“A rune, hovering like an angel: a shape like two wings joined by a single bar.”
Cassandra Clare book City of Heavenly Fire
Source: City of Heavenly Fire
Part III, No. 5 - Walton's Book of Lives. Compare: "The pen wherewith thou dost so heavenly sing / Made of a quill from an angel's wing", Henry Constable, Sonnet; "Whose noble praise / Deserves a quill pluckt from an angel's wing", Dorothy Berry, Sonnet.
Ecclesiastical Sonnets (1821)
“A rune, hovering like an angel: a shape like two wings joined by a single bar.”
Cassandra Clare book City of Heavenly Fire
Source: City of Heavenly Fire
David Marr (1945–1980) British neuroscientist and psychologist
Source: Vision, 1982, p. 27
Friedrich Schiller (1759–1805) German poet, philosopher, historian, and playwright
Hope, Faith, and Love (c. 1786); also known as "The Words of Strength", as translated in The Common School Journal Vol. IX (1847) edited by Horace Mann, p. 386
Context: There are three lessons I would write, —
Three words — as with a burning pen,
In tracings of eternal light
Upon the hearts of men. Have Hope. Though clouds environ now,
And gladness hides her face in scorn,
Put thou the shadow from thy brow, —
No night but hath its morn. Have Faith. Where'er thy bark is driven, —
The calm's disport, the tempest's mirth, —
Know this: God rules the hosts of heaven,
The habitants of earth. Have Love. Not love alone for one,
But men, as man, thy brothers call;
And scatter, like the circling sun,
Thy charities on all. Thus grave these lessons on thy soul, —
Hope, Faith, and Love, — and thou shalt find
Strength when life's surges rudest roll,
Light when thou else wert blind.
Franklin D. Roosevelt (1882–1945) 32nd President of the United States
1940s, State of the Union Address — The Four Freedoms (1941)
Arthur Schopenhauer (1788–1860) German philosopher
Part III, Ch. VIII, 7, p. 223 https://archive.org/stream/basisofmorality00schoiala#page/223/mode/2up <br class="br">On the Basis of Morality (1840) <br class="br">Source: The Basis of Morality
“A willing heart adds feather to the heel,
And makes the clown a winged Mercury.”
Joanna Baillie (1762–1851) Scottish poet and dramatist
De Montfort (1798), Act III, scene 2; in A Series of Plays.