“Just as camphor is consumed by the flames of fire, so also, mind must be consumed by soul-fire.”
Bhagawan Nityananda (1897–1961) Hindu guru and saint
4
The Chidakasha Gita (1927)
Source: The Home and the World
“Just as camphor is consumed by the flames of fire, so also, mind must be consumed by soul-fire.”
Bhagawan Nityananda (1897–1961) Hindu guru and saint
4
The Chidakasha Gita (1927)
William Ewart Gladstone (1809–1898) British Liberal politician and prime minister of the United Kingdom
Jeventus Mundi: The Gods and Men of the Heroic Age (1870) p. 289. https://archive.org/stream/juventusmundigod00glad_1#page/288/mode/2up <br class="br">1870s
“I'm a fire without a flame, desert with no rain…”
Mike Oldfield (1953) English musician, multi-instrumentalist
Song lyrics, Heaven's Open (1991)
“Bright-flaming, heat-full fire,
The source of motion.”
Guillaume de Salluste Du Bartas (1544–1590) French writer
First Week, Second Day. Compare: "Heat considered as a Mode of Motion" (title of a treatise, 1863), John Tyndall.
La Semaine; ou, Création du monde (1578)
George William Russell (1867–1935) Irish writer, editor, critic, poet, and artistic painter
The Nuts of Knowledge (1903)
Context: We must pass like smoke or live within the spirit's fire;
For we can no more than smoke unto the flame return
If our thought has changed to dream, our will unto desire,
As smoke we vanish though the fire may burn.
Samuel Pepys (1633–1703) English naval administrator and member of parliament
September 2, 1666
Of the Great Fire of London.
Diary
“Absence is to love as wind is to fire: it extinguishes the little flame, it fans the big.”
Umberto Eco (1932–2016) Italian semiotician, essayist, philosopher, literary critic, and novelist
“An aphorism? Fire without flames. Understandable that no one tries to warm himself at it.”
Emil M. Cioran book The Trouble With Being Born
The Trouble With Being Born (1973)