyarchive.com/product/lucida-intervalla/
https://www.ips-planetarium.org/page/a_ottandbroman1988
The book is the only work of fiction to win a Nobel Prize for Literature (1956).
https://youtu.be/3MIlE9R00ik
http://strangehorizons.com/non-fiction/reviews/aniara/
I liked the Rama series so much that I can see taking it up again.
*science fiction
https://images.app.goo.gl/uziY7T6gt3gxG9cw8
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ixFkI1BRXew&t=1623s
https://www.foxtrotfilms.com/films/eric-ravilious-drawn-to-war/
I would like to reread Rama Revealed (1994), like I want to read The Four-Gated City (1969). Both novels are the endings of a series (Rama's tetrology and Lessing's pentalogy) I read sometime ago, and I want to see how life has been colored by reading now.
https://www.google.com/books/edition/Rama_Revealed/5p1JwoGWQkwC?hl=en&gbpv=1&pg=PP1&printsec=frontcover
https://www.google.com/books/edition/The_Four_Gated_City/YbPAFptW2FUC?hl=en&gbpv=1&pg=PA11&printsec=frontcover
https://www.chabad.org/library/article_cdo/aid/3012/jewish/Is-There-Life-on-Other-Planets.htm
When confronted with life incomprehensible to humans, the Torah-observant path is to avoid misunderstanding and from inflicting cruelty. They are judged by their ends: the xenomorphs from the Alien franchise are horrific, the Myrmicats/Sessiles/Avians from the Rama books are a compound species with no intentions of killing their human guests.
Rama has different meaning in Hebrew: to be exalted or to deceive
רום (rum), to be high.
רמה (rama), to deceive or loose.
From one day to the next / Dall’oggi al domani
Pray for the insight given to a frail mortal in order to differentiate between the holiness and the deception.
https://books.google.com/books?id=EtJD6qvyPyoC&pg=PA337&dq=rachamim+hebrew+meaning&hl=en&newbks=1&newbks_redir=0&source=gb_mobile_search&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwjzs5WSqe2IAxXSEFkFHRzwOeYQ6AF6BAgMEAM#v=onepage&q=rachamim%20hebrew%20meaning&f=false
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