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#dante garcía
beast-of-moss · 2 months
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Shirtless dilf underneath cut
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My first oc (of when I was like 12-14), revised into an enstar oc. Retired idol turned producer divorced dilf with his kid, Esmeralda. And he's an uncle to another oc, Diwa, which means he is also a medium
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typewriter-worries · 1 year
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desire is suffering
Half-light: Collected Poems 1965-2016; ‘Dream Reveals in Neon the Great Addictions, Frank Bidart ( @wahabibi ) | Dante and Virgil in Hell, William-Adolphe Bouguereau | Vestiges, Ángel García | Blasphemia, Eliran Kantor | So We Must Meet Apart, Jennifer S. Cheng ( @yoursoethereal ) | Prigione di Lacrime, Roberto Ferri | Diary of a Philosophy Student: Volume 2, 1928-9; Sunday, November 4th, Simone de Beauvoir ( @theoptia ) | Ludwig Drahosch | War of the Foxes, Richard Siken ( @elfreys )
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orpheuslament · 5 months
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Little International Waltz, after Federico García Lorca, Dante Émile
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linkita-chan-20053 · 1 year
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Devil May Cry x FAITH: The Unholy Trinity Crossover
as you may see, this is a crossover between DMC and the game FAITH.
Dante is Father García while Nero is John Ward.
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thinkbyfeelings · 2 years
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~things have a life of their own
it’s simply a matter of waking up their souls ~ 
Gabriel García Márquez, from *One hundred Years of Solitude*
“Io Sono in Pace” by Dante Gabriel Rossetti ~muse Maria Spartali
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sociedadnoticias · 6 months
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Nuevo León vibra con el inicio de la precampaña naranja, "aquí comienza el futuro": Samuel Garcia
Nuevo León vibra con el inicio de la precampaña naranja, "aquí comienza el futuro": Samuel Garcia
Acudieron Dante Delgado, Jorge Álvarez Máynez, Javier Navarro, Juan Ignacio Barragán, Adonaí Carreón, Alma Rosa Marroquín, y Graciela Buchanan, entre otros. SN Redacción                                      Este lunes 20 de noviembre, arrancó la precampaña de Samuel García Sepúlveda, quién aspira a ser el candidato más joven a la Presidencia de la República. Este arranque, se dió en su natal…
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elcorreografico · 2 years
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Billiken, Patoruzito y Anteojito: Exhibirán portadas y publicaciones de las históricas revistas
#Cultura #Berisso | #Billiken, #Patoruzito y #Anteojito: Exhibirán portadas y publicaciones de las históricas #revistas
Organizada por el Museo de la Ilustración Gráfica de Buenos Aires y con el acompañamiento de la Municipalidad de La Plata, llega la muestra “Revistas Infantiles: Billiken, Patoruzito y Anteojito”, una colección de portadas que marcaron una época por su importante contenido escolar.Como parte de las actividades y propuestas que ofrecerá la Secretaría de Cultura y Educación para las vacaciones de…
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hacheaefeblog · 2 years
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Comparaciones (de novelas y novelistas)
Comparaciones (de novelas y novelistas)
Extraña expedición de dos: Viktor Frankl viajaba con El hombre en busca de sentido Desde el Jardín, Jerzy Kosinski y Umberto Eco estudiaban El nombre de la rosa En el setiembre verde Tom Clancy comenzó La Caza al Octubre Rojo Las hijas de Louisa May Alcott crecieron y se convirtieron en Mujercitas Si se quedaba en Macondo, García Márquez habría vivido Cien Años de Soledad Como Mary Shelley…
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forgive my northern attitude, I was raised on little light (December 2023)
Fall Out Boy // u.k. // Anne Carson // Church of the Exaltation of the Cross // u.k. // Fall Out Boy's announcement for So Much (For) Stardust // u.k. // Dante Alighieri // Ingeborg Bachmann // Ada Limón // Clarice Lispector // Virginia Woolf // Federico García Lorca // Rita Dove // Jenny Holzer // June Jordan // Heidi Priebe // u.k.
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The non english version based on the notes of the other poll (translations are not mine. Apologies for any inaccuracies)
Update: I realize after i made it i put the same Don Quixote quote twice but i cant edit polls so 4 and 9 are the same. oops
update 2: I accidentally put the first line of ch 1 instead of the first line of the prologue for Posthumous Memoirs. the correct quote is "Ao verme que primeiro roeu as frias carnes do meu cadáver dedico como saudosa lembrança estas memórias póstumas".
Translations and sources:
– Iliade by Homer. (“Sing, goddess, of the anger of Achilles, son of Peleus”)
Anna Karenina by Lev Tolstoy ("All happy families resemble one another; every unhappy family is unhappy in its own way.")
One Hundred Years of Solitude by Gabriel García Márquez. ("Many years later, as he faced the firing squad, Colonel Aureliano Buendía was to remember that distant afternoon when his father took him to discover ice.")
Cervantes from Somewhere in La Mancha by Don Quixote, (“In a place whose name I do not care to remember")
The Aeneid. ("I sing of arms and men")
The Metamorphosis by Kafka ("As Gregor Samsa awoke one morning from uneasy dreams he found himself transformed in his bed into a gigantic insect.")
the Inferno by Dante ("When halfway through the journey of our life")
The Stranger by Albert Camus. (Mother died today. Or, maybe, yesterday; I can’t be sure”.)
Miguel de Cervantes by Don Quixote (“Somewhere in la Mancha, in a place whose name I do not care to remember, a gentleman lived not long ago, one of those who has a lance and ancient shield on a shelf and keeps a skinny nag and a greyhound for racing.”)
the Posthumous Memoirs of Brás Cubas by Machado de Assis ("to the worm who first gnawed on the cold flesh of my corpse, I dedicate with fond remembrance these Posthumous Memoirs")
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aguacerotropical · 1 year
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i really love how many references there are in Vanitas no Carte to different events and literature. The manga is pulpy and camp (as is all vampire media) but it’s also very carefully written. I’m going to list out the ones I have identified:
Averoigne is a region invented by writer Clark Ashton Smith
The real Beast of Gévaudan was killed by Jean Castel, who is Jean-Jacques Castel in the manga, in a party organized by the also real Marquis d'Apchier..
Astolfo is directly taken from Life is a Dream by Calderón de la Barca, and the storyline of Teacher putting Noé, Louis and Dominique in strange invented experiments to test human nature goes along the lines of the play.
Doctor Moreau comes from The Island of Doctor Moreau by HG Wells. His character is also a mad scientist obsessed with creating human hybrids.
The Comte de Saint Germain existed and was as eccentric as Teacher. Lord Ruthven is a literal copy-paste from The Vampyre, since, in that novel, the protagonist is doomed due to an oath he swore to the vampire.
Sir Francis Varney, the Marquis Machina, is named after Varney the Vampire, a pulp serial that popularized vampires and set a lot of their characteristics.
There’s De Sades, of course, and Faustina which references the various Faust storylines in which the character makes a deal with the Devil that completely backfires. That seems to be the deal with her becoming Naenia. A naenia is also a lamentation.
Charlatan’s parade is a nod to the Mask of the Red Death by Poe and the Danses Macabres that became popular, with vanitas paintings, after the Black Plague.
The civil war between vampires and humans is inspired by the Hundred Year’s War, due to Jeanne being, of course, Jeanne d’Arc.
Similarly, the setting is most definitely La Belle Époque and the World’s Fairs. Like the Belle Époque, a period of peace between 19th century wars and WWI, I expect that the events will soon devolve to another war.
Count Orlok is from Nosferatu. The Mina girl who becomes a curse-bearer is from Dracula.
Early 19th century vampires were obsessed with the moon and, I’m probably wrong on this one, but Luna reminds me so much of the García Lorca poem Ballad for the Moon Moon. Lorca always associates the moon with death throughout Romancero Gitano and, since she already sampled Spanish literature, it could be a possibility.
There’s Parcelsus and all the character’s coloring seem to hold some sort of relation to the steps needed to create a philosopher’s stone. Dante, as Vanita’s guide to the underworld.
I’m sure there are more, but these are the ones I already know. I expect there to be a reference to Carmilla eventually, and perhaps a more direct one to the Harkers. And Noé’s biblical background to play more into his character, as a savior of what is left after the flood. Interestingly though, Vanitas refers to him as “child of the ark”, which might signal that he is what is left of something else (the Archivistés?) (Also, who named him? His human adoptive grandparents?)
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mylittledarkag3 · 2 months
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How many have you read out of the hundred?
Me: 64/100
Reblog & share your results
1. "Pride and Prejudice" by Jane Austen
2. "Crime and Punishment" by Fyodor Dostoevsky
3. "To Kill a Mockingbird" by Harper Lee
4. "1984" by George Orwell
5. "Great Expectations" by Charles Dickens
6. "One Hundred Years of Solitude" by Gabriel García Márquez
7. "Jane Eyre" by Charlotte Brontë
8. "The Catcher in the Rye" by J.D. Salinger
9. "War and Peace" by Leo Tolstoy
10. "The Great Gatsby" by F. Scott Fitzgerald
11. "Moby-Dick" by Herman Melville
12. "The Odyssey" by Homer
13. "Wuthering Heights" by Emily Brontë
14. "Anna Karenina" by Leo Tolstoy
15. "The Brothers Karamazov" by Fyodor Dostoevsky
16. "The Iliad" by Homer
17. "Frankenstein" by Mary Shelley
18. "Les Misérables" by Victor Hugo
19. "Don Quixote" by Miguel de Cervantes
20. "Middlemarch" by George Eliot
21. "The Picture of Dorian Gray" by Oscar Wilde
22. "The Scarlet Letter" by Nathaniel Hawthorne
23. "Dracula" by Bram Stoker
24. "Sense and Sensibility" by Jane Austen
25. "The Hunchback of Notre-Dame" by Victor Hugo
26. "The War of the Worlds" by H.G. Wells
27. "The Grapes of Wrath" by John Steinbeck
28. "The Canterbury Tales" by Geoffrey Chaucer
29. "The Portrait of a Lady" by Henry James
30. "The Jungle Book" by Rudyard Kipling
31. "Siddhartha" by Hermann Hesse
32. "The Divine Comedy" by Dante Alighieri
33. "A Tale of Two Cities" by Charles Dickens
34. "The Trial" by Franz Kafka
35. "Mansfield Park" by Jane Austen
36. "The Three Musketeers" by Alexandre Dumas
37. "Fahrenheit 451" by Ray Bradbury
38. "Gulliver's Travels" by Jonathan Swift
39. "The Sound and the Fury" by William Faulkner
40. "Emma" by Jane Austen
41. "Robinson Crusoe" by Daniel Defoe
42. "Tess of the d'Urbervilles" by Thomas Hardy
43. "The Republic" by Plato
44. "Heart of Darkness" by Joseph Conrad
45. "The Hound of the Baskervilles" by Arthur Conan Doyle
46. "The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde" by Robert Louis Stevenson
47. "The Prince" by Niccolò Machiavelli
48. "The Metamorphosis" by Franz Kafka
49. "The Old Man and the Sea" by Ernest Hemingway
50. "Bleak House" by Charles Dickens
51. "Gone with the Wind" by Margaret Mitchell
52. "The Plague" by Albert Camus
53. "The Joy Luck Club" by Amy Tan
54. "The Master and Margarita" by Mikhail Bulgakov
55. "The Red and the Black" by Stendhal
56. "The Sun Also Rises" by Ernest Hemingway
57. "The Fountainhead" by Ayn Rand
58. "The Bell Jar" by Sylvia Plath
59. "The Idiot" by Fyodor Dostoevsky
60. "The Book Thief" by Markus Zusak
61. "The Return of Sherlock Holmes" by Arthur Conan Doyle
62. "The Woman in White" by Wilkie Collins
63. "Things Fall Apart" by Chinua Achebe
64. "Treasure Island" by Robert Louis Stevenson
65. "Ulysses" by James Joyce
66. "Uncle Tom's Cabin" by Harriet Beecher Stowe
67. "Vanity Fair" by William Makepeace Thackeray
68. "Waiting for Godot" by Samuel Beckett
69. "Walden Two" by B.F. Skinner
70. "Watership Down" by Richard Adams
71. "White Fang" by Jack London
72. "Wide Sargasso Sea" by Jean Rhys
73. "Winnie-the-Pooh" by A.A. Milne
74. "Wise Blood" by Flannery O'Connor
75. "Woman in the Nineteenth Century" by Margaret Fuller
76. "Women in Love" by D.H. Lawrence
77. "Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance" by Robert M. Pirsig
78. "The Aeneid" by Virgil
79. "The Age of Innocence" by Edith Wharton
80. "The Alchemist" by Paulo Coelho
81. "The Art of War" by Sun Tzu
82. "The Autobiography of Benjamin Franklin" by Benjamin Franklin
83. "The Awakening" by Kate Chopin
84. "The Big Sleep" by Raymond Chandler
85. "The Bluest Eye" by Toni Morrison
86. "The Caine Mutiny" by Herman Wouk
87. "The Cherry Orchard" by Anton Chekhov
88. "The Chosen" by Chaim Potok
89. "The Christmas Carol" by Charles Dickens
90. "The City of Ember" by Jeanne DuPrau
91. "The Clue in the Crumbling Wall" by Carolyn Keene
92. "The Code of the Woosters" by P.G. Wodehouse
93. "The Color Purple" by Alice Walker
94. "The Count of Monte Cristo" by Alexandre Dumas
95. "The Crucible" by Arthur Miller
96. "The Crying of Lot 49" by Thomas Pynchon
97. "The Da Vinci Code" by Dan Brown
98. "The Death of Ivan Ilyich" by Leo Tolstoy
99. "The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire" by Edward Gibbon
100. "The Divine Secrets of the Ya-Ya Sisterhood" by Rebecca Wells
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thepedanticbohemian · 9 months
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Authors every aspiring writer needs to read...
Earnest Hemmingway
Elmore James
Frank Herbert
Anais Nin
F. Scott Fitzgerald
James Joyce
Henry Miller
George Orwell
Virginia Woolf
Charles Dickens
Franz Kafka
Gabriel García Márquez
Dante Alighieri
Emily Dickenson
Gustave Flaubert
Herman Melville
T.S. Eliot
Edgar Allan Poe
C.S. Lewis
Nelson DeMille
...and so many more. As Stephen King teaches us in his brilliant ON WRITING, if you don't read, you cannot write.
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andrescasciani · 11 months
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¡Acaba de editarse! Revista Lafarium (Buenos Aires, julio de 2023)
*Incluye “En su interior”, historieta con guión de Diego Arandojo y dibujos de Andrés Casciani
Con portada de Valentín Pigni y colaboraciones de: Pabluchi García, Paté Crudo, Gabriel Juárez, Juan Coccotis, Rodrigo Fiotto, Emiliano Bellini, Oscar Grillo, GR Mateo, Pablo Paz, Hernán Tenorio, Otto, Dante Minervi, Piero Pierini, Nicolás Viglietti, Juan Sirro, Marcelo Gobbo, Fabián Arnaldi, Juan Manuel Menéndez, Andrés Torres Meza, Marcela Nigro, Manuel Rivas Pintos, Nuno Gonçalves, Lorena Pinasco, Colifato Ilustrado, Pablo Stanisci, Mauricio Giacomino y  Pablo Katzin (Fritz Sol). Entrevistas exclusivas a Martín Eito y Flor Paccela.
Para leer y descargar gratis:
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oraculoediciones · 11 months
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:: ¡DESPIERTA JULIO, DE SU ENTIERRO PREMATURO! - nueva edición de Lafarium, abriendo sus pútridas alas y lanzando un graznido para romper la noche digital. Con portada de Valentín Pigni y colaboraciones sanguíneas: Pabluchi García, Paté Crudo, Gabriel Juárez, Juan Coccotis, Rodrigo Fiotto, Emiliano Bellini, Oscar Grillo, GR Mateo, Pablo Paz, Hernán Tenorio, Otto, Dante Minervi, Piero Pierini, Nicolás Viglietti, Juan Sirro, Marcelo Gobbo, Fabián Arnaldi, Juan Manuel Menéndez, Andrés Torres Meza, Marcela Nigro, Manuel Rivas Pintos, Nuno Gonçalves, Lorena Pinasco, Colifato Ilustrado, Pablo Stanisci, Andrés Casciani, Mauricio Giacomino y  Pablo Katzin (Fritz Sol). Entrevistas exclusivas a Martín Eito y Flor Paccela. ¡Pasen, vean, sufran y gocen! :: Descarga: https://archive.org/download/lafarium2023/Lafarium-julio-2023.pdf
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matematicasdedios · 8 months
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THE PATH TO VALHALLA
written by
Juan Antonio García Martín
Here Vigour failed the towering Fantasy: But yet the Will rolled onward, like a Wheel in even motion, by the Love impelled, that moves the Sun in Heaven and all the Stars.
Paradise, Chant XXXIII
Dante Alighieri, - The Divine Comedy
Introduction
Where Nothing is narrated
Dear Reader,
We have all seen in our Life several Scenes of Horror and Heartbreak. We have seen Nothing.
It is a Wonder of God, providing us with the Nothingness.
Luminous, tender, blessed as both Words and Enchantments.
How so? - you may ask, my dear Reader...
Well... Here begins the Nothingness.
In the beginning there was only Darkness.
Only the Kingdom of God made up what we now call the Universe.
One day, walking in the Garden of the 7 Virgins, God had an Idea.
The Idea to Create.
Perhaps the Reader, in all Reason, wonders why it had not occurred to him before.
I will not be the one to venture to answer that Question. It is in the Hands of the Reader, after passing through these Pages, to find the Answer to such an inaccessible Question.
After years of incessant Searching, I myself have not found it, but it is in my Power, and in these Pages, to attempt what Juan Ramón called an “aprojimacion” to that Question.
Dear Reader,
In these pages I seek to shed some Light on the Human Condition, its Passions, Fears, its Sorrows, and its Sadness. I hope you enjoy as much as I do this magical Moment after my Arrival in the Valhalla.
These Pages will slowly be filled with Symbols as God guides my Hand. I do not yet have the Answer, but Valhalla is the first Step in my Future Encounter with God, whom I will be grateful to have noticed me, and with whom I will have the Pleasure of conversing, and perhaps glimpsing some Light in the Face of such a convoluted Dilemma.
The Creation.
1.- Childhood's Paradise
Creation rails, wrote Aleixandre. There is no one like him to
to initiate us into this Childhood's Paradise.
The boundless Blue of the Sea and the Sky of Malaga, the loving Waves, the tranquil Bliss... A City that dwells in Heaven, infinite in the Airs, like a Bird of Paradise in the Garden of the Afternoon.
2.- Hell of Excess
Oh, Youth! Ephemeral and wild...
Although my Family always thought it would be a Paradise for me, two adorable Friends showed me new Ways to face my Youth. Baudelaire showed me the way to Les Paradis Artificiels, and my beloved Arthur, a descent into Hell.
As we have already agreed, God guides my Hand and these libertine Pages, therefore my Blood is shed in each Symbol that you, my dear Reader, will encounter.
The naked Truth, the constant Lie, the infinite Craving for Excess.
Decadence begins to fly over these light Letters.
3.- The Hell of the 3 Days
Dear Reader,
We find ourselves in the most ominous of all Hells, even though it is the most ephemeral of all. The deafening Screams of tortured Souls, the absence of Water, everything is Absence, all is Chaos.
You will be judged as you enter, with no Benevolence, you are condemned beforehand.
You burn in the most undesirable Darkness. Bodies rot in the filthy Mire of their Misery. The Screams are deafening.
Satan’s servants spit on your purulent Sores.
The prelude to Hell on Earth.
This Hell of the 3 Days is where Satan dwells.
Here you are all by yourself. Darkness floods the Souls. Bodies slumber on the cold Ice that inhabits this Hell. Dead and yet alive at the same time.
3 Walls and a Grate are the Rooms where the Souls are tortured. Here, the Light does not reach. Eternal darkness.
We can only hear the Screams of Silence.
The thunderous Silence never stops screaming.
4.- Hell on Earth
The few Souls that have survived the Hell of the 3 Days, wander absent, silent, lost, in this Hell of the 3 Days.
No Direction, No Destiny, just waiting for a Sign to awaken them and bring them out of their Lethargy, their Suffering, their infinite Sorrow, perhaps a Spark that will bring them back to Life, on their tortuous Road to Valhalla.
Books of old Legends will accompany us in this Hell.
Dear reader,
We will spend quite some Time on this Hell on Earth, but that does not prevent us from enjoying certain worldly Pleasures.
After all, we are on Earth.
As Tolstoy rightly said, Time and Patience are the two mightiest warriors
5.- Ocean's Paradise
Here we embark in a descent into the Maelstromm.
Not as Poe wrote it, but a Whirlwind of Thunderstorms for the Souls who arrive here.
The Master takes us back to the City of Paradise, where the Ocean proudly dominates the Earth.
"There Heaven was you, City that in it, you dwelt, City that in it, you flew with your Wings wide open".
Dear reader,
This Paradise is a deception to the Eyes of innocent Souls.
The Arrival is but Coldness.
The Port offers us Wines and Fruits of the Ocean, but Bread is not easy to find in this multitude of blind Spirits. Their Looks freeze the Blood.
Be warned, my dear Reader, for Misery, Disenchantment and Chaos inhabit this Paradise.
We are still far from our Destiny.
Here the Master spoke, and with his eternal Despair brought us marvellous Verses.
6.- Mountains´ Paradise
The prettiest of all Paradises, even though we are absolutely exhausted at our Arrival.
Black Wolves welcome us with sweet Howls of Joy.
The Murmur of Waters in cobalt blue Cascades.
Here the Gods introduce themselves to us, even without manifesting themselves in their Entirety.
Athom, Guardian of this Paradise, shelters us and provides us with Warmth. He gives us new Names, and procures Miracles for us.
Dear reader,
If you have come this far, the Glory of Valhalla awaits you.
Only a small Step separates us from our Destiny.
This Paradise is flooded with Peace and Calmness.
7.- Arrival in the Valhalla
How many Doubts and Questions will you, my dear Reader, have about our Arrival in the Valhalla?
In these Letters, the Master will guide us to our last, but not the most important Station on our Path.
Valhalla is a new Beginning of the Universe, here, all the Gods hold pleasant Gatherings where they discuss future Simulations, you may also call them, my dear Reader, Creations, with which they entertain us Mortals.
This is the favourite Game of the Gods.
The Creation of infinite Simulations where Mortals dream they are free. But the Universe, this Simulation, is written by the Gods, and free Will is only an implant in the Memory of us Mortals.
Do not give up, dear Reader...
This has only just begun, and I fear our Paths will soon cross again.
SIN FIN
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