Lanced Hearts of Lovers & Martyrs

I'm Eric, a young poet who seems to have been swept away in the Romantic Spirit of Beethoven's Symphonies, struck by the philosophies of Plato & the Poets' lyrics, burned for love like the martyrs of Rome, and can see an honest beauty in love & faith.

This blog is dedicated to my passions in Poetry, Literature, History, Philosophy, and Music, along with exploring the beauty and truth in the Christian faith-- how it rebels and transcends the ways of the world and burns it ablaze; preaches it's the Heart that counts, sings how Love endures, and that Truth is a beautiful Bride & hypocrisy a sin. It reveals that love is self-less, death is no end, and that there's no greater love than to lay down your life for your friends.

• Faith & Philosophy
• History (esp. 19th cen.-WWI)
• Poetry & Literature
• Catholicism

• Christ
• St. Justin Martyr
• Socrates
• Victor Hugo
• J.R.R. Tolkien
• Richard Wagner

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"Reason directs those who are truly pious and philosophical to honour and love only what is true, declining to follow traditional opinions, if these be worthless."
-St. Justin Martyr

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  1. Here in the cross-roads town of Port Huron, MI where I call home, and where the dying auto-industry and economy’s left without a pretty penny, there’s a tiny little shop that’s sprung up against the storefronts of our downtown. It’s called Art for Good, and it’s been my stomping grounds since the first day I stumbled in on a winter day when they were preparing  their grand opening. Been a part of their work and efforts to brighten the dwindling city ever since.

    Art for Good’s a non-profit pretty much held together by a man and his wife with one heart set on art and the city we live in. It’s an art shop, a cafe, a hopeful sanctuary for all starvings artists. They sell art supplies, handmade crafts, and showcase local artists, as well as offer Fair-Trade coffee and goods made from around the globe, from places as diverse as the Congo, Honduras, and Thailand, all made by good hands and honest labour (that’s more than can be said of Folgers, Hershey’s and the like, if you do your homework). All-in-all, it’s just a good place to hang out.

    I’m heading a poet’s club within their cafe. We’re so-far one member strong, beside myself (we got room to grow, at least…) Just picture it like the Dead Poets’ Society, except just a college kid blogger and a middle-aged alcoholic who’s been writing half a long as he’s been drinking, and still been writing longer than I’ve been alive…. makes for some good times.

    If you’re ever in the neighborhood, feel free to stop by. 

     
     
  2. (Source: myunderwood)

     
     
  3. The history of Man lies somewhere between these notes…

     
     
  4. colourthysoul:

John William Waterhouse - Dante and Beatrice (1915)

    colourthysoul:

    John William Waterhouse - Dante and Beatrice (1915)

     
     
  5. 40 plays
    Maria Callas
    Andrea Chenier - La Mamma Morta
    Platinum Collection

    La Mamma Morta- ‘Mother Death’, aria from Giordano’s Andrea Chénier.


    Within the tragic song, the life of the fallen countess Maddalena is told— how her mother perished saving her in the flames of her childhood house (‘the home that craddled me is burning!’) by the hands of the French Revolution; how her maid, the only faithful love she knew thenceforth, ‘sold her beauty’ into prostitution to care for her— But yet, when all light was gone, and any hope she found in life had died away, the Strings of a new theme break the old, and she sings,

    It was then, in my grief,
    that love came to me.
    A voice full of harmony says,
    “You must live, I am life itself!
    Your heaven is in my eyes!
    You are not alone.
    I shall collect all your tears
    I will walk with you and support you!
    Smile and hope! I am Love!
    Are you surrounded by blood and mire?
    I am Divine! I am Oblivion!
    I am the God who saves the World
    I descend from Heaven and make this Earth
    A heaven! Ah!
    I am love, love, love.”
    And the angel approaches with a kiss,
    and he kisses death -
    A dying body is my body.
    So take it.
    I am already dead matter!

    —She sings all this of her new-found love in Andrea Chénier; a poet ever enthralled in Truth and Beauty— whom with she is to share in his death in the final scene, at the guillotines of St. Lazare Prison.

     
     
  6. "These two creatures were resplendent. They had reached that irrevocable and irrecoverable moment, at the dazzling intersection of all youth and all joy. They realized the verses of Jean Prouvaire; they were forty years old taken together. It was marriage sublimated; these two children were two lilies. They did not see each other, they did not contemplate each other. Cosette perceived Marius in the midst of a glory; Marius perceived Cosette on an altar. And on that altar, and in that glory, the two apotheoses mingling, in the background, one knows not how, behind a cloud for Cosette, in a flash for Marius, there was the ideal thing, the real thing, the meeting of the kiss and the dream, the nuptial pillow. All the torments through which they had passed came back to them in intoxication. It seemed to them that their sorrows, their sleepless nights, their tears, their anguish, their terrors, their despair, converted into caresses and rays of light, rendered still more charming the charming hour which was approaching; and that their griefs were but so many handmaidens who were preparing the toilet of joy. How good it is to have suffered! Their unhappiness formed a halo round their happiness. The long agony of their love was terminating in an ascension."
    — Victor Hugo, Les Misérables .
     
     
  7. leakatthedisco:

La Jeune Martyre - P. Delaroche - 1855

I could never quite pick a favorite painting, but whenever I try, this is one I always find myself drawn to.
I could post it a thousand times, and have something new to say of it each one.

    leakatthedisco:

    La Jeune Martyre - P. Delaroche - 1855

    I could never quite pick a favorite painting, but whenever I try, this is one I always find myself drawn to.

    I could post it a thousand times, and have something new to say of it each one.

     
     
  8. The Most Beautiful Passage I’ve Taken From The Catechism

    677 The Church will enter the glory of the kingdom only through this final Passover, when she will follow her Lord in his death and Resurrection.579The kingdom will be fulfilled, then, not by a historic triumph of the Church through a progressive ascendancy, but only by God’s victory over the final unleashing of evil, which will cause his Bride to come down from heaven.580 God’s triumph over the revolt of evil will take the form of the Last Judgment after the final cosmic upheaval of this passing world.581