“Constantine was Nature's masterpiece, a triumph, as it were, of God's handiwork. One look at him would convince anyone that here was a descendant of the mythical Golden Age of the Greeks, so infinite was his charm.”
Of Constantine Doukas
The Alexiad, Book 1
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Anna Comnena8
Byzantine historian 1083–1153Related quotes
Isaac D'Israeli (1766–1848) British writer
Source: The Literary Character, Illustrated by the History of Men of Genius (1795–1822), Ch. III.
Hans Blix (1928) Swedish politician
BBC News, "Blix criticises UK's Iraq dossier", September 18, 2003 http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/politics/3118462.stm <br class="br">referring to the British and American governments' insistence that there are WMD in Iraq after Blix had already concluded and reported there was nothing to be found
Pierre Teilhard De Chardin (1881–1955) French philosopher and Jesuit priest
Mysticism of Science (1939)
“God on high
Looks graciously on him whom triumph's hour
Has made not pitiless.”
Source: Oresteia (458 BC), Agamemnon, lines 951–952 (tr. E. D. A. Morshead)
Constantine P. Cavafy (1863–1933) Greek poet
One of Their Gods http://www.cavafy.com/poems/content.asp?id=40&cat=1 <br class="br">Collected Poems (1992) <br class="br">Context: The people going by would gaze at him,<br>and one would ask the other if he knew him,<br>if he was a Greek from Syria, or a stranger.<br>But some who looked more carefully<br>would understand and step aside;<br>and as he disappeared under the arcades,<br>among the shadows and the evening lights,<br>going toward the quarter that lives<br>only at night, with orgies and debauchery,<br>with every kind of intoxication and desire,<br>they would wonder which of Them it could be,<br>and for what suspicious pleasure<br>he had come down into the streets of Selefkia<br>from the August Celestial Mansions.
N. G. L. Hammond (1907–2001) British classical scholar
"A History of Greece to 323 BC", Cambridge University, 1986 (p 516)
William St Clair (1937) author
Source: That Greece Might Still be Free (1972), p. 15-16.
“Limited in his nature, infinite in his desires, man is a fallen god who remembers the heavens.”
Alphonse de Lamartine book Méditations poétiques
Méditations Poétiques (1820), Sermon 2