"R. S. Thomas in conversation with Molly Price-Owen" in The David Jones Journal R. S. Thomas Special Issue (Summer/Autumn 2001)
Context: True Christianity at its most profound is as good as you get. … I think I've been lucky in the period which I've lived through because obviously I would have been for the chop in earlier days. The Inquisition would have rooted me out; even in the 19th century I would probably have been had up by a Bishop and asked to change my views, or to keep them to myself etc.... I think that so much of our Christian beliefs … are an attempt to convey through language something which is unsayable.
“The [Greek] myths were… attempting—at a deeper level—to feel the intangible and say the unsayable.”
Source: Sailing the Wine-Dark Sea: Why the Greeks Matter (2003), Ch.VII The Way They Went: Greco-Roman Meets Judeo-Christian
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Thomas Cahill 58
American scholar and writer 1940Related quotes

National Observer (6 February 1967)

“The POSITIVE THINKER sees the INVISIBLE, feels the INTANGIBLE, and achieves the IMPOSSIBLE.”
Source: My Early Life, 1874-1904

Source: Father and Child Reunion (2001), p. 98.

Pedagogia do oprimido (Pedagogy of the Oppressed) (1968, English trans. 1970)

“My greater simplicity came from a deeper level than the labyrinth of the brain.”
1:61-2
"Quotes", Late Notebooks, 1982–1990: Architecture of the Spiritual World (2002)

Source: Myth, Symbol, and Meaning in Mary Poppins (2007), Ch. 2, p. 39