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SubscriptionsSites I Read
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Part I:
"Inside the church, the grief was real. Sen. Edward Kennedy's voice caught as he read his lovely eulogy, and when he was done, Caroline Kennedy Schlossberg stood up and hugged him. She bravely read from Shakespeare's 'The Tempest' ('Our revels now are ended. We are such stuff as dreams are made on'). Many of the 315 mourners, family and friends of the Kennedys and Bessettes, swallowed hard through a gospel choir's rendition of 'Amazing Grace,' and afterward, they sang lustily as Uncle Teddy led the old Irish songs at the wake."
-- Newsweek magazine, issue dated August 2, 1999
Part II:
The Ba gua (Chinese....) are eight diagrams used in Taoist cosmology to represent a range of interrelated concepts. Each consists of three lines, each either 'broken' or 'unbroken,' representing a yin line or a yang line, respectively. Due to their tripartite structure, they are often referred to as 'trigrams' in English. --Wikipedia
Part III: Above: detail from the cover of...
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| "When New Haven was founded, the city was laid out into a grid of nine squares surrounded by a great wilderness. Last year [2000] History of Art Professor Emeritus Vincent Scully said the original town plan reflected a feeling that the new city should be sacred. Scully said the colony's founders thought of their new Puritan settlement as a 'nine-square paradise on Earth, heaven on earth, New Haven, New Jerusalem.'"
-- Yale Daily News, Jan. 11, 2001
"Real and unreal are two in one: New Haven Before and after one arrives...." -- Wallace Stevens, "An Ordinary Evening in New Haven," XXVIII
See also Art and Man at Yale.
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