“Since all things are God, in all things thou seest just so much of God as thy capacity affordeth thee.”
Source: The Vision and the Voice: With Commentary and Other Papers
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Aleister Crowley142
poet, mountaineer, occultist 1875–1947Related quotes
Nicholas of Cusa (1401–1464) German philosopher, theologian, jurist, and astronomer
De visione Dei (On The Vision of God) (1453)
“If neither love nor pain
Will ever touch thy heart,
Then only God's in thee,
And then in God thou art”
Angelus Silesius (1624–1677) German writer
The Cherubinic Wanderer
Charles Kingsley (1819–1875) English clergyman, historian and novelist
Source: Attributed, Dictionary of Burning Words of Brilliant Writers (1895), P. 263.
William Tyndale (1494–1536) Bible translator and agitator from England
The Obedience of A Christian Man (1528)
Báb (1819–1850) Iranian prophet; founder of the religion Bábism; venerated in the Bahá'í Faith
Tablet to ‘Him Who Will Be Made Manifest’
Thomas Bradwardine (1300–1349) Theologian; Archbishop of Canterbury
Sample of Bradwardine devotional writing quoted by James Burnes, The Church of England Magazine under the superintendence of clergymen of the United Church of England and Ireland Vol. IV (January to June 1838)
George Herbert (1593–1633) Welsh-born English poet, orator and Anglican priest
Source: The Temple (1633), The Elixir, Lines 1-4
Eric Rücker Eddison book The Worm Ouroboros
Therewith the hippogriff, as if maddened with the day-beams, plunged like a wild horse, spread wide its rainbow pinions, reared, and took wing. But the Lord Juss was sprung astride of it, and the grip of his knees on the ribs of it was like brazen clamps. The firm land seemed to rush away beneath him to the rear; the lake and the shore and islands thereof showed in a moment small and remote, and the figures of the Queen and his companions like toys, then dots, then shrunken to nothingness, and the vast silence of the upper air opened and received him into utter loneliness. In that silence earth and sky swirled like the wine in a shaken goblet as the wild steed rocketed higher and higher in great spirals. A cloud billowy-white shut in the sky before them; brighter and brighter it grew in its dazzling whiteness as they sped towards it, until they touched it and the glory was dissolved in a gray mist that grew still darker and colder as they flew till suddenly they emerged from the further side of the cloud into a radiance of blue and gold blinding in its glory. <br class="br"> Ch. 28 : Zora Rach Nam Psarrion, p. 420 http://www.sacred-texts.com/ring/two/two34.htm <br class="br">The Worm Ouroboros (1922)