John Monroe > John's Quotes

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  • #1
    T.M. Lakomy
    “For what was burned at the stakes beyond the fires did endure”
    T.M. Lakomy

  • #2
    T.M. Lakomy
    “You are all lost, for the many houses of human religion are all held by the strings of the same master puppeteer.”
    T.M. Lakomy

  • #3
    T.M. Lakomy
    “If I rolled the dice carved out of my weathered bone
    And offered of my blood the libation to the fane
    When even the reaper’s mockery forsakes me alone
    My own clangorous thoughts are the last to remain”
    T.M. Lakomy

  • #4
    T.M. Lakomy
    “There is nothing more important in life than perception, because you shape your life through it.
    It is like a looking glass, you look and you perceive things. You perceive a reality. You make it real and you live by it. It is all about your eyes, how you see it. And what you see, you create.”
    T.M. Lakomy

  • #5
    T.M. Lakomy
    “For the wanderer astray, the hermit seeking the lost books
    To him the bitter path of knowledge is truly germane
    And to gaze at the grand canvas of depravity, the deified crooks
    All the depth of duplicity of the celestial rulers most profane.”
    T.M. Lakomy

  • #6
    Albert Einstein
    “As our circle of knowledge expands, so does the circumference of darkness surrounding it.”
    Albert Einstein

  • #7
    Hermes Trismegistus
    “If then you do not make yourself equal to God, you cannot apprehend God; for like is known by like.
    Leap clear of all that is corporeal, and make yourself grown to a like expanse with that greatness which is beyond all measure; rise above all time and become eternal; then you will apprehend God. Think that for you too nothing is impossible; deem that you too are immortal, and that you are able to grasp all things in your thought, to know every craft and science; find your home in the haunts of every living creature; make yourself higher than all heights and lower than all depths; bring together in yourself all opposites of quality, heat and cold, dryness and fluidity; think that you are everywhere at once, on land, at sea, in heaven; think that you are not yet begotten, that you are in the womb, that you are young, that you are old, that you have died, that you are in the world beyond the grave; grasp in your thought all of this at once, all times and places, all substances and qualities and magnitudes together; then you can apprehend God.

    But if you shut up your soul in your body, and abase yourself, and say “I know nothing, I can do nothing; I am afraid of earth and sea, I cannot mount to heaven; I know not what I was, nor what I shall be,” then what have you to do with God?”
    Hermes Trismegistus, Hermetica: The Greek Corpus Hermeticum and the Latin Asclepius



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