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now begins generated list of local instances, definitions, quotes, instances in chapters, wordnet info if available and instances among weblinks


OBJECT INSTANCES [0] - TOPICS - AUTHORS - BOOKS - CHAPTERS - CLASSES - SEE ALSO - SIMILAR TITLES

TOPICS
SEE ALSO


AUTH

BOOKS
Awaken_the_Giant_Within
Big_Mind,_Big_Heart
Collected_Poems
Common_Sense
Dark_Night_of_the_Soul
DND_DM_Guide_5E
Enchiridion_text
Epigrams_from_Savitri
Evolution_II
Faust
Flow_-_The_Psychology_of_Optimal_Experience
Full_Circle
General_Principles_of_Kabbalah
Heart_of_Matter
Journey_to_the_Lord_of_Power_-_A_Sufi_Manual_on_Retreat
Kena_and_Other_Upanishads
Letters_On_Poetry_And_Art
Letters_On_Yoga
Letters_On_Yoga_IV
Liber_157_-_The_Tao_Teh_King
Life_without_Death
Mantras_Of_The_Mother
Meditation__The_First_and_Last_Freedom
Mind_-_Its_Mysteries_and_Control
Modern_Man_in_Search_of_a_Soul
My_Burning_Heart
On_Interpretation
On_Thoughts_And_Aphorisms
Plotinus_-_Complete_Works_Vol_01
Process_and_Reality
Questions_And_Answers_1955
Questions_And_Answers_1957-1958
Savitri
Some_Answers_From_The_Mother
The_Archetypes_and_the_Collective_Unconscious
The_Bible
The_Blue_Cliff_Records
the_Book
The_Book_of_Secrets__Keys_to_Love_and_Meditation
The_Categories
The_Divine_Companion
The_Divine_Milieu
The_Essential_Songs_of_Milarepa
The_Ever-Present_Origin
The_Imitation_of_Christ
The_Ladder_of_Divine_Ascent
The_Odyssey
The_Prophet
The_Republic
The_Seals_of_Wisdom
The_Study_and_Practice_of_Yoga
The_Tarot_of_Paul_Christian
The_Use_and_Abuse_of_History
The_Way_of_Perfection
The_Wit_and_Wisdom_of_Alfred_North_Whitehead
The_Yoga_Sutras
Toward_the_Future
Twilight_of_the_Idols
Vishnu_Purana
Words_Of_The_Mother_I
Words_Of_The_Mother_III
Writings_In_Bengali_and_Sanskrit

IN CHAPTERS TITLE
06.02_-_The_Way_of_Fate_and_the_Problem_of_Pain
08.07_-_Sleep_and_Pain
1.05_-_On_painstaking_and_true_repentance_which_constitute_the_life_of_the_holy_convicts;_and_about_the_prison.
1955-04-27_-_Symbolic_dreams_and_visions_-_Curing_pain_by_various_methods_-_Different_states_of_consciousness_-_Seeing_oneself_dead_in_a_dream_-_Exteriorisation
1956-03-07_-_Sacrifice,_Animals,_hostile_forces,_receive_in_proportion_to_consciousness_-_To_be_luminously_open_-_Integral_transformation_-_Pain_of_rejection,_delight_of_progress_-_Spirit_behind_intention_-_Spirit,_matter,_over-simplified
1956-07-04_-_Aspiration_when_one_sees_a_shooting_star_-_Preparing_the_bodyn_making_it_understand_-_Getting_rid_of_pain_and_suffering_-_Psychic_light
1957-02-13_-_Suffering,_pain_and_pleasure_-_Illness_and_its_cure
1.asak_-_My_Beloved-_this_torture_and_pain
1.jr_-_Until_You've_Found_Pain
1.khc_-_this_autumn_scenes_worth_words_paint
1.lb_-_Gold_painted_jars_-_wines_worth_a_thousand
1.lovecraft_-_Despair
1.pbs_-_Despair
1.pbs_-_Fragment_-_Such_Hope,_As_Is_The_Sick_Despair_Of_Good
1.pbs_-_Song._Despair
1.pbs_-_Sonnet_-_Lift_Not_The_Painted_Veil_Which_Those_Who_Live
1.rb_-_Rhyme_for_a_Child_Viewing_a_Naked_Venus_in_a_Painting_of_'The_Judgement_of_Paris'
1.rt_-_Your_flute_plays_the_exact_notes_of_my_pain._(from_The_Lover_of_God)
1.whitman_-_Despairing_Cries
1.whitman_-_Spain_1873-74
1.ww_-_Book_Thirteenth_[Imagination_And_Taste,_How_Impaired_And_Restored_Concluded]
1.ww_-_Book_Twelfth_[Imagination_And_Taste,_How_Impaired_And_Restored_]
1.ww_-_Look_Now_On_That_Adventurer_Who_Hath_Paid
1.ww_-_Upon_The_Sight_Of_A_Beautiful_Picture_Painted_By_Sir_G._H._Beaumont,_Bart
7.6.09_-_Despair_on_the_Staircase

IN CHAPTERS CLASSNAME

IN CHAPTERS TEXT
0_0.01_-_Introduction
00.01_-_The_Approach_to_Mysticism
0_0.02_-_Topographical_Note
00.03_-_Upanishadic_Symbolism
00.04_-_The_Beautiful_in_the_Upanishads
000_-_Humans_in_Universe
0.00_-_INTRODUCTION
0.00_-_The_Book_of_Lies_Text
0.00_-_THE_GOSPEL_PREFACE
0.01_-_Letters_from_the_Mother_to_Her_Son
0.02_-_Letters_to_a_Sadhak
0.02_-_The_Three_Steps_of_Nature
0.03_-_Letters_to_My_little_smile
0.04_-_Letters_to_a_Sadhak
0.05_-_Letters_to_a_Child
0.06_-_INTRODUCTION
0.06_-_Letters_to_a_Young_Sadhak
0.08_-_Letters_to_a_Young_Captain
01.01_-_The_Symbol_Dawn
01.02_-_Natures_Own_Yoga
01.02_-_Sri_Aurobindo_-_Ahana_and_Other_Poems
01.02_-_The_Issue
01.03_-_Sri_Aurobindo_and_his_School
01.03_-_The_Yoga_of_the_King_-_The_Yoga_of_the_Souls_Release
01.04_-_The_Poetry_in_the_Making
01.04_-_The_Secret_Knowledge
01.05_-_The_Yoga_of_the_King_-_The_Yoga_of_the_Spirits_Freedom_and_Greatness
01.06_-_Vivekananda
01.07_-_Blaise_Pascal_(1623-1662)
01.08_-_Walter_Hilton:_The_Scale_of_Perfection
0.10_-_Letters_to_a_Young_Captain
01.10_-_Nicholas_Berdyaev:_God_Made_Human
01.11_-_Aldous_Huxley:_The_Perennial_Philosophy
01.13_-_T._S._Eliot:_Four_Quartets
01.14_-_Nicholas_Roerich
0.11_-_Letters_to_a_Sadhak
0.14_-_Letters_to_a_Sadhak
0_1956-12-12
0_1957-04-22
0_1958-02-25
0_1958-07-06
0_1958-07-21
0_1958-11-04_-_Myths_are_True_and_Gods_exist_-_mental_formation_and_occult_faculties_-_exteriorization_-_work_in_dreams
0_1958-11-08
0_1958-11-22
0_1958-11-26
0_1958-12-15_-_tantric_mantra_-_125,000
0_1959-01-06
0_1959-01-14
0_1959-04-07
0_1959-05-28
0_1959-06-07
0_1959-07-10
0_1959-10-15
0_1960-03-07
0_1960-04-07
0_1960-04-20
0_1960-05-28_-_death_of_K_-_the_death_process-_the_subtle_physical
0_1960-06-04
0_1960-07-23_-_The_Flood_and_the_race_-_turning_back_to_guide_and_save_amongst_the_torrents_-_sadhana_vs_tamas_and_destruction_-_power_of_giving_and_offering_-_Japa,_7_lakhs,_140000_per_day,_1_crore_takes_20_years
0_1960-08-16
0_1960-08-20
0_1960-09-20
0_1960-10-22
0_1960-10-25
0_1960-10-30
0_1960-11-05
0_1960-11-08
0_1960-11-12
0_1960-11-15
0_1960-11-26
0_1960-12-17
0_1960-12-31
0_1961-01-27
0_1961-02-04
0_1961-02-07
0_1961-02-11
0_1961-02-18
0_1961-02-25
0_1961-03-11
0_1961-03-14
0_1961-03-21
0_1961-03-27
0_1961-04-25
0_1961-04-29
0_1961-06-02
0_1961-06-06
0_1961-06-27
0_1961-07-07
0_1961-07-15
0_1961-07-18
0_1961-08-02
0_1961-08-05
0_1961-09-10
0_1961-09-16
0_1961-09-30
0_1961-10-02
0_1961-10-15
0_1961-10-30
0_1961-11-05
0_1961-11-07
0_1962-01-12_-_supramental_ship
0_1962-01-21
0_1962-01-27
0_1962-02-24
0_1962-03-13
0_1962-04-13
0_1962-05-13
0_1962-05-15
0_1962-05-18
0_1962-05-22
0_1962-05-31
0_1962-06-02
0_1962-06-06
0_1962-06-12
0_1962-06-30
0_1962-07-07
0_1962-07-18
0_1962-07-21
0_1962-07-25
0_1962-07-31
0_1962-08-08
0_1962-09-05
0_1962-09-08
0_1962-09-18
0_1962-09-26
0_1962-10-12
0_1962-10-27
0_1962-10-30
0_1962-11-07
0_1962-11-17
0_1962-12-15
0_1962-12-19
0_1963-01-09
0_1963-01-12
0_1963-01-14
0_1963-01-30
0_1963-02-19
0_1963-02-23
0_1963-03-09
0_1963-03-19
0_1963-03-23
0_1963-03-30
0_1963-04-20
0_1963-05-03
0_1963-05-11
0_1963-05-18
0_1963-05-22
0_1963-06-03
0_1963-06-15
0_1963-06-19
0_1963-07-03
0_1963-07-06
0_1963-07-13
0_1963-07-20
0_1963-07-27
0_1963-08-07
0_1963-08-10
0_1963-08-24
0_1963-08-31
0_1963-09-18
0_1963-09-25
0_1963-09-28
0_1963-10-19
0_1963-10-26
0_1963-11-20
0_1963-12-03
0_1963-12-07_-_supramental_ship
0_1963-12-11
0_1963-12-21
0_1963-12-25
0_1963-12-31
0_1964-01-08
0_1964-01-18
0_1964-02-05
0_1964-03-07
0_1964-04-08
0_1964-04-25
0_1964-05-21
0_1964-06-27
0_1964-07-28
0_1964-08-11
0_1964-08-22
0_1964-09-16
0_1964-09-26
0_1964-10-07
0_1964-10-14
0_1964-10-17
0_1964-10-30
0_1964-11-04
0_1964-11-12
0_1964-11-14
0_1964-11-21
0_1964-11-25
0_1965-01-12
0_1965-03-03
0_1965-03-24
0_1965-03-27
0_1965-05-08
0_1965-06-05
0_1965-06-14
0_1965-07-10
0_1965-07-24
0_1965-08-07
0_1965-08-18
0_1965-08-21
0_1965-08-25
0_1965-08-31
0_1965-09-04
0_1965-09-18
0_1965-09-25
0_1965-10-16
0_1965-10-27
0_1965-11-13
0_1965-11-23
0_1965-11-27
0_1965-12-10
0_1965-12-18
0_1966-01-22
0_1966-03-19
0_1966-03-26
0_1966-04-13
0_1966-04-16
0_1966-05-07
0_1966-06-02
0_1966-06-25
0_1966-07-30
0_1966-08-03
0_1966-09-07
0_1966-09-14
0_1966-09-21
0_1966-09-28
0_1966-10-05
0_1966-10-08
0_1966-10-29
0_1966-11-30
0_1966-12-07
0_1966-12-20
0_1967-01-14
0_1967-02-18
0_1967-03-02
0_1967-04-05
0_1967-04-15
0_1967-04-19
0_1967-05-06
0_1967-05-10
0_1967-05-24
0_1967-05-30
0_1967-06-07
0_1967-06-14
0_1967-07-05
0_1967-07-22
0_1967-07-26
0_1967-08-02
0_1967-08-12
0_1967-08-26
0_1967-09-03
0_1967-09-13
0_1967-09-16
0_1967-09-20
0_1967-09-30
0_1967-10-04
0_1967-10-19
0_1967-10-30
0_1967-11-22
0_1967-11-29
0_1967-12-08
0_1968-01-12
0_1968-02-03
0_1968-02-20
0_1968-03-13
0_1968-04-10
0_1968-04-20
0_1968-04-27
0_1968-05-02
0_1968-05-18
0_1968-05-22
0_1968-06-15
0_1968-06-18
0_1968-06-29
0_1968-07-17
0_1968-07-20
0_1968-08-07
0_1968-08-28
0_1968-09-07
0_1968-09-28
0_1968-10-09
0_1968-10-16
0_1968-10-23
0_1968-10-26
0_1968-11-06
0_1968-11-09
0_1968-11-23
0_1968-11-27
0_1968-12-04
0_1968-12-14
0_1968-12-21
0_1968-12-25
0_1969-02-19
0_1969-03-12
0_1969-03-26
0_1969-04-09
0_1969-04-23
0_1969-05-03
0_1969-05-10
0_1969-05-14
0_1969-05-24
0_1969-06-25
0_1969-06-28
0_1969-07-23
0_1969-07-30
0_1969-08-06
0_1969-08-09
0_1969-08-16
0_1969-08-20
0_1969-09-10
0_1969-09-17
0_1969-09-20
0_1969-09-27
0_1969-10-01
0_1969-10-08
0_1969-10-11
0_1969-10-18
0_1969-10-25
0_1969-11-08
0_1969-11-12
0_1969-11-15
0_1969-11-19
0_1969-11-22
0_1969-11-29
0_1969-12-10
0_1969-12-13
0_1969-12-20
0_1969-12-24
0_1969-12-31
0_1970-02-07
0_1970-02-11
0_1970-02-28
0_1970-03-04
0_1970-03-07
0_1970-03-14
0_1970-03-18
0_1970-03-25
0_1970-03-28
0_1970-04-04
0_1970-04-29
0_1970-05-09
0_1970-05-20
0_1970-06-20
0_1970-06-27
0_1970-07-04
0_1970-07-11
0_1970-08-01
0_1970-08-05
0_1970-09-05
0_1970-09-09
0_1970-09-12
0_1970-09-30
0_1970-10-10
0_1970-10-17
0_1971-01-16
0_1971-01-17
0_1971-03-06
0_1971-04-11
0_1971-04-14
0_1971-04-17
0_1971-05-12
0_1971-05-15
0_1971-06-12
0_1971-07-17
0_1971-07-28
0_1971-08-28
0_1971-09-22
0_1971-10-13
0_1971-10-16
0_1971-10-27
0_1971-11-13
0_1971-11-17
0_1971-12-11
0_1971-12-18
0_1971-12-25
0_1972-01-15
0_1972-02-02
0_1972-02-07
0_1972-02-26
0_1972-03-29a
0_1972-03-29b
0_1972-04-05
0_1972-04-08
0_1972-04-15
0_1972-04-26
0_1972-05-06
0_1972-05-17
0_1972-06-14
0_1972-06-24
0_1972-07-12
0_1972-07-22
0_1972-08-02
0_1972-08-12
0_1972-08-30
0_1972-10-11
0_1972-11-25
0_1972-12-02
0_1972-12-10
0_1973-01-10
0_1973-03-10
0_1973-03-17
0_1973-04-07
0_1973-04-14
0_1973-04-25
02.01_-_Our_Ideal
02.01_-_The_World-Stair
02.01_-_The_World_War
02.02_-_The_Kingdom_of_Subtle_Matter
02.03_-_The_Glory_and_the_Fall_of_Life
02.03_-_The_Shakespearean_Word
02.04_-_The_Kingdoms_of_the_Little_Life
02.04_-_Two_Sonnets_of_Shakespeare
02.05_-_Robert_Graves
02.05_-_The_Godheads_of_the_Little_Life
02.06_-_Boris_Pasternak
02.06_-_The_Kingdoms_and_Godheads_of_the_Greater_Life
02.06_-_Vansittartism
02.07_-_George_Seftris
02.07_-_India_One_and_Indivisable
02.07_-_The_Descent_into_Night
02.08_-_Jules_Supervielle
02.08_-_The_World_of_Falsehood,_the_Mother_of_Evil_and_the_Sons_of_Darkness
02.09_-_The_Paradise_of_the_Life-Gods
02.10_-_Independence_and_its_Sanction
02.10_-_Two_Mystic_Poems_in_Modern_Bengali
02.11_-_New_World-Conditions
02.11_-_The_Kingdoms_and_Godheads_of_the_Greater_Mind
02.13_-_Rabindranath_and_Sri_Aurobindo
03.01_-_Humanism_and_Humanism
03.01_-_The_Malady_of_the_Century
03.02_-_The_Adoration_of_the_Divine_Mother
03.02_-_The_Philosopher_as_an_Artist_and_Philosophy_as_an_Art
03.03_-_Arjuna_or_the_Ideal_Disciple
03.03_-_The_House_of_the_Spirit_and_the_New_Creation
03.04_-_The_Body_Human
03.04_-_The_Vision_and_the_Boon
03.05_-_Some_Conceptions_and_Misconceptions
03.06_-_Divine_Humanism
03.09_-_Art_and_Katharsis
03.10_-_Hamlet:_A_Crisis_of_the_Evolving_Soul
03.12_-_Communism:_What_does_it_Mean?
03.13_-_Human_Destiny
03.14_-_Mater_Dolorosa
03.15_-_Origin_and_Nature_of_Suffering
04.01_-_The_Birth_and_Childhood_of_the_Flame
04.01_-_The_Divine_Man
04.01_-_The_March_of_Civilisation
04.02_-_The_Growth_of_the_Flame
04.03_-_Consciousness_as_Energy
04.03_-_The_Call_to_the_Quest
04.04_-_Evolution_of_the_Spiritual_Consciousness
04.04_-_The_Quest
04.07_-_Readings_in_Savitri
04.08_-_To_the_Heights_VIII_(Mahalakshmi)
04.13_-_To_the_HeightsXIII
04.20_-_To_the_Heights-XX
04.23_-_To_the_Heights-XXIII
04.31_-_To_the_Heights-XXXI
05.01_-_At_the_Origin_of_Ignorance
05.01_-_Man_and_the_Gods
05.01_-_The_Destined_Meeting-Place
05.02_-_Gods_Labour
05.03_-_Of_Desire_and_Atonement
05.03_-_Satyavan_and_Savitri
05.06_-_Physics_or_philosophy
05.06_-_The_Birth_of_Maya
05.06_-_The_Role_of_Evil
05.07_-_The_Observer_and_the_Observed
05.12_-_The_Soul_and_its_Journey
05.28_-_God_Protects
06.01_-_The_End_of_a_Civilisation
06.01_-_The_Word_of_Fate
06.02_-_The_Way_of_Fate_and_the_Problem_of_Pain
06.07_-_Total_Transformation_Demands_Total_Rejection
06.11_-_The_Steps_of_the_Soul
06.16_-_A_Page_of_Occult_History
06.27_-_To_Learn_and_to_Understand
06.29_-_Towards_Redemption
06.30_-_Sweet_Holy_Tears
07.01_-_The_Joy_of_Union;_the_Ordeal_of_the_Foreknowledge
07.02_-_The_Parable_of_the_Search_for_the_Soul
07.03_-_The_Entry_into_the_Inner_Countries
07.04_-_The_Triple_Soul-Forces
07.05_-_The_Finding_of_the_Soul
07.06_-_Nirvana_and_the_Discovery_of_the_All-Negating_Absolute
07.13_-_Divine_Justice
07.15_-_Divine_Disgust
07.19_-_Bad_Thought-Formation
07.21_-_On_Occultism
07.22_-_Mysticism_and_Occultism
07.28_-_Personal_Effort_and_Will
07.36_-_The_Body_and_the_Psychic
07.42_-_The_Nature_and_Destiny_of_Art
07.43_-_Music_Its_Origin_and_Nature
07.45_-_Specialisation
08.03_-_Death_in_the_Forest
08.06_-_A_Sign_and_a_Symbol
08.07_-_Sleep_and_Pain
08.08_-_The_Mind_s_Bazaar
08.17_-_Psychological_Perfection
08.19_-_Asceticism
08.22_-_Regarding_the_Body
08.24_-_On_Food
08.25_-_Meat-Eating
08.30_-_Dealing_with_a_Wrong_Movement
08.36_-_Buddha_and_Shankara
09.01_-_Towards_the_Black_Void
09.02_-_The_Journey_in_Eternal_Night_and_the_Voice_of_the_Darkness
09.05_-_The_Story_of_Love
100.00_-_Synergy
10.01_-_A_Dream
10.01_-_The_Dream_Twilight_of_the_Ideal
10.02_-_The_Gospel_of_Death_and_Vanity_of_the_Ideal
10.03_-_The_Debate_of_Love_and_Death
10.04_-_The_Dream_Twilight_of_the_Earthly_Real
10.04_-_Transfiguration
1.007_-_Initial_Steps_in_Yoga_Practice
1.008_-_The_Principle_of_Self-Affirmation
1.00a_-_Introduction
1.00b_-_Introduction
1.00c_-_DIVISION_C_-_THE_ETHERIC_BODY_AND_PRANA
1.00d_-_Introduction
1.00e_-_DIVISION_E_-_MOTION_ON_THE_PHYSICAL_AND_ASTRAL_PLANES
1.00f_-_DIVISION_F_-_THE_LAW_OF_ECONOMY
1.00_-_Main
1.00_-_PREFACE_-_DESCENSUS_AD_INFERNOS
1.00_-_PRELUDE_AT_THE_THEATRE
1.00_-_The_Constitution_of_the_Human_Being
10.10_-_A_Poem
1.010_-_Self-Control_-_The_Alpha_and_Omega_of_Yoga
10.11_-_Savitri
10.12_-_Awake_Mother
1.012_-_Sublimation_-_A_Way_to_Reshuffle_Thought
1.01_-_Adam_Kadmon_and_the_Evolution
1.01_-_A_NOTE_ON_PROGRESS
1.01_-_Appearance_and_Reality
1.01_-_Archetypes_of_the_Collective_Unconscious
1.01_-_Asana
1.01_-_BOOK_THE_FIRST
1.01_-_Economy
1.01f_-_Introduction
1.01_-_Foreward
1.01_-_Fundamental_Considerations
1.01_-_Historical_Survey
1.01_-_How_is_Knowledge_Of_The_Higher_Worlds_Attained?
1.01_-_Maitreya_inquires_of_his_teacher_(Parashara)
1.01_-_MAPS_OF_EXPERIENCE_-_OBJECT_AND_MEANING
1.01_-_Meeting_the_Master_-_Authors_first_meeting,_December_1918
1.01_-_Necessity_for_knowledge_of_the_whole_human_being_for_a_genuine_education.
1.01_-_Newtonian_and_Bergsonian_Time
1.01_-_NIGHT
1.01_-_On_knowledge_of_the_soul,_and_how_knowledge_of_the_soul_is_the_key_to_the_knowledge_of_God.
1.01_-_On_Love
1.01_-_On_renunciation_of_the_world
1.01_-_Our_Demand_and_Need_from_the_Gita
1.01_-_Proem
1.01_-_SAMADHI_PADA
1.01_-_Soul_and_God
1.01_-_Tara_the_Divine
1.01_-_THAT_ARE_THOU
1.01_-_the_Call_to_Adventure
1.01_-_The_Castle
1.01_-_The_Dark_Forest._The_Hill_of_Difficulty._The_Panther,_the_Lion,_and_the_Wolf._Virgil.
1.01_-_The_Divine_and_The_Universe
1.01_-_The_Human_Aspiration
1.01_-_The_King_of_the_Wood
1.01_-_The_Mental_Fortress
1.01_-_The_Offering
1.01_-_THE_OPPOSITES
1.01_-_The_Path_of_Later_On
1.01_-_The_Rape_of_the_Lock
1.01_-_The_Unexpected
1.01_-_To_Watanabe_Sukefusa
1.01_-_What_is_Magick?
1.01_-_Who_is_Tara
1.02.2.1_-_Brahman__Oneness_of_God_and_the_World
1.02.2.2_-_Self-Realisation
1.02.3.2_-_Knowledge_and_Ignorance
10.23_-_Prayers_and_Meditations_of_the_Mother
10.24_-_Savitri
1.02.9_-_Conclusion_and_Summary
1.02_-_BEFORE_THE_CITY-GATE
1.02_-_BOOK_THE_SECOND
1.02_-_Karma_Yoga
1.02_-_MAPS_OF_MEANING_-_THREE_LEVELS_OF_ANALYSIS
1.02_-_Meditating_on_Tara
1.02_-_On_detachment
1.02_-_On_the_Knowledge_of_God.
1.02_-_SADHANA_PADA
1.02_-_Self-Consecration
1.02_-_Skillful_Means
1.02_-_The_7_Habits__An_Overview
1.02_-_The_Child_as_growing_being_and_the_childs_experience_of_encountering_the_teacher.
1.02_-_The_Concept_of_the_Collective_Unconscious
1.02_-_The_Development_of_Sri_Aurobindos_Thought
1.02_-_The_Divine_Is_with_You
1.02_-_The_Divine_Teacher
1.02_-_The_Eternal_Law
1.02_-_The_Great_Process
1.02_-_The_Objects_of_Imitation.
1.02_-_The_Pit
1.02_-_THE_POOL_OF_TEARS
1.02_-_THE_QUATERNIO_AND_THE_MEDIATING_ROLE_OF_MERCURIUS
1.02_-_The_Recovery
1.02_-_The_Refusal_of_the_Call
1.02_-_The_Shadow
1.02_-_The_Stages_of_Initiation
1.02_-_The_Three_European_Worlds
1.02_-_The_Ultimate_Path_is_Without_Difficulty
1.02_-_THE_WITHIN_OF_THINGS
1.02_-_To_Zen_Monks_Kin_and_Koku
1.02_-_Where_I_Lived,_and_What_I_Lived_For
10.31_-_The_Mystery_of_The_Five_Senses
1.035_-_The_Recitation_of_Mantra
1.036_-_The_Rise_of_Obstacles_in_Yoga_Practice
1.037_-_Preventing_the_Fall_in_Yoga
1.038_-_Impediments_in_Concentration_and_Meditation
1.03_-_A_CAUCUS-RACE_AND_A_LONG_TALE
1.03_-_A_Parable
1.03_-_APPRENTICESHIP_AND_ENCULTURATION_-_ADOPTION_OF_A_SHARED_MAP
1.03_-_Bloodstream_Sermon
1.03_-_BOOK_THE_THIRD
1.03_-_Concerning_the_Archetypes,_with_Special_Reference_to_the_Anima_Concept
1.03_-_Hymns_of_Gritsamada
1.03_-_Invocation_of_Tara
1.03_-_Measure_of_time,_Moments_of_Kashthas,_etc.
1.03_-_Meeting_the_Master_-_Meeting_with_others
1.03_-_On_exile_or_pilgrimage
1.03_-_On_Knowledge_of_the_World.
1.03_-_ON_THE_AFTERWORLDLY
1.03_-_PERSONALITY,_SANCTITY,_DIVINE_INCARNATION
1.03_-_Questions_and_Answers
1.03_-_Reading
1.03_-_.REASON._IN_PHILOSOPHY
1.03_-_Self-Surrender_in_Works_-_The_Way_of_The_Gita
1.03_-_Some_Practical_Aspects
1.03_-_Supernatural_Aid
1.03_-_Sympathetic_Magic
1.03_-_Tara,_Liberator_from_the_Eight_Dangers
1.03_-_The_Desert
1.03_-_The_Gate_of_Hell._The_Inefficient_or_Indifferent._Pope_Celestine_V._The_Shores_of_Acheron._Charon._The
1.03_-_THE_GRAND_OPTION
1.03_-_The_House_Of_The_Lord
1.03_-_THE_ORPHAN,_THE_WIDOW,_AND_THE_MOON
1.03_-_The_Sephiros
1.03_-_THE_STUDY_(The_Exorcism)
1.03_-_The_Sunlit_Path
1.03_-_The_Syzygy_-_Anima_and_Animus
1.03_-_The_Tale_of_the_Alchemist_Who_Sold_His_Soul
1.03_-_Time_Series,_Information,_and_Communication
1.03_-_To_Layman_Ishii
1.03_-_VISIT_TO_VIDYASAGAR
1.03_-_YIBHOOTI_PADA
1.040_-_Re-Educating_the_Mind
1.04_-_ADVICE_TO_HOUSEHOLDERS
1.04_-_ALCHEMY_AND_MANICHAEISM
1.04_-_A_Leader
1.04_-_Body,_Soul_and_Spirit
1.04_-_BOOK_THE_FOURTH
1.04_-_Communion
1.04_-_GOD_IN_THE_WORLD
1.04_-_KAI_VALYA_PADA
1.04_-_Magic_and_Religion
1.04_-_On_blessed_and_ever-memorable_obedience
1.04_-_On_Knowledge_of_the_Future_World.
1.04_-_ON_THE_DESPISERS_OF_THE_BODY
1.04_-_Pratyahara
1.04_-_Reality_Omnipresent
1.04_-_SOME_REFLECTIONS_ON_PROGRESS
1.04_-_Sounds
1.04_-_The_Aims_of_Psycho_therapy
1.04_-_THE_APPEARANCE_OF_ANOMALY_-_CHALLENGE_TO_THE_SHARED_MAP
1.04_-_The_Conditions_of_Esoteric_Training
1.04_-_The_Crossing_of_the_First_Threshold
1.04_-_The_Discovery_of_the_Nation-Soul
1.04_-_The_Divine_Mother_-_This_Is_She
1.04_-_The_Gods_of_the_Veda
1.04_-_The_Origin_and_Development_of_Poetry.
1.04_-_The_Paths
1.04_-_The_Praise
1.04_-_The_Qabalah__The_Best_Training_for_Memory
1.04_-_THE_RABBIT_SENDS_IN_A_LITTLE_BILL
1.04_-_The_Sacrifice_the_Triune_Path_and_the_Lord_of_the_Sacrifice
1.04_-_The_Self
1.04_-_The_Silent_Mind
1.04_-_THE_STUDY_(The_Compact)
1.04_-_To_the_Priest_of_Rytan-ji
1.04_-_What_Arjuna_Saw_-_the_Dark_Side_of_the_Force
1.05_-_2010_and_1956_-_Doomsday?
1.052_-_Yoga_Practice_-_A_Series_of_Positive_Steps
1.053_-_A_Very_Important_Sadhana
1.056_-_Lack_of_Knowledge_is_the_Cause_of_Suffering
1.057_-_The_Four_Manifestations_of_Ignorance
1.05_-_AUERBACHS_CELLAR
1.05_-_BOOK_THE_FIFTH
1.05_-_Buddhism_and_Women
1.05_-_Christ,_A_Symbol_of_the_Self
1.05_-_Computing_Machines_and_the_Nervous_System
1.05_-_Consciousness
1.05_-_Definition_of_the_Ludicrous,_and_a_brief_sketch_of_the_rise_of_Comedy.
1.05_-_Knowledge_by_Aquaintance_and_Knowledge_by_Description
1.05_-_On_painstaking_and_true_repentance_which_constitute_the_life_of_the_holy_convicts;_and_about_the_prison.
1.05_-_Pratyahara_and_Dharana
1.05_-_Problems_of_Modern_Psycho_therapy
1.05_-_Ritam
1.05_-_Solitude
1.05_-_Some_Results_of_Initiation
1.05_-_Splitting_of_the_Spirit
1.05_-_The_Activation_of_Human_Energy
1.05_-_THE_HOSTILE_BROTHERS_-_ARCHETYPES_OF_RESPONSE_TO_THE_UNKNOWN
1.05_-_The_Magical_Control_of_the_Weather
1.05_-_THE_MASTER_AND_KESHAB
1.05_-_THE_NEW_SPIRIT
1.05_-_The_Second_Circle__The_Wanton._Minos._The_Infernal_Hurricane._Francesca_da_Rimini.
1.05_-_The_Universe__The_0_=_2_Equation
1.05_-_To_Know_How_To_Suffer
1.05_-_True_and_False_Subjectivism
1.05_-_War_And_Politics
1.05_-_Work_and_Teaching
1.05_-_Yoga_and_Hypnotism
1.060_-_Tracing_the_Ultimate_Cause_of_Any_Experience
1.06_-_Being_Human_and_the_Copernican_Principle
1.06_-_BOOK_THE_SIXTH
1.06_-_Definition_of_Tragedy.
1.06_-_Dhyana
1.06_-_Five_Dreams
1.06_-_Gestalt_and_Universals
1.06_-_Hymns_of_Parashara
1.06_-_Iconography
1.06_-_LIFE_AND_THE_PLANETS
1.06_-_Magicians_as_Kings
1.06_-_Man_in_the_Universe
1.06_-_MORTIFICATION,_NON-ATTACHMENT,_RIGHT_LIVELIHOOD
1.06_-_On_remembrance_of_death.
1.06_-_On_Thought
1.06_-_On_Work
1.06_-_Origin_of_the_four_castes
1.06_-_Psycho_therapy_and_a_Philosophy_of_Life
1.06_-_Quieting_the_Vital
1.06_-_The_Ascent_of_the_Sacrifice_2_The_Works_of_Love_-_The_Works_of_Life
1.06_-_The_Breaking_of_the_Limits
1.06_-_THE_FOUR_GREAT_ERRORS
1.06_-_The_Four_Powers_of_the_Mother
1.06_-_The_Literal_Qabalah
1.06_-_THE_MASTER_WITH_THE_BRAHMO_DEVOTEES
1.06_-_The_Sign_of_the_Fishes
1.06_-_The_Third_Circle__The_Gluttonous._Cerberus._The_Eternal_Rain._Ciacco._Florence.
1.06_-_The_Transformation_of_Dream_Life
1.06_-_WITCHES_KITCHEN
1.06_-_Yun_Men's_Every_Day_is_a_Good_Day
1.070_-_The_Seven_Stages_of_Perfection
1.07_-_A_Song_of_Longing_for_Tara,_the_Infallible
1.07_-_A_STREET
1.07_-_BOOK_THE_SEVENTH
1.07_-_Bridge_across_the_Afterlife
1.07_-_Incarnate_Human_Gods
1.07_-_Jnana_Yoga
1.07_-_Medicine_and_Psycho_therapy
1.07_-_Note_on_the_word_Go
1.07_-_On_mourning_which_causes_joy.
1.07_-_On_Our_Knowledge_of_General_Principles
1.07_-_Production_of_the_mind-born_sons_of_Brahma
1.07_-_Raja-Yoga_in_Brief
1.07_-_Samadhi
1.07_-_Savitri
1.07_-_The_Ego_and_the_Dualities
1.07_-_The_Farther_Reaches_of_Human_Nature
1.07_-_The_Fire_of_the_New_World
1.07_-_THE_.IMPROVERS._OF_MANKIND
1.07_-_The_Infinity_Of_The_Universe
1.07_-_The_Literal_Qabalah_(continued)
1.07_-_The_Magic_Wand
1.07_-_THE_MASTER_AND_VIJAY_GOSWAMI
1.07_-_The_Primary_Data_of_Being
1.07_-_The_Process_of_Evolution
1.07_-_The_Psychic_Center
1.07_-_The_Three_Schools_of_Magick_2
1.07_-_TRUTH
1.081_-_The_Application_of_Pratyahara
1.083_-_Choosing_an_Object_for_Concentration
1.089_-_The_Levels_of_Concentration
1.08_-_Adhyatma_Yoga
1.08a_-_The_Ladder
1.08_-_Attendants
1.08_-_BOOK_THE_EIGHTH
1.08_-_Civilisation_and_Barbarism
1.08_-_EVENING_A_SMALL,_NEATLY_KEPT_CHAMBER
1.08_-_Independence_from_the_Physical
1.08_-_On_freedom_from_anger_and_on_meekness.
1.08_-_Origin_of_Rudra:_his_becoming_eight_Rudras
1.08_-_Psycho_therapy_Today
1.08_-_RELIGION_AND_TEMPERAMENT
1.08_-_Sri_Aurobindos_Descent_into_Death
1.08_-_The_Depths_of_the_Divine
1.08_-_The_Four_Austerities_and_the_Four_Liberations
1.08_-_The_Gods_of_the_Veda_-_The_Secret_of_the_Veda
1.08_-_The_Historical_Significance_of_the_Fish
1.08_-_THE_MASTERS_BIRTHDAY_CELEBRATION_AT_DAKSHINESWAR
1.08_-_THE_QUEEN'S_CROQUET_GROUND
1.08_-_The_Supreme_Discovery
1.08_-_The_Three_Schools_of_Magick_3
1.094_-_Understanding_the_Structure_of_Things
1.096_-_Powers_that_Accrue_in_the_Practice
1.098_-_The_Transformation_from_Human_to_Divine
1.099_-_The_Entry_of_the_Eternal_into_the_Individual
1.09_-_ADVICE_TO_THE_BRAHMOS
1.09_-_BOOK_THE_NINTH
1.09_-_Concentration_-_Its_Spiritual_Uses
1.09_-_Equality_and_the_Annihilation_of_Ego
1.09_-_FAITH_IN_PEACE
1.09_-_Legend_of_Lakshmi
1.09_-_Man_-_About_the_Body
1.09_-_Of_the_signs_by_which_it_will_be_known_that_the_spiritual_person_is_walking_along_the_way_of_this_night_and_purgation_of_sense.
1.09_-_PROMENADE
1.09_-_Saraswati_and_Her_Consorts
1.09_-_SELF-KNOWLEDGE
1.09_-_SKIRMISHES_IN_A_WAY_WITH_THE_AGE
1.09_-_Sri_Aurobindo_and_the_Big_Bang
1.09_-_Stead_and_Maskelyne
1.09_-_Talks
1.09_-_The_Ambivalence_of_the_Fish_Symbol
1.09_-_The_Furies_and_Medusa._The_Angel._The_City_of_Dis._The_Sixth_Circle__Heresiarchs.
1.09_-_The_Greater_Self
1.09_-_The_Guardian_of_the_Threshold
1.09_-_The_Secret_Chiefs
1.09_-_The_Worship_of_Trees
1.09_-_To_the_Students,_Young_and_Old
1.1.01_-_Seeking_the_Divine
11.01_-_The_Eternal_Day__The_Souls_Choice_and_the_Supreme_Consummation
11.01_-_The_Opening_Scene_of_Savitri
1.1.02_-_Sachchidananda
11.02_-_The_Golden_Life-line
1.1.04_-_Philosophy
1.10_-_BOOK_THE_TENTH
1.10_-_Concentration_-_Its_Practice
1.10_-_Conscious_Force
1.10_-_GRACE_AND_FREE_WILL
1.10_-_Harmony
1.10_-_Laughter_Of_The_Gods
1.10_-_On_our_Knowledge_of_Universals
1.10_-_Relics_of_Tree_Worship_in_Modern_Europe
1.10_-_THE_FORMATION_OF_THE_NOOSPHERE
1.10_-_THE_MASTER_WITH_THE_BRAHMO_DEVOTEES_(II)
1.10_-_THE_NEIGHBORS_HOUSE
1.10_-_Theodicy_-_Nature_Makes_No_Mistakes
1.10_-_The_Secret_of_the_Veda
1.10_-_The_Three_Modes_of_Nature
1.10_-_THINGS_I_OWE_TO_THE_ANCIENTS
1.1.1.08_-_Self-criticism
11.13_-_In_these_Fateful_Days
1.11_-_BOOK_THE_ELEVENTH
1.11_-_Correspondence_and_Interviews
1.11_-_Delight_of_Existence_-_The_Problem
1.11_-_FAITH_IN_MAN
1.11_-_GOOD_AND_EVIL
1.11_-_Higher_Laws
1.11_-_Legend_of_Dhruva,_the_son_of_Uttanapada
1.11_-_Oneness
1.11_-_(Plot_continued.)_Reversal_of_the_Situation,_Recognition,_and_Tragic_or_disastrous_Incident_defined_and_explained.
1.11_-_Powers
1.11_-_The_Broken_Rocks._Pope_Anastasius._General_Description_of_the_Inferno_and_its_Divisions.
1.11_-_The_Change_of_Power
1.11_-_The_Kalki_Avatar
1.11_-_The_Master_of_the_Work
1.11_-_The_Seven_Rivers
1.11_-_WITH_THE_DEVOTEES_AT_DAKSHINEWAR
1.12_-_BOOK_THE_TWELFTH
1.12_-_Brute_Neighbors
1.12_-_Delight_of_Existence_-_The_Solution
1.12_-_Dhruva_commences_a_course_of_religious_austerities
1.12_-_GARDEN
1.12_-_God_Departs
1.12_-_Independence
1.12_-_Love_The_Creator
1.12_-_Sleep_and_Dreams
1.12_-_SOME_REFLECTIONS_ON_THE_RIGHTS_OF_MAN
1.12_-_THE_FESTIVAL_AT_PNIHTI
1.12_-_The_Left-Hand_Path_-_The_Black_Brothers
1.12_-_The_Sacred_Marriage
1.12_-_The_Sociology_of_Superman
1.12_-_The_Superconscient
1.13_-_A_Dream
1.13_-_And_Then?
1.13_-_BOOK_THE_THIRTEENTH
1.13_-_Conclusion_-_He_is_here
1.13_-_Gnostic_Symbols_of_the_Self
1.13_-_Knowledge,_Error,_and_Probably_Opinion
1.1.3_-_Mental_Difficulties_and_the_Need_of_Quietude
1.13_-_Posterity_of_Dhruva
1.13_-_Reason_and_Religion
1.13_-_SALVATION,_DELIVERANCE,_ENLIGHTENMENT
1.13_-_System_of_the_O.T.O.
1.13_-_THE_HUMAN_REBOUND_OF_EVOLUTION_AND_ITS_CONSEQUENCES
1.13_-_The_Kings_of_Rome_and_Alba
1.13_-_THE_MASTER_AND_M.
1.13_-_The_Pentacle,_Lamen_or_Seal
1.13_-_The_Wood_of_Thorns._The_Harpies._The_Violent_against_themselves._Suicides._Pier_della_Vigna._Lano_and_Jacopo_da_Sant'_Andrea.
1.13_-_Under_the_Auspices_of_the_Gods
1.14_-_BOOK_THE_FOURTEENTH
1.14_-_FOREST_AND_CAVERN
1.14_-_IMMORTALITY_AND_SURVIVAL
1.14_-_INSTRUCTION_TO_VAISHNAVS_AND_BRHMOS
1.14_-_Noise
1.14_-_On_the_clamorous,_yet_wicked_master-the_stomach.
1.1.4_-_The_Physical_Mind_and_Sadhana
1.14_-_The_Principle_of_Divine_Works
1.14_-_The_Sand_Waste_and_the_Rain_of_Fire._The_Violent_against_God._Capaneus._The_Statue_of_Time,_and_the_Four_Infernal_Rivers.
1.14_-_The_Secret
1.14_-_The_Structure_and_Dynamics_of_the_Self
1.14_-_The_Succesion_to_the_Kingdom_in_Ancient_Latium
1.14_-_The_Suprarational_Beauty
1.14_-_The_Victory_Over_Death
1.15_-_Conclusion
1.15_-_Index
1.15_-_On_incorruptible_purity_and_chastity_to_which_the_corruptible_attain_by_toil_and_sweat.
1.15_-_Prayers
1.15_-_THE_DIRECTIONS_AND_CONDITIONS_OF_THE_FUTURE
1.15_-_The_element_of_Character_in_Tragedy.
1.15_-_The_Suprarational_Good
1.15_-_The_Transformed_Being
1.15_-_The_Value_of_Philosophy
1.15_-_The_world_overrun_with_trees;_they_are_destroyed_by_the_Pracetasas
1.15_-_The_Worship_of_the_Oak
1.15_-_Truth
1.16_-_Advantages_and_Disadvantages_of_Evocational_Magic
1.16_-_Dianus_and_Diana
1.16_-_Guidoguerra,_Aldobrandi,_and_Rusticucci._Cataract_of_the_River_of_Blood.
1.16_-_Man,_A_Transitional_Being
1.16_-_PRAYER
1.16_-_Religion
1.16_-_The_Season_of_Truth
1.16_-_The_Suprarational_Ultimate_of_Life
1.17_-_Astral_Journey__Example,_How_to_do_it,_How_to_Verify_your_Experience
1.17_-_DOES_MANKIND_MOVE_BIOLOGICALLY_UPON_ITSELF?
1.17_-_God
1.17_-_Legend_of_Prahlada
1.17_-_Religion_as_the_Law_of_Life
1.17_-_SUFFERING
1.17_-_The_Burden_of_Royalty
1.17_-_The_Transformation
1.18_-_DONJON
1.18_-_Hiranyakasipu's_reiterated_attempts_to_destroy_his_son
1.18_-_Mind_and_Supermind
1.18_-_On_insensibility,_that_is,_deadening_of_the_soul_and_the_death_of_the_mind_before_the_death_of_the_body.
1.18_-_The_Divine_Worker
1.18_-_The_Eighth_Circle,_Malebolge__The_Fraudulent_and_the_Malicious._The_First_Bolgia__Seducers_and_Panders._Venedico_Caccianimico._Jason._The_Second_Bolgia__Flatterers._Allessio_Interminelli._Thais.
1.18_-_The_Importance_of_our_Conventional_Greetings,_etc.
1.18_-_The_Infrarational_Age_of_the_Cycle
1.18_-_The_Perils_of_the_Soul
1.19_-_Dialogue_between_Prahlada_and_his_father
1.19_-_Equality
1.19_-_Life
1.19_-_NIGHT
1.19_-_On_sleep,_prayer,_and_psalm-singing_in_chapel.
1.19_-_ON_THE_ADDERS_BITE
1.19_-_Tabooed_Acts
1.19_-_THE_MASTER_AND_HIS_INJURED_ARM
1.19_-_The_Practice_of_Magical_Evocation
1.200-1.224_Talks
1.201_-_Socrates
1.2.01_-_The_Call_and_the_Capacity
12.01_-_The_Return_to_Earth
12.03_-_The_Sorrows_of_God
12.05_-_The_World_Tragedy
1.2.07_-_Surrender
1.2.08_-_Faith
1.20_-_Death,_Desire_and_Incapacity
1.20_-_Equality_and_Knowledge
1.20_-_ON_CHILD_AND_MARRIAGE
1.20_-_RULES_FOR_HOUSEHOLDERS_AND_MONKS
1.20_-_Tabooed_Persons
1.20_-_Talismans_-_The_Lamen_-_The_Pantacle
1.20_-_TANTUM_RELIGIO_POTUIT_SUADERE_MALORUM
1.20_-_The_End_of_the_Curve_of_Reason
1.20_-_The_Fourth_Bolgia__Soothsayers._Amphiaraus,_Tiresias,_Aruns,_Manto,_Eryphylus,_Michael_Scott,_Guido_Bonatti,_and_Asdente._Virgil_reproaches_Dante's_Pity.
1.20_-_Visnu_appears_to_Prahlada
1.2.11_-_Patience_and_Perseverance
1.21_-_A_DAY_AT_DAKSHINESWAR
1.21_-_IDOLATRY
1.2.1_-_Mental_Development_and_Sadhana
1.21_-_Tabooed_Things
1.21_-_The_Spiritual_Aim_and_Life
1.22_-_ADVICE_TO_AN_ACTOR
1.22_-_Ciampolo,_Friar_Gomita,_and_Michael_Zanche._The_Malabranche_quarrel.
1.22_-_EMOTIONALISM
1.22_-_OBERON_AND_TITANIA's_GOLDEN_WEDDING
1.22_-_On_the_many_forms_of_vainglory.
1.22_-_Tabooed_Words
1.22_-_THE_END_OF_THE_SPECIES
1.22_-_The_Necessity_of_the_Spiritual_Transformation
1.2.2_-_The_Place_of_Study_in_Sadhana
1.23_-_Conditions_for_the_Coming_of_a_Spiritual_Age
1.23_-_DREARY_DAY
1.23_-_Escape_from_the_Malabranche._The_Sixth_Bolgia__Hypocrites._Catalano_and_Loderingo._Caiaphas.
1.23_-_FESTIVAL_AT_SURENDRAS_HOUSE
1.23_-_Improvising_a_Temple
1.23_-_On_mad_price,_and,_in_the_same_Step,_on_unclean_and_blasphemous_thoughts.
1.23_-_Our_Debt_to_the_Savage
1.23_-_The_Double_Soul_in_Man
1.240_-_1.300_Talks
1.240_-_Talks_2
1.24_-_Matter
1.24_-_PUNDIT_SHASHADHAR
1.24_-_RITUAL,_SYMBOL,_SACRAMENT
1.24_-_The_Advent_and_Progress_of_the_Spiritual_Age
1.24_-_The_Killing_of_the_Divine_King
1.24_-_The_Seventh_Bolgia_-_Thieves._Vanni_Fucci._Serpents.
1.25_-_ADVICE_TO_PUNDIT_SHASHADHAR
1.25_-_Critical_Objections_brought_against_Poetry,_and_the_principles_on_which_they_are_to_be_answered.
1.25_-_DUNGEON
1.25_-_Fascinations,_Invisibility,_Levitation,_Transmutations,_Kinks_in_Time
1.25_-_On_Religion
1.25_-_On_the_destroyer_of_the_passions,_most_sublime_humility,_which_is_rooted_in_spiritual_feeling.
1.25_-_Temporary_Kings
1.25_-_The_Knot_of_Matter
1.26_-_Continues_the_description_of_a_method_for_recollecting_the_thoughts._Describes_means_of_doing_this._This_chapter_is_very_profitable_for_those_who_are_beginning_prayer.
1.26_-_FESTIVAL_AT_ADHARS_HOUSE
1.26_-_On_discernment_of_thoughts,_passions_and_virtues
1.26_-_PERSEVERANCE_AND_REGULARITY
1.26_-_Sacrifice_of_the_Kings_Son
1.26_-_The_Eighth_Bolgia__Evil_Counsellors._Ulysses_and_Diomed._Ulysses'_Last_Voyage.
1.27_-_AT_DAKSHINESWAR
1.27_-_Guido_da_Montefeltro._His_deception_by_Pope_Boniface_VIII.
1.27_-_On_holy_solitude_of_body_and_soul.
1.27_-_The_Sevenfold_Chord_of_Being
1.28_-_Need_to_Define_God,_Self,_etc.
1.28_-_On_holy_and_blessed_prayer,_mother_of_virtues,_and_on_the_attitude_of_mind_and_body_in_prayer.
1.28_-_Supermind,_Mind_and_the_Overmind_Maya
1.28_-_The_Killing_of_the_Tree-Spirit
1.28_-_The_Ninth_Bolgia__Schismatics._Mahomet_and_Ali._Pier_da_Medicina,_Curio,_Mosca,_and_Bertr_and_de_Born.
1.29_-_Geri_del_Bello._The_Tenth_Bolgia__Alchemists._Griffolino_d'_Arezzo_and_Capocchino._The_many_people_and_the_divers_wounds
1.29_-_What_is_Certainty?
1.2_-_Katha_Upanishads
1.300_-_1.400_Talks
1.3.01_-_Peace__The_Basis_of_the_Sadhana
1.3.02_-_Equality__The_Chief_Support
1.3.04_-_Peace
1.3.05_-_Silence
13.06_-_The_Passing_of_Satyavan
1.30_-_Concerning_the_linking_together_of_the_supreme_trinity_among_the_virtues.
1.30_-_Do_you_Believe_in_God?
1.31_-_Adonis_in_Cyprus
1.31_-_Continues_the_same_subject._Explains_what_is_meant_by_the_Prayer_of_Quiet._Gives_several_counsels_to_those_who_experience_it._This_chapter_is_very_noteworthy.
1.3.2.01_-_I._The_Entire_Purpose_of_Yoga
1.32_-_Expounds_these_words_of_the_Paternoster__Fiat_voluntas_tua_sicut_in_coelo_et_in_terra._Describes_how_much_is_accomplished_by_those_who_repeat_these_words_with_full_resolution_and_how_well
1.32_-_The_Ritual_of_Adonis
1.33_-_Count_Ugolino_and_the_Archbishop_Ruggieri._The_Death_of_Count_Ugolino's_Sons.
1.33_-_The_Gardens_of_Adonis
1.34_-_Continues_the_same_subject._This_is_very_suitable_for_reading_after_the_reception_of_the_Most_Holy_Sacrament.
1.34_-_Fourth_Division_of_the_Ninth_Circle,_the_Judecca__Traitors_to_their_Lords_and_Benefactors._Lucifer,_Judas_Iscariot,_Brutus,_and_Cassius._The_Chasm_of_Lethe._The_Ascent.
1.34_-_The_Myth_and_Ritual_of_Attis
1.3.5.01_-_The_Law_of_the_Way
1.3.5.03_-_The_Involved_and_Evolving_Godhead
1.3.5.04_-_The_Evolution_of_Consciousness
1.35_-_Describes_the_recollection_which_should_be_practised_after_Communion._Concludes_this_subject_with_an_exclamatory_prayer_to_the_Eternal_Father.
1.35_-_The_Tao_2
1.37_-_Oriential_Religions_in_the_West
1.38_-_The_Myth_of_Osiris
1.38_-_Woman_-_Her_Magical_Formula
1.39_-_The_Ritual_of_Osiris
1.400_-_1.450_Talks
1.4.01_-_The_Divine_Grace_and_Guidance
14.01_-_To_Read_Sri_Aurobindo
14.02_-_Occult_Experiences
1.4.02_-_The_Divine_Force
1.4.03_-_The_Guru
14.06_-_Liberty,_Self-Control_and_Friendship
14.07_-_A_Review_of_Our_Ashram_Life
14.08_-_A_Parable_of_Sea-Gulls
1.40_-_Coincidence
1.40_-_Describes_how,_by_striving_always_to_walk_in_the_love_and_fear_of_God,_we_shall_travel_safely_amid_all_these_temptations.
1.41_-_Isis
1.42_-_Treats_of_these_last_words_of_the_Paternoster__Sed_libera_nos_a_malo._Amen._But_deliver_us_from_evil._Amen.
1.439
1.43_-_Dionysus
1.43_-_The_Holy_Guardian_Angel_is_not_the_Higher_Self_but_an_Objective_Individual
1.44_-_Demeter_and_Persephone
1.44_-_Serious_Style_of_A.C.,_or_the_Apparent_Frivolity_of_Some_of_my_Remarks
1.450_-_1.500_Talks
1.45_-_The_Corn-Mother_and_the_Corn-Maiden_in_Northern_Europe
1.46_-_Selfishness
1.46_-_The_Corn-Mother_in_Many_Lands
1.47_-_Lityerses
1.48_-_The_Corn-Spirit_as_an_Animal
1.49_-_Ancient_Deities_of_Vegetation_as_Animals
1.4_-_Readings_in_the_Taittiriya_Upanishad
15.07_-_Souls_Freedom
1.50_-_A.C._and_the_Masters;_Why_they_Chose_him,_etc.
1.50_-_Eating_the_God
1.51_-_How_to_Recognise_Masters,_Angels,_etc.,_and_how_they_Work
1.52_-_Family_-_Public_Enemy_No._1
1.52_-_Killing_the_Divine_Animal
1.53_-_Mother-Love
1.53_-_The_Propitation_of_Wild_Animals_By_Hunters
1.54_-_On_Meanness
1.54_-_Types_of_Animal_Sacrament
1.550_-_1.600_Talks
1.55_-_The_Transference_of_Evil
1.56_-_The_Public_Expulsion_of_Evils
1.57_-_Public_Scapegoats
1.58_-_Human_Scapegoats_in_Classical_Antiquity
1.59_-_Geomancy
1.59_-_Killing_the_God_in_Mexico
16.02_-_Mater_Dolorosa
16.05_-_Distiques
1.60_-_Between_Heaven_and_Earth
1.61_-_Power_and_Authority
1.62_-_The_Fire-Festivals_of_Europe
1.63_-_Fear,_a_Bad_Astral_Vision
1.63_-_The_Interpretation_of_the_Fire-Festivals
1.65_-_Man
1.66_-_The_External_Soul_in_Folk-Tales
1.67_-_The_External_Soul_in_Folk-Custom
1.68_-_The_Golden_Bough
1.69_-_Farewell_to_Nemi
1.69_-_Original_Sin
17.02_-_Hymn_to_the_Sun
17.09_-_Victory_to_the_World_Master
1.70_-_Morality_1
1.71_-_Morality_2
1.75_-_The_AA_and_the_Planet
1.76_-_The_Gods_-_How_and_Why_they_Overlap
1.78_-_Sore_Spots
1.79_-_Progress
18.03_-_Tagore
18.04_-_Modern_Poems
18.05_-_Ashram_Poets
1.82_-_Epistola_Penultima_-_The_Two_Ways_to_Reality
19.07_-_The_Adept
19.09_-_On_Evil
19.10_-_Punishment
1913_06_18p
1913_11_28p
1914_01_04p
1914_05_25p
1914_05_31p
1914_06_02p
1914_07_07p
1914_10_07p
1914_10_12p
1915_03_04p
1915_03_07p
1915_03_08p
1915_11_07p
19.15_-_On_Happiness
1916_06_07p
19.16_-_Of_the_Pleasant
1917_10_15p
19.21_-_Miscellany
19.22_-_Of_Hell
1929-04-14_-_Dangers_of_Yoga_-_Two_paths,_tapasya_and_surrender_-_Impulses,_desires_and_Yoga_-_Difficulties_-_Unification_around_the_psychic_being_-_Ambition,_undoing_of_many_Yogis_-_Powers,_misuse_and_right_use_of_-_How_to_recognise_the_Divine_Will_-_Accept_things_that_come_from_Divine_-_Vital_devotion_-_Need_of_strong_body_and_nerves_-_Inner_being,_invariable
1929-04-21_-_Visions,_seeing_and_interpretation_-_Dreams_and_dreaml_and_-_Dreamless_sleep_-_Visions_and_formulation_-_Surrender,_passive_and_of_the_will_-_Meditation_and_progress_-_Entering_the_spiritual_life,_a_plunge_into_the_Divine
1929-04-28_-_Offering,_general_and_detailed_-_Integral_Yoga_-_Remembrance_of_the_Divine_-_Reading_and_Yoga_-_Necessity,_predetermination_-_Freedom_-_Miracles_-_Aim_of_creation
1929-05-26_-_Individual,_illusion_of_separateness_-_Hostile_forces_and_the_mental_plane_-_Psychic_world,_psychic_being_-_Spiritual_and_psychic_-_Words,_understanding_speech_and_reading_-_Hostile_forces,_their_utility_-_Illusion_of_action,_true_action
1929-07-28_-_Art_and_Yoga_-_Art_and_life_-_Music,_dance_-_World_of_Harmony
1929-08-04_-_Surrender_and_sacrifice_-_Personality_and_surrender_-_Desire_and_passion_-_Spirituality_and_morality
1951-01-04_-_Transformation_and_reversal_of_consciousness.
1951-01-08_-_True_vision_and_understanding_of_the_world._Progress,_equilibrium._Inner_reality_-_the_psychic._Animals_and_the_psychic.
1951-01-25_-_Needs_and_desires._Collaboration_of_the_vital,_mind_an_accomplice._Progress_and_sincerity_-_recognising_faults._Organising_the_body_-_illness_-_new_harmony_-_physical_beauty.
1951-02-03_-_What_is_Yoga?_for_what?_-_Aspiration,_seeking_the_Divine._-_Process_of_yoga,_renouncing_the_ego.
1951-02-12_-_Divine_force_-_Signs_indicating_readiness_-_Weakness_in_mind,_vital_-_concentration_-_Divine_perception,_human_notion_of_good,_bad_-_Conversion,_consecration_-_progress_-_Signs_of_entering_the_path_-_kinds_of_meditation_-_aspiration
1951-02-17_-_False_visions_-_Offering_ones_will_-_Equilibrium_-_progress_-_maturity_-_Ardent_self-giving-_perfecting_the_instrument_-_Difficulties,_a_help_in_total_realisation_-_paradoxes_-_Sincerity_-_spontaneous_meditation
1951-02-24_-_Psychic_being_and_entity_-_dimensions_-_in_the_atom_-_Death_-_exteriorisation_-_unconsciousness_-_Past_lives_-_progress_upon_earth_-_choice_of_birth_-_Consecration_to_divine_Work_-_psychic_memories_-_Individualisation_-_progress
1951-02-26_-_On_reading_books_-_gossip_-_Discipline_and_realisation_-_Imaginary_stories-_value_of_-_Private_lives_of_big_men_-_relaxation_-_Understanding_others_-_gnostic_consciousness
1951-03-05_-_Disasters-_the_forces_of_Nature_-_Story_of_the_charity_Bazar_-_Liberation_and_law_-_Dealing_with_the_mind_and_vital-_methods
1951-03-10_-_Fairy_Tales-_serpent_guarding_treasure_-_Vital_beings-_their_incarnations_-_The_vital_being_after_death_-_Nightmares-_vital_and_mental_-_Mind_and_vital_after_death_-_The_spirit_of_the_form-_Egyptian_mummies
1951-03-12_-_Mental_forms_-_learning_difficult_subjects_-_Mental_fortress_-_thought_-_Training_the_mind_-_Helping_the_vital_being_after_death_-_ceremonies_-_Human_stupidities
1951-03-26_-_Losing_all_to_gain_all_-_psychic_being_-_Transforming_the_vital_-_physical_habits_-_the_subconscient_-_Overcoming_difficulties_-_weakness,_an_insincerity_-_to_change_the_world_-_Psychic_source,_flash_of_experience_-_preparation_for_yoga
1951-03-31_-_Physical_ailment_and_mental_disorder_-_Curing_an_illness_spiritually_-_Receptivity_of_the_body_-_The_subtle-physical-_illness_accidents_-_Curing_sunstroke_and_other_disorders
1951-04-07_-_Origin_of_Evil_-_Misery-_its_cause
1951-04-09_-_Modern_Art_-_Trend_of_art_in_Europe_in_the_twentieth_century_-_Effect_of_the_Wars_-_descent_of_vital_worlds_-_Formation_of_character_-_If_there_is_another_war
1951-04-12_-_Japan,_its_art,_landscapes,_life,_etc_-_Fairy-lore_of_Japan_-_Culture-_its_spiral_movement_-_Indian_and_European-_the_spiritual_life_-_Art_and_Truth
1951-04-14_-_Surrender_and_sacrifice_-_Idea_of_sacrifice_-_Bahaism_-_martyrdom_-_Sleep-_forgetfulness,_exteriorisation,_etc_-_Dreams_and_visions-_explanations_-_Exteriorisation-_incidents_about_cats
1951-04-17_-_Unity,_diversity_-_Protective_envelope_-_desires_-_consciousness,_true_defence_-_Perfection_of_physical_-_cinema_-_Choice,_constant_and_conscious_-_law_of_ones_being_-_the_One,_the_Multiplicity_-_Civilization-_preparing_an_instrument
1951-04-23_-_The_goal_and_the_way_-_Learning_how_to_sleep_-_relaxation_-_Adverse_forces-_test_of_sincerity_-_Attitude_to_suffering_and_death
1951-04-26_-_Irrevocable_transformation_-_The_divine_Shakti_-_glad_submission_-_Rejection,_integral_-_Consecration_-_total_self-forgetfulness_-_work
1951-04-28_-_Personal_effort_-_tamas,_laziness_-_Static_and_dynamic_power_-_Stupidity_-_psychic_and_intelligence_-_Philosophies-_different_languages_-_Theories_of_Creation_-_Surrender_of_ones_being_and_ones_work
1951-05-05_-_Needs_and_desires_-_Discernment_-_sincerity_and_true_perception_-_Mantra_and_its_effects_-_Object_in_action-_to_serve_-_relying_only_on_the_Divine
1953-03-18
1953-05-13
1953-05-27
1953-06-10
1953-06-24
1953-07-08
1953-07-15
1953-07-22
1953-07-29
1953-09-02
1953-09-09
1953-09-16
1953-10-14
1953-10-21
1953-10-28
1953-11-18
1953-12-09
1954-02-10_-_Study_a_variety_of_subjects_-_Memory_-Memory_of_past_lives_-_Getting_rid_of_unpleasant_thoughts
1954-02-17_-_Experience_expressed_in_different_ways_-_Origin_of_the_psychic_being_-_Progress_in_sports_-Everything_is_not_for_the_best
1954-03-03_-_Occultism_-_A_French_scientists_experiment
1954-04-14_-_Love_-_Can_a_person_love_another_truly?_-_Parental_love
1954-06-30_-_Occultism_-_Religion_and_vital_beings_-_Mothers_knowledge_of_what_happens_in_the_Ashram_-_Asking_questions_to_Mother_-_Drawing_on_Mother
1954-07-21_-_Mistakes_-_Success_-_Asuras_-_Mental_arrogance_-_Difficulty_turned_into_opportunity_-_Mothers_use_of_flowers_-_Conversion_of_men_governed_by_adverse_forces
1954-08-18_-_Mahalakshmi_-_Maheshwari_-_Mahasaraswati_-_Determinism_and_freedom_-_Suffering_and_knowledge_-_Aspects_of_the_Mother
1954-09-15_-_Parts_of_the_being_-_Thoughts_and_impulses_-_The_subconscient_-_Precise_vocabulary_-_The_Grace_and_difficulties
1954-09-22_-_The_supramental_creation_-_Rajasic_eagerness_-_Silence_from_above_-_Aspiration_and_rejection_-_Effort,_individuality_and_ego_-_Aspiration_and_desire
1954-09-29_-_The_right_spirit_-_The_Divine_comes_first_-_Finding_the_Divine_-_Mistakes_-_Rejecting_impulses_-_Making_the_consciousness_vast_-_Firm_resolution
1954-10-06_-_What_happens_is_for_the_best_-_Blaming_oneself_-Experiences_-_The_vital_desire-soul_-Creating_a_spiritual_atmosphere_-Thought_and_Truth
1954-10-20_-_Stand_back_-_Asking_questions_to_Mother_-_Seeing_images_in_meditation_-_Berlioz_-Music_-_Mothers_organ_music_-_Destiny
1954-12-22_-_Possession_by_hostile_forces_-_Purity_and_morality_-_Faith_in_the_final_success_-Drawing_back_from_the_path
1955-02-09_-_Desire_is_contagious_-_Primitive_form_of_love_-_the_artists_delight_-_Psychic_need,_mind_as_an_instrument_-_How_the_psychic_being_expresses_itself_-_Distinguishing_the_parts_of_ones_being_-_The_psychic_guides_-_Illness_-_Mothers_vision
1955-02-16_-_Losing_something_given_by_Mother_-_Using_things_well_-_Sadhak_collecting_soap-pieces_-_What_things_are_truly_indispensable_-_Natures_harmonious_arrangement_-_Riches_a_curse,_philanthropy_-_Misuse_of_things_creates_misery
1955-04-27_-_Symbolic_dreams_and_visions_-_Curing_pain_by_various_methods_-_Different_states_of_consciousness_-_Seeing_oneself_dead_in_a_dream_-_Exteriorisation
1955-06-01_-_The_aesthetic_conscience_-_Beauty_and_form_-_The_roots_of_our_life_-_The_sense_of_beauty_-_Educating_the_aesthetic_sense,_taste_-_Mental_constructions_based_on_a_revelation_-_Changing_the_world_and_humanity
1955-10-19_-_The_rhythms_of_time_-_The_lotus_of_knowledge_and_perfection_-_Potential_knowledge_-_The_teguments_of_the_soul_-_Shastra_and_the_Gurus_direct_teaching_-_He_who_chooses_the_Infinite...
1955-10-26_-_The_Divine_and_the_universal_Teacher_-_The_power_of_the_Word_-_The_Creative_Word,_the_mantra_-_Sound,_music_in_other_worlds_-_The_domains_of_pure_form,_colour_and_ideas
1955-12-07_-_Emotional_impulse_of_self-giving_-_A_young_dancer_in_France_-_The_heart_has_wings,_not_the_head_-_Only_joy_can_conquer_the_Adversary
1956-01-04_-_Integral_idea_of_the_Divine_-_All_things_attracted_by_the_Divine_-_Bad_things_not_in_place_-_Integral_yoga_-_Moving_idea-force,_ideas_-_Consequences_of_manifestation_-_Work_of_Spirit_via_Nature_-_Change_consciousness,_change_world
1956-01-25_-_The_divine_way_of_life_-_Divine,_Overmind,_Supermind_-_Material_body__for_discovery_of_the_Divine_-_Five_psychological_perfections
1956-02-08_-_Forces_of_Nature_expressing_a_higher_Will_-_Illusion_of_separate_personality_-_One_dynamic_force_which_moves_all_things_-_Linear_and_spherical_thinking_-_Common_ideal_of_life,_microscopic
1956-02-15_-_Nature_and_the_Master_of_Nature_-_Conscious_intelligence_-_Theory_of_the_Gita,_not_the_whole_truth_-_Surrender_to_the_Lord_-_Change_of_nature
1956-03-07_-_Sacrifice,_Animals,_hostile_forces,_receive_in_proportion_to_consciousness_-_To_be_luminously_open_-_Integral_transformation_-_Pain_of_rejection,_delight_of_progress_-_Spirit_behind_intention_-_Spirit,_matter,_over-simplified
1956-03-28_-_The_starting-point_of_spiritual_experience_-_The_boundless_finite_-_The_Timeless_and_Time_-_Mental_explanation_not_enough_-_Changing_knowledge_into_experience_-_Sat-Chit-Tapas-Ananda
1956-04-25_-_God,_human_conception_and_the_true_Divine_-_Earthly_existence,_to_realise_the_Divine_-_Ananda,_divine_pleasure_-_Relations_with_the_divine_Presence_-_Asking_the_Divine_for_what_one_needs_-_Allowing_the_Divine_to_lead_one
1956-05-23_-_Yoga_and_religion_-_Story_of_two_clergymen_on_a_boat_-_The_Buddha_and_the_Supramental_-_Hieroglyphs_and_phonetic_alphabets_-_A_vision_of_ancient_Egypt_-_Memory_for_sounds
1956-05-30_-_Forms_as_symbols_of_the_Force_behind_-_Art_as_expression_of_contact_with_the_Divine_-_Supramental_psychological_perfection_-_Division_of_works_-_The_Ashram,_idle_stupidities
1956-06-27_-_Birth,_entry_of_soul_into_body_-_Formation_of_the_supramental_world_-_Aspiration_for_progress_-_Bad_thoughts_-_Cerebral_filter_-_Progress_and_resistance
1956-07-04_-_Aspiration_when_one_sees_a_shooting_star_-_Preparing_the_bodyn_making_it_understand_-_Getting_rid_of_pain_and_suffering_-_Psychic_light
1956-08-01_-_Value_of_worship_-_Spiritual_realisation_and_the_integral_yoga_-_Symbols,_translation_of_experience_into_form_-_Sincerity,_fundamental_virtue_-_Intensity_of_aspiration,_with_anguish_or_joy_-_The_divine_Grace
1956-08-08_-_How_to_light_the_psychic_fire,_will_for_progress_-_Helping_from_a_distance,_mental_formations_-_Prayer_and_the_divine_-_Grace_Grace_at_work_everywhere
1956-08-15_-_Protection,_purification,_fear_-_Atmosphere_at_the_Ashram_on_Darshan_days_-_Darshan_messages_-_Significance_of_15-08_-_State_of_surrender_-_Divine_Grace_always_all-powerful_-_Assumption_of_Virgin_Mary_-_SA_message_of_1947-08-15
1956-08-29_-_To_live_spontaneously_-_Mental_formations_Absolute_sincerity_-_Balance_is_indispensable,_the_middle_path_-_When_in_difficulty,_widen_the_consciousness_-_Easiest_way_of_forgetting_oneself
1956-09-05_-_Material_life,_seeing_in_the_right_way_-_Effect_of_the_Supermind_on_the_earth_-_Emergence_of_the_Supermind_-_Falling_back_into_the_same_mistaken_ways
1956-09-19_-_Power,_predominant_quality_of_vital_being_-_The_Divine,_the_psychic_being,_the_Supermind_-_How_to_come_out_of_the_physical_consciousness_-_Look_life_in_the_face_-_Ordinary_love_and_Divine_love
1956-10-10_-_The_supramental_race__in_a_few_centuries_-_Condition_for_new_realisation_-_Everyone_must_follow_his_own_path_-_Progress,_no_two_paths_alike
1956-10-17_-_Delight,_the_highest_state_-_Delight_and_detachment_-_To_be_calm_-_Quietude,_mental_and_vital_-_Calm_and_strength_-_Experience_and_expression_of_experience
1956-12-26_-_Defeated_victories_-_Change_of_consciousness_-_Experiences_that_indicate_the_road_to_take_-_Choice_and_preference_-_Diversity_of_the_manifestation
1957-01-02_-_Can_one_go_out_of_time_and_space?_-_Not_a_crucified_but_a_glorified_body_-_Individual_effort_and_the_new_force
1957-01-09_-_God_is_essentially_Delight_-_God_and_Nature_play_at_hide-and-seek_-__Why,_and_when,_are_you_grave?
1957-01-16_-_Seeking_something_without_knowing_it_-_Why_are_we_here?
1957-01-23_-_How_should_we_understand_pure_delight?_-_The_drop_of_honey_-_Action_of_the_Divine_Will_in_the_world
1957-01-30_-_Artistry_is_just_contrast_-_How_to_perceive_the_Divine_Guidance?
1957-02-06_-_Death,_need_of_progress_-_Changing_Natures_methods
1957-02-13_-_Suffering,_pain_and_pleasure_-_Illness_and_its_cure
1957-02-20_-_Limitations_of_the_body_and_individuality
1957-03-22_-_A_story_of_initiation,_knowledge_and_practice
1957-03-27_-_If_only_humanity_consented_to_be_spiritualised
1957-04-24_-_Perfection,_lower_and_higher
1957-05-08_-_Vital_excitement,_reason,_instinct
1957-06-19_-_Causes_of_illness_Fear_and_illness_-_Minds_working,_faith_and_illness
1957-12-11_-_Appearance_of_the_first_men
1958-01-08_-_Sri_Aurobindos_method_of_exposition_-_The_mind_as_a_public_place_-_Mental_control_-_Sri_Aurobindos_subtle_hand
1958-02-19_-_Experience_of_the_supramental_boat_-_The_Censors_-_Absurdity_of_artificial_means
1958-03-26_-_Mental_anxiety_and_trust_in_spiritual_power
1958-05-21_-_Mental_honesty
1958-07-09_-_Faith_and_personal_effort
1958-08-27_-_Meditation_and_imagination_-_From_thought_to_idea,_from_idea_to_principle
1958-09-03_-_How_to_discipline_the_imagination_-_Mental_formations
1958-09-10_-_Magic,_occultism,_physical_science
1958_11_14
1958-11-26_-_The_role_of_the_Spirit_-_New_birth
1960_01_12
1960_05_04
1960_06_03
1960_06_22
1961_03_11_-_58
1961_05_22?
1962_01_12
1962_01_21
1963_01_14
1963_03_06
1963_08_10
1963_08_11?_-_94
1964_09_16
1965_03_03
1966_09_14
1969_08_19
1969_08_21
1969_08_28
1970_02_08
1970_02_17
1970_03_25
1970_04_02
1970_04_09
1970_04_18
1970_04_23_-_495
1970_04_24_-_497
1970_04_28
1970_05_24
1970_06_01
1970_06_02
1.ac_-_A_Birthday
1.ac_-_At_Sea
1.ac_-_On_-_On_-_Poet
1.ac_-_The_Garden_of_Janus
1.ac_-_The_Quest
1.ac_-_The_Wizard_Way
1.ad_-_O_Christ,_protect_me!
1.anon_-_But_little_better
1.anon_-_The_Epic_of_Gilgamesh_TabletIX
1.anon_-_The_Epic_of_Gilgamesh_Tablet_VII
1.anon_-_The_Epic_of_Gilgamesh_Tablet_X
1.ap_-_The_Universal_Prayer
1.asak_-_A_pious_one_with_a_hundred_beads_on_your_rosary
1.asak_-_If_you_do_not_give_up_the_crowds
1.asak_-_My_Beloved-_this_torture_and_pain
1.bs_-_One_Point_Contains_All
1.bv_-_When_I_see_the_lark_beating
1f.lovecraft_-_A_Reminiscence_of_Dr._Samuel_Johnson
1f.lovecraft_-_Ashes
1f.lovecraft_-_At_the_Mountains_of_Madness
1f.lovecraft_-_Azathoth
1f.lovecraft_-_Beyond_the_Wall_of_Sleep
1f.lovecraft_-_Celephais
1f.lovecraft_-_Cool_Air
1f.lovecraft_-_Dagon
1f.lovecraft_-_Deaf,_Dumb,_and_Blind
1f.lovecraft_-_Facts_concerning_the_Late
1f.lovecraft_-_From_Beyond
1f.lovecraft_-_He
1f.lovecraft_-_Herbert_West-Reanimator
1f.lovecraft_-_Hypnos
1f.lovecraft_-_In_the_Vault
1f.lovecraft_-_In_the_Walls_of_Eryx
1f.lovecraft_-_Medusas_Coil
1f.lovecraft_-_Old_Bugs
1f.lovecraft_-_Out_of_the_Aeons
1f.lovecraft_-_Pickmans_Model
1f.lovecraft_-_Polaris
1f.lovecraft_-_Sweet_Ermengarde
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Alchemist
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Battle_that_Ended_the_Century
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Beast_in_the_Cave
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Call_of_Cthulhu
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Case_of_Charles_Dexter_Ward
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Cats_of_Ulthar
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Challenge_from_Beyond
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Colour_out_of_Space
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Crawling_Chaos
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Curse_of_Yig
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Diary_of_Alonzo_Typer
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Disinterment
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Doom_That_Came_to_Sarnath
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Dream-Quest_of_Unknown_Kadath
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Dreams_in_the_Witch_House
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Dunwich_Horror
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Electric_Executioner
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Ghost-Eater
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Haunter_of_the_Dark
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Hoard_of_the_Wizard-Beast
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Horror_at_Martins_Beach
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Horror_at_Red_Hook
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Horror_in_the_Burying-Ground
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Horror_in_the_Museum
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Hound
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Last_Test
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Loved_Dead
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Lurking_Fear
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Man_of_Stone
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Moon-Bog
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Mound
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Music_of_Erich_Zann
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Mysterious_Ship
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Mystery_of_the_Grave-Yard
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Nameless_City
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Night_Ocean
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Picture_in_the_House
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Quest_of_Iranon
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Rats_in_the_Walls
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Shadow_out_of_Time
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Shadow_over_Innsmouth
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Shunned_House
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Silver_Key
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Statement_of_Randolph_Carter
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Strange_High_House_in_the_Mist
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Street
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Temple
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Terrible_Old_Man
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Thing_on_the_Doorstep
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Tomb
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Transition_of_Juan_Romero
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Trap
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Tree
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Tree_on_the_Hill
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Whisperer_in_Darkness
1f.lovecraft_-_The_White_Ship
1f.lovecraft_-_Through_the_Gates_of_the_Silver_Key
1f.lovecraft_-_Till_A_the_Seas
1f.lovecraft_-_Two_Black_Bottles
1f.lovecraft_-_Under_the_Pyramids
1f.lovecraft_-_What_the_Moon_Brings
1f.lovecraft_-_Winged_Death
1.fs_-_A_Funeral_Fantasie
1.fs_-_Cassandra
1.fs_-_Elysium
1.fs_-_Fantasie_--_To_Laura
1.fs_-_Feast_Of_Victory
1.fs_-_Fridolin_(The_Walk_To_The_Iron_Factory)
1.fs_-_Friendship
1.fs_-_Group_From_Tartarus
1.fs_-_Hero_And_Leander
1.fs_-_Nadowessian_Death-Lament
1.fs_-_Ode_To_Joy_-_With_Translation
1.fs_-_Parables_And_Riddles
1.fs_-_Resignation
1.fs_-_The_Artists
1.fs_-_The_Celebrated_Woman_-_An_Epistle_By_A_Married_Man
1.fs_-_The_Dance
1.fs_-_The_Division_Of_The_Earth
1.fs_-_The_Eleusinian_Festival
1.fs_-_The_Fight_With_The_Dragon
1.fs_-_The_Hostage
1.fs_-_The_Ideal_And_The_Actual_Life
1.fs_-_The_Ideals
1.fs_-_The_Infanticide
1.fs_-_The_Knight_Of_Toggenburg
1.fs_-_The_Lay_Of_The_Bell
1.fs_-_The_Maid_Of_Orleans
1.fs_-_The_Ring_Of_Polycrates_-_A_Ballad
1.fs_-_The_Triumph_Of_Love
1.fs_-_The_Walk
1.fs_-_The_Youth_By_The_Brook
1.fs_-_To_Laura_At_The_Harpsichord
1.fs_-_Written_In_A_Young_Lady's_Album
1.fua_-_Look_--_I_do_nothing-_He_performs_all_deeds
1.fua_-_The_moths_and_the_flame
1.fua_-_The_peacocks_excuse
1.gmh_-_The_Alchemist_In_The_City
1.grh_-_Gorakh_Bani
1.hcyc_-_55_-_When_all_is_finally_seen_as_it_is,_(from_The_Shodoka)
1.hs_-_It_Is_Time_to_Wake_Up!
1.hs_-_Lady_That_Hast_My_Heart
1.hs_-_Not_Worth_The_Toil!
1.hs_-_The_Lute_Will_Beg
1.hs_-_The_Margin_Of_A_Stream
1.ia_-_If_What_She_Says_Is_True
1.ia_-_If_what_she_says_is_true
1.ia_-_Modification_Of_The_R_Poem
1.jk_-_A_Draught_Of_Sunshine
1.jk_-_A_Party_Of_Lovers
1.jk_-_A_Thing_Of_Beauty_(Endymion)
1.jk_-_Ben_Nevis_-_A_Dialogue
1.jk_-_Endymion_-_Book_I
1.jk_-_Endymion_-_Book_II
1.jk_-_Endymion_-_Book_III
1.jk_-_Endymion_-_Book_IV
1.jk_-_Epistle_To_My_Brother_George
1.jk_-_Extracts_From_An_Opera
1.jk_-_Fill_For_Me_A_Brimming_Bowl
1.jk_-_Fragment._Welcome_Joy,_And_Welcome_Sorrow
1.jk_-_Hyperion,_A_Vision_-_Attempted_Reconstruction_Of_The_Poem
1.jk_-_Hyperion._Book_I
1.jk_-_Hyperion._Book_II
1.jk_-_Hyperion._Book_III
1.jk_-_Isabella;_Or,_The_Pot_Of_Basil_-_A_Story_From_Boccaccio
1.jk_-_I_Stood_Tip-Toe_Upon_A_Little_Hill
1.jk_-_Lamia._Part_I
1.jk_-_Lamia._Part_II
1.jk_-_Lines_To_Fanny
1.jk_-_Lines_Written_In_The_Highlands_After_A_Visit_To_Burnss_Country
1.jk_-_Ode_On_Indolence
1.jk_-_Ode_To_A_Nightingale
1.jk_-_Ode_To_Fanny
1.jk_-_Ode_To_Psyche
1.jk_-_On_Death
1.jk_-_On_Receiving_A_Curious_Shell
1.jk_-_On_Receiving_A_Laurel_Crown_From_Leigh_Hunt
1.jk_-_On_Seeing_The_Elgin_Marbles_For_The_First_Time
1.jk_-_On_Visiting_The_Tomb_Of_Burns
1.jk_-_Otho_The_Great_-_Act_I
1.jk_-_Otho_The_Great_-_Act_II
1.jk_-_Otho_The_Great_-_Act_III
1.jk_-_Otho_The_Great_-_Act_IV
1.jk_-_Otho_The_Great_-_Act_V
1.jk_-_Sleep_And_Poetry
1.jk_-_Song._Written_On_A_Blank_Page_In_Beaumont_And_Fletchers_Works
1.jk_-_Sonnet_-_After_Dark_Vapors_Have_Oppressd_Our_Plains
1.jk_-_Sonnet_-_As_From_The_Darkening_Gloom_A_Silver_Dove
1.jk_-_Sonnet._If_By_Dull_Rhymes_Our_English_Must_Be_Chaind
1.jk_-_Sonnet_III._Written_On_The_Day_That_Mr._Leigh_Hunt_Left_Prison
1.jk_-_Sonnet._Why_Did_I_Laugh_Tonight?
1.jk_-_Sonnet_XIII._Addressed_To_Haydon
1.jk_-_Spenserian_Stanza._Written_At_The_Close_Of_Canto_II,_Book_V,_Of_The_Faerie_Queene
1.jk_-_The_Cap_And_Bells;_Or,_The_Jealousies_-_A_Faery_Tale_.._Unfinished
1.jk_-_The_Eve_Of_Saint_Mark._A_Fragment
1.jk_-_The_Eve_Of_St._Agnes
1.jk_-_The_Gadfly
1.jk_-_To_Hope
1.jk_-_To_The_Ladies_Who_Saw_Me_Crowned
1.jk_-_Translated_From_A_Sonnet_Of_Ronsard
1.jk_-_Two_Sonnets._To_Haydon,_With_A_Sonnet_Written_On_Seeing_The_Elgin_Marbles
1.jk_-_Woman!_When_I_Behold_Thee_Flippant,_Vain
1.jlb_-_Chess
1.jlb_-_Inscription_on_any_Tomb
1.jlb_-_Shinto
1.jlb_-_The_Golem
1.jlb_-_When_sorrow_lays_us_low
1.jr_-_Bring_Wine
1.jr_-_By_the_God_who_was_in_pre-eternity_living_and_moving_and_omnipotent,_everlasting
1.jr_-_Come,_Come,_Whoever_You_Are
1.jr_-_Description_Of_Love
1.jr_-_How_Long
1.jr_-_I_Have_Fallen_Into_Unconsciousness
1.jr_-_Lord,_What_A_Beloved_Is_Mine!
1.jr_-_Rise,_Lovers
1.jr_-_Secret_Language
1.jr_-_The_Sun_Must_Come
1.jr_-_Until_You've_Found_Pain
1.jr_-_We_are_the_mirror_as_well_as_the_face_in_it
1.jr_-_Weary_Not_Of_Us,_For_We_Are_Very_Beautiful
1.jt_-_How_the_Soul_Through_the_Senses_Finds_God_in_All_Creatures
1.jwvg_-_Anniversary_Song
1.jwvg_-_Answers_In_A_Game_Of_Questions
1.jwvg_-_Book_Of_Proverbs
1.jwvg_-_From
1.jwvg_-_Legend
1.jwvg_-_Prometheus
1.jwvg_-_The_Bliss_Of_Absence
1.jwvg_-_The_Pupil_In_Magic
1.jwvg_-_The_Reckoning
1.jwvg_-_The_Wanderer
1.jwvg_-_The_Way_To_Behave
1.jwvg_-_To_My_Friend_-_Ode_I
1.jwvg_-_Wont_And_Done
1.kbr_-_I_Have_Attained_The_Eternal_Bliss
1.kbr_-_I_have_attained_the_Eternal_Bliss
1.kbr_-_The_Light_of_the_Sun
1.kbr_-_The_light_of_the_sun,_the_moon,_and_the_stars_shines_bright
1.kg_-_Little_Tiger
1.khc_-_Idle_Wandering
1.khc_-_this_autumn_scenes_worth_words_paint
1.kt_-_A_Song_on_the_View_of_Voidness
1.lb_-_A_Song_Of_An_Autumn_Midnight
1.lb_-_Before_The_Cask_of_Wine
1.lb_-_Bringing_in_the_Wine
1.lb_-_Changgan_Memories
1.lb_-_Confessional
1.lb_-_Exile's_Letter
1.lb_-_Farewell_to_Meng_Hao-jan_at_Yellow_Crane_Tower_by_Li_Po
1.lb_-_Gold_painted_jars_-_wines_worth_a_thousand
1.lb_-_Song_of_an_Autumn_Midnight_by_Li_Po
1.lb_-_The_River-Merchant's_Wife:_A_Letter
1.lb_-_To_His_Two_Children
1.lb_-_We_Fought_for_-_South_of_the_Walls
1.lb_-_Yearning
1.lb_-_Ziyi_Song
1.lovecraft_-_An_Epistle_To_Rheinhart_Kleiner,_Esq.,_Poet-Laureate,_And_Author_Of_Another_Endless_Day
1.lovecraft_-_Despair
1.lovecraft_-_Fungi_From_Yuggoth
1.lovecraft_-_Poemata_Minora-_Volume_II
1.lovecraft_-_Psychopompos-_A_Tale_in_Rhyme
1.lovecraft_-_Revelation
1.lovecraft_-_The_Bride_Of_The_Sea
1.lovecraft_-_The_Peace_Advocate
1.lovecraft_-_The_Poe-ets_Nightmare
1.lovecraft_-_The_Teutons_Battle-Song
1.ltp_-_The_Hundred_Character_Tablet_(Bai_Zi_Bei)
1.mb_-_I_am_pale_with_longing_for_my_beloved
1.mb_-_Its_True_I_Went_to_the_Market
1.mbn_-_From_the_beginning,_before_the_world_ever_was_(from_Before_the_World_Ever_Was)
1.mb_-_No_one_knows_my_invisible_life
1.mb_-_The_Beloved_Comes_Home
1.mb_-_The_Dagger
1.ml_-_Realisation_of_Dreams_and_Mind
1.mm_-_Of_the_voices_of_the_Godhead
1.mm_-_Set_Me_on_Fire
1.mm_-_Three_Golden_Apples_from_the_Hesperian_grove_(from_Atalanta_Fugiens)
1.pbs_-_A_Bridal_Song
1.pbs_-_A_Dialogue
1.pbs_-_Adonais_-_An_elegy_on_the_Death_of_John_Keats
1.pbs_-_Alastor_-_or,_the_Spirit_of_Solitude
1.pbs_-_A_Tale_Of_Society_As_It_Is_-_From_Facts,_1811
1.pbs_-_A_Vision_Of_The_Sea
1.pbs_-_Bereavement
1.pbs_-_Bigotrys_Victim
1.pbs_-_Charles_The_First
1.pbs_-_Death
1.pbs_-_Despair
1.pbs_-_Epigram_IV_-_Circumstance
1.pbs_-_Epipsychidion
1.pbs_-_Epipsychidion_(Excerpt)
1.pbs_-_Epipsychidion_-_Passages_Of_The_Poem,_Or_Connected_Therewith
1.pbs_-_Epithalamium
1.pbs_-_Epithalamium_-_Another_Version
1.pbs_-_Fiordispina
1.pbs_-_Fragment_Of_A_Satire_On_Satire
1.pbs_-_Fragments_Of_An_Unfinished_Drama
1.pbs_-_Fragment_-_Such_Hope,_As_Is_The_Sick_Despair_Of_Good
1.pbs_-_Fragment_-_Supposed_To_Be_An_Epithalamium_Of_Francis_Ravaillac_And_Charlotte_Corday
1.pbs_-_Fragments_Written_For_Hellas
1.pbs_-_Fragment_-_To_A_Friend_Released_From_Prison
1.pbs_-_Ghasta_Or,_The_Avenging_Demon!!!
1.pbs_-_Hellas_-_A_Lyrical_Drama
1.pbs_-_HERE_I_sit_with_my_paper
1.pbs_-_Hymn_To_Mercury
1.pbs_-_Invocation
1.pbs_-_Julian_and_Maddalo_-_A_Conversation
1.pbs_-_Letter_To_Maria_Gisborne
1.pbs_-_Lines_-_We_Meet_Not_As_We_Parted
1.pbs_-_Lines_Written_Among_The_Euganean_Hills
1.pbs_-_Lines_Written_in_the_Bay_of_Lerici
1.pbs_-_Love
1.pbs_-_Marenghi
1.pbs_-_Matilda_Gathering_Flowers
1.pbs_-_May_The_Limner
1.pbs_-_Mutability_-_II.
1.pbs_-_Ode_To_Liberty
1.pbs_-_Ode_To_Naples
1.pbs_-_Oedipus_Tyrannus_or_Swellfoot_The_Tyrant
1.pbs_-_On_An_Icicle_That_Clung_To_The_Grass_Of_A_Grave
1.pbs_-_On_Death
1.pbs_-_On_Leaving_London_For_Wales
1.pbs_-_On_The_Medusa_Of_Leonardo_da_Vinci_In_The_Florentine_Gallery
1.pbs_-_Ozymandias
1.pbs_-_Peter_Bell_The_Third
1.pbs_-_Prince_Athanase
1.pbs_-_Prometheus_Unbound
1.pbs_-_Queen_Mab_-_Part_IV.
1.pbs_-_Queen_Mab_-_Part_IX.
1.pbs_-_Queen_Mab_-_Part_VI.
1.pbs_-_Queen_Mab_-_Part_Vi_(Excerpts)
1.pbs_-_Queen_Mab_-_Part_VII.
1.pbs_-_Queen_Mab_-_Part_VIII.
1.pbs_-_Rosalind_and_Helen_-_a_Modern_Eclogue
1.pbs_-_Scenes_From_The_Faust_Of_Goethe
1.pbs_-_Sister_Rosa_-_A_Ballad
1.pbs_-_Song
1.pbs_-_Song._Despair
1.pbs_-_Song_For_Tasso
1.pbs_-_Song._Hope
1.pbs_-_Song_To_The_Men_Of_England
1.pbs_-_Song._Translated_From_The_Italian
1.pbs_-_Sonnet_-_Lift_Not_The_Painted_Veil_Which_Those_Who_Live
1.pbs_-_Sonnet_To_Byron
1.pbs_-_Stanzas_Written_in_Dejection,_Near_Naples
1.pbs_-_Stanza-_Written_At_Bracknell
1.pbs_-_The_Cenci_-_A_Tragedy_In_Five_Acts
1.pbs_-_The_Cyclops
1.pbs_-_The_Daemon_Of_The_World
1.pbs_-_The_Devils_Walk._A_Ballad
1.pbs_-_The_Fitful_Alternations_of_the_Rain
1.pbs_-_The_Magnetic_Lady_To_Her_Patient
1.pbs_-_The_Mask_Of_Anarchy
1.pbs_-_The_Past
1.pbs_-_The_Retrospect_-_CWM_Elan,_1812
1.pbs_-_The_Revolt_Of_Islam_-_Canto_I-XII
1.pbs_-_The_Tower_Of_Famine
1.pbs_-_The_Triumph_Of_Life
1.pbs_-_The_Witch_Of_Atlas
1.pbs_-_The_Zucca
1.pbs_-_To_A_Skylark
1.pbs_-_To_Edward_Williams
1.pbs_-_To_Harriet
1.pbs_-_To_Jane_-_The_Invitation
1.pbs_-_To_Mary_Shelley
1.pbs_-_To_Mary_Wollstonecraft_Godwin
1.pbs_-_To--_One_word_is_too_often_profaned
1.pbs_-_To_Sophia_(Miss_Stacey)
1.pbs_-_To_The_Lord_Chancellor
1.pbs_-_To_The_Men_Of_England
1.pbs_-_To_The_Moonbeam
1.pbs_-_War
1.pbs_-_When_A_Lover_Clasps_His_Fairest
1.pbs_-_With_A_Guitar,_To_Jane
1.pbs_-_Written_At_Bracknell
1.poe_-_Al_Aaraaf-_Part_1
1.poe_-_Enigma
1.poe_-_Eulalie
1.poe_-_Eureka_-_A_Prose_Poem
1.poe_-_For_Annie
1.poe_-_Romance
1.poe_-_Tamerlane
1.poe_-_The_Bells
1.poe_-_The_Conversation_Of_Eiros_And_Charmion
1.poe_-_The_Happiest_Day-The_Happiest_Hour
1.poe_-_To_Marie_Louise_(Shew)
1.raa_-_And_the_letter_is_longing
1.raa_-_And_YHVH_spoke_to_me_when_I_saw_His_name
1.rb_-_Abt_Vogler
1.rb_-_A_Grammarian's_Funeral_Shortly_After_The_Revival_Of_Learning
1.rb_-_Andrea_del_Sarto
1.rb_-_An_Epistle_Containing_the_Strange_Medical_Experience_of_Kar
1.rb_-_Any_Wife_To_Any_Husband
1.rb_-_A_Pretty_Woman
1.rb_-_A_Serenade_At_The_Villa
1.rb_-_Bishop_Blougram's_Apology
1.rb_-_By_The_Fire-Side
1.rb_-_Caliban_upon_Setebos_or,_Natural_Theology_in_the_Island
1.rb_-_Childe_Roland_To_The_Dark_Tower_Came
1.rb_-_Cleon
1.rb_-_Fra_Lippo_Lippi
1.rb_-_In_A_Year
1.rb_-_Introduction:_Pippa_Passes
1.rb_-_My_Last_Duchess
1.rb_-_Old_Pictures_In_Florence
1.rb_-_Paracelsus_-_Part_III_-_Paracelsus
1.rb_-_Paracelsus_-_Part_II_-_Paracelsus_Attains
1.rb_-_Paracelsus_-_Part_I_-_Paracelsus_Aspires
1.rb_-_Paracelsus_-_Part_IV_-_Paracelsus_Aspires
1.rb_-_Paracelsus_-_Part_V_-_Paracelsus_Attains
1.rb_-_Pauline,_A_Fragment_of_a_Question
1.rb_-_Pippa_Passes_-_Part_III_-_Evening
1.rb_-_Pippa_Passes_-_Part_II_-_Noon
1.rb_-_Pippa_Passes_-_Part_I_-_Morning
1.rb_-_Pippa_Passes_-_Part_IV_-_Night
1.rb_-_Popularity
1.rb_-_Porphyrias_Lover
1.rb_-_Prospice
1.rb_-_Rabbi_Ben_Ezra
1.rb_-_Rhyme_for_a_Child_Viewing_a_Naked_Venus_in_a_Painting_of_'The_Judgement_of_Paris'
1.rb_-_Sordello_-_Book_the_Fifth
1.rb_-_Sordello_-_Book_the_First
1.rb_-_Sordello_-_Book_the_Fourth
1.rb_-_Sordello_-_Book_the_Second
1.rb_-_Sordello_-_Book_the_Sixth
1.rb_-_Sordello_-_Book_the_Third
1.rb_-_The_Flight_Of_The_Duchess
1.rb_-_The_Glove
1.rb_-_The_Guardian-Angel
1.rb_-_The_Laboratory-Ancien_Rgime
1.rb_-_The_Last_Ride_Together
1.rb_-_The_Lost_Leader
1.rb_-_The_Patriot
1.rb_-_The_Pied_Piper_Of_Hamelin
1.rb_-_Two_In_The_Campagna
1.rb_-_Waring
1.rb_-_Youll_Love_Me_Yet
1.rmpsd_-_Kulakundalini,_Goddess_Full_of_Brahman,_Tara
1.rmpsd_-_Love_Her,_Mind
1.rmpsd_-_Who_is_that_Syama_woman
1.rmr_-_Death
1.rmr_-_Elegy_I
1.rmr_-_Elegy_IV
1.rmr_-_Elegy_X
1.rmr_-_Going_Blind
1.rmr_-_In_The_Beginning
1.rmr_-_Moving_Forward
1.rmr_-_The_Last_Evening
1.rmr_-_The_Neighbor
1.rmr_-_To_Music
1.rt_-_(101)_Ever_in_my_life_have_I_sought_thee_with_my_songs_(from_Gitanjali)
1.rt_-_(80)_I_am_like_a_remnant_of_a_cloud_of_autumn_(from_Gitanjali)
1.rt_-_(84)_It_is_the_pang_of_separation_that_spreads_throughout_the_world_(from_Gitanjali)
1.rt_-_A_Dream
1.rt_-_Colored_Toys
1.rt_-_Compensation
1.rt_-_Dream_Girl
1.rt_-_Fireflies
1.rt_-_Flower
1.rt_-_Friend
1.rt_-_Gitanjali
1.rt_-_I_Found_A_Few_Old_Letters
1.rt_-_Innermost_One
1.rt_-_Kinu_Goalas_Alley
1.rt_-_Last_Curtain
1.rt_-_Lord_Of_My_Life
1.rt_-_Lovers_Gifts_LXX_-_Take_Back_Your_Coins
1.rt_-_Lovers_Gifts_XLII_-_Are_You_A_Mere_Picture
1.rt_-_Lovers_Gifts_XLIII_-_Dying,_You_Have_Left_Behind
1.rt_-_Lovers_Gifts_XXXIX_-_There_Is_A_Looker-On
1.rt_-_Maya
1.rt_-_My_Song
1.rt_-_One_Day_In_Spring....
1.rt_-_Roaming_Cloud
1.rt_-_She
1.rt_-_Shyama
1.rt_-_The_Child-Angel
1.rt_-_The_Gardener_LIX_-_O_Woman
1.rt_-_The_Gardener_LVII_-_I_Plucked_Your_Flower
1.rt_-_The_Gardener_LXI_-_Peace,_My_Heart
1.rt_-_The_Gardener_XLIV_-_Reverend_Sir,_Forgive
1.rt_-_The_Gardener_XVI_-_Hands_Cling_To_Eyes
1.rt_-_The_Gardener_XXIV_-_Do_Not_Keep_To_Yourself
1.rt_-_The_Gardener_XXVIII_-_Your_Questioning_Eyes
1.rt_-_The_Golden_Boat
1.rt_-_The_Homecoming
1.rt_-_The_Journey
1.rt_-_The_Kiss
1.rt_-_The_Kiss(2)
1.rt_-_The_Land_Of_The_Exile
1.rt_-_The_Merchant
1.rt_-_Unending_Love
1.rt_-_Urvashi
1.rt_-_When_And_Why
1.rt_-_Your_flute_plays_the_exact_notes_of_my_pain._(from_The_Lover_of_God)
1.rwe_-_Alphonso_Of_Castile
1.rwe_-_Astrae
1.rwe_-_Bacchus
1.rwe_-_Dmonic_Love
1.rwe_-_Friendship
1.rwe_-_Initial_Love
1.rwe_-_In_Memoriam
1.rwe_-_Loss_And_Gain
1.rwe_-_Love_And_Thought
1.rwe_-_May-Day
1.rwe_-_Merlin_II
1.rwe_-_Monadnoc
1.rwe_-_Musketaquid
1.rwe_-_Nature
1.rwe_-_Ode_To_Beauty
1.rwe_-_Saadi
1.rwe_-_Song_of_Nature
1.rwe_-_The_Adirondacs
1.rwe_-_The_Enchanter
1.rwe_-_The_Past
1.rwe_-_The_Poet
1.rwe_-_The_Problem
1.rwe_-_The_Sphinx
1.rwe_-_The_World-Soul
1.rwe_-_Threnody
1.rwe_-_To_Rhea
1.rwe_-_Voluntaries
1.rwe_-_Wakdeubsankeit
1.rwe_-_Woodnotes
1.sdi_-_All_Adams_offspring_form_one_family_tree
1.sjc_-_I_Live_Yet_Do_Not_Live_in_Me
1.sjc_-_Loves_Living_Flame
1.sjc_-_Not_for_All_the_Beauty
1.snk_-_Nirvana_Shatakam
1.srd_-_Krishna_Awakes
1.srh_-_The_Royal_Song_of_Saraha_(Dohakosa)
1.srmd_-_The_universe
1.srm_-_The_Necklet_of_Nine_Gems
1.stav_-_I_Live_Without_Living_In_Me
1.stav_-_In_the_Hands_of_God
1.stav_-_Oh_Exceeding_Beauty
1.stl_-_My_Song_for_Today
1.sv_-_Song_of_the_Sanyasin
1.tr_-_I_Watch_People_In_The_World
1.tr_-_No_Luck_Today_On_My_Mendicant_Rounds
1.wby_-_A_Bronze_Head
1.wby_-_A_Dialogue_Of_Self_And_Soul
1.wby_-_A_Dramatic_Poem
1.wby_-_All_Souls_Night
1.wby_-_A_Man_Young_And_Old_-_Complete
1.wby_-_A_Man_Young_And_Old_-_II._Human_Dignity
1.wby_-_A_Man_Young_And_Old_-_IX._The_Secrets_Of_The_Old
1.wby_-_A_Man_Young_And_Old_-_XI._From_Oedipus_At_Colonus
1.wby_-_Among_School_Children
1.wby_-_Anashuya_And_Vijaya
1.wby_-_A_Prayer_On_Going_Into_My_House
1.wby_-_A_Woman_Young_And_Old
1.wby_-_Colonel_Martin
1.wby_-_Cuchulains_Fight_With_The_Sea
1.wby_-_Ego_Dominus_Tuus
1.wby_-_Fergus_And_The_Druid
1.wby_-_For_Anne_Gregory
1.wby_-_From_A_Full_Moon_In_March
1.wby_-_Her_Vision_In_The_Wood
1.wby_-_High_Talk
1.wby_-_In_Memory_Of_Major_Robert_Gregory
1.wby_-_In_The_Seven_Woods
1.wby_-_Meditations_In_Time_Of_Civil_War
1.wby_-_Now_as_at_all_times
1.wby_-_On_Woman
1.wby_-_Owen_Aherne_And_His_Dancers
1.wby_-_Parnells_Funeral
1.wby_-_Peace
1.wby_-_Responsibilities_-_Introduction
1.wby_-_September_1913
1.wby_-_Shepherd_And_Goatherd
1.wby_-_Solomon_And_The_Witch
1.wby_-_The_Circus_Animals_Desertion
1.wby_-_The_Crazed_Moon
1.wby_-_The_Gyres
1.wby_-_The_Hour_Before_Dawn
1.wby_-_The_Lover_Mourns_For_The_Loss_Of_Love
1.wby_-_The_Magi
1.wby_-_The_Mother_Of_God
1.wby_-_The_Mountain_Tomb
1.wby_-_The_Municipal_Gallery_Revisited
1.wby_-_The_Old_Age_Of_Queen_Maeve
1.wby_-_The_Realists
1.wby_-_The_Scholars
1.wby_-_The_Shadowy_Waters_-_Introduction
1.wby_-_The_Shadowy_Waters_-_The_Shadowy_Waters
1.wby_-_The_Song_Of_The_Happy_Shepherd
1.wby_-_The_Three_Beggars
1.wby_-_The_Two_Kings
1.wby_-_The_Wanderings_Of_Oisin_-_Book_I
1.wby_-_The_Wanderings_Of_Oisin_-_Book_III
1.wby_-_The_Winding_Stair
1.wby_-_The_Witch
1.wby_-_Three_Songs_To_The_One_Burden
1.wby_-_To_A_Shade
1.wby_-_Two_Songs_From_A_Play
1.wby_-_Two_Songs_Rewritten_For_The_Tunes_Sake
1.wby_-_Two_Years_Later
1.wby_-_Under_Ben_Bulben
1.wby_-_When_Helen_Lived
1.wby_-_Wisdom
1.whitman_-_A_Carol_Of_Harvest_For_1867
1.whitman_-_Adieu_To_A_Solider
1.whitman_-_Ah_Poverties,_Wincings_Sulky_Retreats
1.whitman_-_American_Feuillage
1.whitman_-_A_Riddle_Song
1.whitman_-_As_I_Sat_Alone_By_Blue_Ontarios_Shores
1.whitman_-_As_I_Walk_These_Broad,_Majestic_Days
1.whitman_-_Beginners
1.whitman_-_Brother_Of_All,_With_Generous_Hand
1.whitman_-_Carol_Of_Occupations
1.whitman_-_Despairing_Cries
1.whitman_-_Eidolons
1.whitman_-_Europe,_The_72d_And_73d_Years_Of_These_States
1.whitman_-_From_Pent-up_Aching_Rivers
1.whitman_-_Great_Are_The_Myths
1.whitman_-_Manhattan_Streets_I_Saunterd,_Pondering
1.whitman_-_Out_of_the_Cradle_Endlessly_Rocking
1.whitman_-_Prayer_Of_Columbus
1.whitman_-_Proud_Music_Of_The_Storm
1.whitman_-_Respondez!
1.whitman_-_Salut_Au_Monde
1.whitman_-_Sea-Shore_Memories
1.whitman_-_Sing_Of_The_Banner_At_Day-Break
1.whitman_-_Song_of_Myself
1.whitman_-_Song_Of_Myself-_XL
1.whitman_-_Song_Of_Myself-_XLIII
1.whitman_-_Song_Of_Myself-_XV
1.whitman_-_Song_Of_Myself-_XXI
1.whitman_-_Song_Of_Myself-_XXIV
1.whitman_-_Song_Of_Myself-_XXXIII
1.whitman_-_Song_Of_Myself-_XXXVII
1.whitman_-_Song_Of_The_Broad-Axe
1.whitman_-_Song_Of_The_Exposition
1.whitman_-_Song_Of_The_Open_Road
1.whitman_-_Spain_1873-74
1.whitman_-_Spontaneous_Me
1.whitman_-_Starting_From_Paumanok
1.whitman_-_The_Death_And_Burial_Of_McDonald_Clarke-_A_Parody
1.whitman_-_The_Singer_In_The_Prison
1.whitman_-_The_Sleepers
1.whitman_-_The_Wound_Dresser
1.whitman_-_This_Moment,_Yearning_And_Thoughtful
1.whitman_-_To_Oratists
1.whitman_-_Weave_In,_Weave_In,_My_Hardy_Life
1.whitman_-_Yet,_Yet,_Ye_Downcast_Hours
1.ww_-_1-_The_White_Doe_Of_Rylstone,_Or,_The_Fate_Of_The_Nortons
1.ww_-_24_-_Walt_Whitman,_a_cosmos,_of_Manhattan_the_son
1.ww_-_2-_The_White_Doe_Of_Rylstone,_Or,_The_Fate_Of_The_Nortons
1.ww_-_3-_The_White_Doe_Of_Rylstone,_Or,_The_Fate_Of_The_Nortons
1.ww_-_4-_The_White_Doe_Of_Rylstone,_Or,_The_Fate_Of_The_Nortons
1.ww_-_6-_The_White_Doe_Of_Rylstone,_Or,_The_Fate_Of_The_Nortons
1.ww_-_7-_The_White_Doe_Of_Rylstone,_Or,_The_Fate_Of_The_Nortons
1.ww_-_A_Character
1.ww_-_A_Complaint
1.ww_-_Address_To_The_Scholars_Of_The_Village_School_Of_---
1.ww_-_Alas!_What_Boots_The_Long_Laborious_Quest
1.ww_-_Alice_Fell,_Or_Poverty
1.ww_-_Anecdote_For_Fathers
1.ww_-_An_Evening_Walk
1.ww_-_Animal_Tranquility_And_Decay
1.ww_-_Anticipation,_October_1803
1.ww_-_A_Poet!_He_Hath_Put_His_Heart_To_School
1.ww_-_Argument_For_Suicide
1.ww_-_Artegal_And_Elidure
1.ww_-_A_Sketch
1.ww_-_Avaunt_All_Specious_Pliancy_Of_Mind
1.ww_-_A_Whirl-Blast_From_Behind_The_Hill
1.ww_-_Beggars
1.ww_-_Book_Eighth-_Retrospect--Love_Of_Nature_Leading_To_Love_Of_Man
1.ww_-_Book_Eleventh-_France_[concluded]
1.ww_-_Book_Fifth-Books
1.ww_-_Book_First_[Introduction-Childhood_and_School_Time]
1.ww_-_Book_Fourteenth_[conclusion]
1.ww_-_Book_Fourth_[Summer_Vacation]
1.ww_-_Book_Ninth_[Residence_in_France]
1.ww_-_Book_Second_[School-Time_Continued]
1.ww_-_Book_Seventh_[Residence_in_London]
1.ww_-_Book_Sixth_[Cambridge_and_the_Alps]
1.ww_-_Book_Tenth_{Residence_in_France_continued]
1.ww_-_Book_Third_[Residence_at_Cambridge]
1.ww_-_Book_Thirteenth_[Imagination_And_Taste,_How_Impaired_And_Restored_Concluded]
1.ww_-_Book_Twelfth_[Imagination_And_Taste,_How_Impaired_And_Restored_]
1.ww_-_Brook!_Whose_Society_The_Poet_Seeks
1.ww_-_Calais-_August_1802
1.ww_-_Call_Not_The_Royal_Swede_Unfortunate
1.ww_-_Calm_is_all_Nature_as_a_Resting_Wheel.
1.ww_-_Character_Of_The_Happy_Warrior
1.ww_-_Composed_Near_Calais,_On_The_Road_Leading_To_Ardres,_August_7,_1802
1.ww_-_Composed_While_The_Author_Was_Engaged_In_Writing_A_Tract_Occasioned_By_The_Convention_Of_Cintra
1.ww_-_Dion_[See_Plutarch]
1.ww_-_Elegiac_Stanzas_In_Memory_Of_My_Brother,_John_Commander_Of_The_E._I._Companys_Ship_The_Earl_Of_Aber
1.ww_-_Elegiac_Stanzas_Suggested_By_A_Picture_Of_Peele_Castle
1.ww_-_Ellen_Irwin_Or_The_Braes_Of_Kirtle
1.ww_-_Epitaphs_Translated_From_Chiabrera
1.ww_-_From_The_Cuckoo_And_The_Nightingale
1.ww_-_From_The_Italian_Of_Michael_Angelo
1.ww_-_George_and_Sarah_Green
1.ww_-_Guilt_And_Sorrow,_Or,_Incidents_Upon_Salisbury_Plain
1.ww_-_Hart-Leap_Well
1.ww_-_Her_Eyes_Are_Wild
1.ww_-_Hint_From_The_Mountains_For_Certain_Political_Pretenders
1.ww_-_I_Know_an_Aged_Man_Constrained_to_Dwell
1.ww_-_Incident_Characteristic_Of_A_Favorite_Dog
1.ww_-_Indignation_Of_A_High-Minded_Spaniard
1.ww_-_Influence_of_Natural_Objects
1.ww_-_Inscriptions_In_The_Ground_Of_Coleorton,_The_Seat_Of_Sir_George_Beaumont,_Bart.,_Leicestershire
1.ww_-_Laodamia
1.ww_-_Lines_Composed_a_Few_Miles_above_Tintern_Abbey
1.ww_-_Lines_Written_As_A_School_Exercise_At_Hawkshead,_Anno_Aetatis_14
1.ww_-_Look_Now_On_That_Adventurer_Who_Hath_Paid
1.ww_-_Maternal_Grief
1.ww_-_Memorials_Of_A_Tour_In_Scotland-_1803_XII._Sonnet_Composed_At_----_Castle
1.ww_-_Memorials_Of_A_Tour_In_Scotland-_1803_X._Rob_Roys_Grave
1.ww_-_Michael-_A_Pastoral_Poem
1.ww_-_Minstrels
1.ww_-_Nutting
1.ww_-_October,_1803
1.ww_-_Ode
1.ww_-_Ode_on_Intimations_of_Immortality
1.ww_-_Ode_To_Lycoris._May_1817
1.ww_-_Oer_The_Wide_Earth,_On_Mountain_And_On_Plain
1.ww_-_On_the_Extinction_of_the_Venetian_Republic
1.ww_-_Personal_Talk
1.ww_-_Resolution_And_Independence
1.ww_-_Ruth
1.ww_-_Song_at_the_Feast_of_Brougham_Castle
1.ww_-_Sonnet-_On_seeing_Miss_Helen_Maria_Williams_weep_at_a_tale_of_distress
1.ww_-_Stanzas_Written_In_My_Pocket_Copy_Of_Thomsons_Castle_Of_Indolence
1.ww_-_The_Affliction_Of_Margaret
1.ww_-_The_Birth_Of_Love
1.ww_-_The_Brothers
1.ww_-_The_Complaint_Of_A_Forsaken_Indian_Woman
1.ww_-_The_Emigrant_Mother
1.ww_-_The_Excursion-_II-_Book_First-_The_Wanderer
1.ww_-_The_Excursion-_IV-_Book_Third-_Despondency
1.ww_-_The_Excursion-_IX-_Book_Eighth-_The_Parsonage
1.ww_-_The_Excursion-_V-_Book_Fouth-_Despondency_Corrected
1.ww_-_The_Excursion-_VII-_Book_Sixth-_The_Churchyard_Among_the_Mountains
1.ww_-_The_Excursion-_X-_Book_Ninth-_Discourse_of_the_Wanderer,_and_an_Evening_Visit_to_the_Lake
1.ww_-_The_Farmer_Of_Tilsbury_Vale
1.ww_-_The_Force_Of_Prayer,_Or,_The_Founding_Of_Bolton,_A_Tradition
1.ww_-_The_Forsaken
1.ww_-_The_Fountain
1.ww_-_The_French_Army_In_Russia,_1812-13
1.ww_-_The_Green_Linnet
1.ww_-_The_Highland_Broach
1.ww_-_The_Idiot_Boy
1.ww_-_The_Kitten_And_Falling_Leaves
1.ww_-_The_Last_Of_The_Flock
1.ww_-_The_Morning_Of_The_Day_Appointed_For_A_General_Thanksgiving._January_18,_1816
1.ww_-_The_Pet-Lamb
1.ww_-_The_Prelude,_Book_1-_Childhood_And_School-Time
1.ww_-_The_Prioresss_Tale_[from_Chaucer]
1.ww_-_The_Recluse_-_Book_First
1.ww_-_The_Redbreast_Chasing_The_Butterfly
1.ww_-_The_Reverie_of_Poor_Susan
1.ww_-_The_Solitary_Reaper
1.ww_-_The_Thorn
1.ww_-_The_Two_April_Mornings
1.ww_-_The_Two_Thieves-_Or,_The_Last_Stage_Of_Avarice
1.ww_-_The_Waggoner_-_Canto_First
1.ww_-_The_Waggoner_-_Canto_Fourth
1.ww_-_The_Waggoner_-_Canto_Second
1.ww_-_The_Waggoner_-_Canto_Third
1.ww_-_The_Wishing_Gate_Destroyed
1.ww_-_To_A_Sexton
1.ww_-_To_H._C.
1.ww_-_To_Sir_George_Howland_Beaumont,_Bart_From_the_South-West_Coast_Or_Cumberland_1811
1.ww_-_To_The_Same_Flower
1.ww_-_To_The_Same_Flower_(Second_Poem)
1.ww_-_Translation_Of_Part_Of_The_First_Book_Of_The_Aeneid
1.ww_-_Troilus_And_Cresida
1.ww_-_Upon_The_Punishment_Of_Death
1.ww_-_Upon_The_Sight_Of_A_Beautiful_Picture_Painted_By_Sir_G._H._Beaumont,_Bart
1.ww_-_Vaudracour_And_Julia
1.ww_-_Water-Fowl_Observed_Frequently_Over_The_Lakes_Of_Rydal_And_Grasmere
1.ww_-_Weak_Is_The_Will_Of_Man,_His_Judgement_Blind
1.ww_-_We_Are_Seven
1.ww_-_When_To_The_Attractions_Of_The_Busy_World
1.ww_-_Written_In_A_Blank_Leaf_Of_Macpherson's_Ossian
1.ww_-_Written_In_Very_Early_Youth
1.ww_-_Yarrow_Visited
1.yt_-_The_Supreme_Being_is_the_Dakini_Queen_of_the_Lake_of_Awareness!
1.yt_-_This_self-sufficient_black_lady_has_shaken_things_up
20.01_-_Charyapada_-_Old_Bengali_Mystic_Poems
2.01_-_AT_THE_STAR_THEATRE
2.01_-_Habit_1__Be_Proactive
2.01_-_Mandala_One
2.01_-_On_Books
2.01_-_Proem
2.01_-_THE_ARCANE_SUBSTANCE_AND_THE_POINT
2.01_-_THE_CHILD_WITH_THE_MIRROR
2.01_-_The_Picture
2.01_-_The_Therapeutic_value_of_Abreaction
2.01_-_The_Yoga_and_Its_Objects
2.02_-_Brahman,_Purusha,_Ishwara_-_Maya,_Prakriti,_Shakti
2.02_-_Habit_2__Begin_with_the_End_in_Mind
2.02_-_Meeting_With_the_Goddess
2.02_-_THE_DURGA_PUJA_FESTIVAL
2.02_-_THE_EXPANSION_OF_LIFE
2.02_-_The_Ishavasyopanishad_with_a_commentary_in_English
2.02_-_The_Synthesis_of_Devotion_and_Knowledge
2.03_-_Atomic_Forms_And_Their_Combinations
2.03_-_DEMETER
2.03_-_Karmayogin__A_Commentary_on_the_Isha_Upanishad
2.03_-_On_Medicine
2.03_-_THE_ENIGMA_OF_BOLOGNA
2.03_-_The_Eternal_and_the_Individual
2.03_-_THE_MASTER_IN_VARIOUS_MOODS
2.03_-_The_Naturalness_of_Bhakti-Yoga_and_its_Central_Secret
2.03_-_The_Purified_Understanding
2.03_-_The_Supreme_Divine
2.04_-_Absence_Of_Secondary_Qualities
2.04_-_ADVICE_TO_ISHAN
2.04_-_Agni,_the_Illumined_Will
2.04_-_On_Art
2.04_-_ON_PRIESTS
2.04_-_Positive_Aspects_of_the_Mother-Complex
2.04_-_The_Divine_and_the_Undivine
2.04_-_The_Forms_of_Love-Manifestation
2.04_-_The_Scourge,_the_Dagger_and_the_Chain
2.04_-_The_Secret_of_Secrets
2.05_-_Apotheosis
2.05_-_Habit_3__Put_First_Things_First
2.05_-_On_Poetry
2.05_-_ON_THE_VIRTUOUS
2.05_-_Universal_Love_and_how_it_leads_to_Self-Surrender
2.05_-_VISIT_TO_THE_SINTHI_BRAMO_SAMAJ
2.06_-_Reality_and_the_Cosmic_Illusion
2.06_-_The_Wand
2.06_-_WITH_VARIOUS_DEVOTEES
2.06_-_Works_Devotion_and_Knowledge
2.07_-_BANKIM_CHANDRA
2.07_-_I_Also_Try_to_Tell_My_Tale
2.07_-_On_Congress_and_Politics
2.07_-_The_Knowledge_and_the_Ignorance
2.07_-_The_Mother__Relations_with_Others
2.07_-_The_Release_from_Subjection_to_the_Body
2.07_-_The_Supreme_Word_of_the_Gita
2.07_-_The_Upanishad_in_Aphorism
2.08_-_AT_THE_STAR_THEATRE_(II)
2.08_-_Memory,_Self-Consciousness_and_the_Ignorance
2.08_-_The_Release_from_the_Heart_and_the_Mind
2.08_-_The_Sword
2.09_-_Human_representations_of_the_Divine_Ideal_of_Love
2.09_-_Meditation
2.09_-_On_Sadhana
2.09_-_THE_MASTERS_BIRTHDAY
2.09_-_The_Pantacle
2.09_-_The_Release_from_the_Ego
2.0_-_THE_ANTICHRIST
2.1.01_-_God_The_One_Reality
2.1.01_-_The_Central_Process_of_the_Sadhana
2.1.02_-_Love_and_Death
2.1.02_-_Nature_The_World-Manifestation
2.1.03_-_Man_and_Superman
2.10_-_THE_MASTER_AND_NARENDRA
2.10_-_The_Realisation_of_the_Cosmic_Self
2.10_-_The_Vision_of_the_World-Spirit_-_Time_the_Destroyer
2.1.1.04_-_Reading,_Yogic_Force_and_the_Development_of_Style
2.11_-_The_Boundaries_of_the_Ignorance
2.1.1_-_The_Nature_of_the_Vital
2.11_-_WITH_THE_DEVOTEES_IN_CALCUTTA
2.12_-_THE_MASTERS_REMINISCENCES
2.12_-_The_Origin_of_the_Ignorance
2.12_-_The_Realisation_of_Sachchidananda
2.1.2_-_The_Vital_and_Other_Levels_of_Being
2.12_-_The_Way_and_the_Bhakta
2.1.3.2_-_Study
2.1.3.3_-_Reading
2.1.3.4_-_Conduct
2.13_-_Exclusive_Concentration_of_Consciousness-Force_and_the_Ignorance
2.13_-_On_Psychology
2.13_-_The_Difficulties_of_the_Mental_Being
2.13_-_THE_MASTER_AT_THE_HOUSES_OF_BALARM_AND_GIRISH
2.1.3_-_Wrong_Movements_of_the_Vital
2.14_-_On_Movements
2.14_-_ON_THE_LAND_OF_EDUCATION
2.1.4_-_The_Lower_Vital_Being
2.14_-_The_Origin_and_Remedy_of_Falsehood,_Error,_Wrong_and_Evil
2.14_-_The_Passive_and_the_Active_Brahman
2.14_-_The_Unpacking_of_God
2.1.5.1_-_Study_of_Works_of_Sri_Aurobindo_and_the_Mother
2.1.5.4_-_Arts
2.15_-_CAR_FESTIVAL_AT_BALARMS_HOUSE
2.15_-_On_the_Gods_and_Asuras
2.15_-_Reality_and_the_Integral_Knowledge
2.15_-_The_Cosmic_Consciousness
2.16_-_Oneness
2.16_-_The_Integral_Knowledge_and_the_Aim_of_Life;_Four_Theories_of_Existence
2.16_-_The_Magick_Fire
2.16_-_VISIT_TO_NANDA_BOSES_HOUSE
2.1.7.08_-_Comments_on_Specific_Lines_and_Passages_of_the_Poem
2.17_-_December_1938
2.17_-_THE_MASTER_ON_HIMSELF_AND_HIS_EXPERIENCES
2.17_-_The_Progress_to_Knowledge_-_God,_Man_and_Nature
2.18_-_January_1939
2.18_-_SRI_RAMAKRISHNA_AT_SYAMPUKUR
2.18_-_The_Evolutionary_Process_-_Ascent_and_Integration
2.19_-_Feb-May_1939
2.19_-_Out_of_the_Sevenfold_Ignorance_towards_the_Sevenfold_Knowledge
2.19_-_THE_MASTER_AND_DR._SARKAR
2.19_-_The_Planes_of_Our_Existence
2.2.01_-_The_Problem_of_Consciousness
2.2.01_-_Work_and_Yoga
2.2.02_-_Becoming_Conscious_in_Work
2.2.02_-_Consciousness_and_the_Inconscient
2.2.03_-_The_Divine_Force_in_Work
2.2.03_-_The_Psychic_Being
2.2.04_-_Practical_Concerns_in_Work
2.2.05_-_Creative_Activity
22.06_-_On_The_Brink(3)
2.20_-_THE_MASTERS_TRAINING_OF_HIS_DISCIPLES
2.21_-_1940
2.21_-_IN_THE_COMPANY_OF_DEVOTEES_AT_SYAMPUKUR
2.21_-_The_Ladder_of_Self-transcendence
2.21_-_Towards_the_Supreme_Secret
2.22_-_1941-1943
2.22_-_Rebirth_and_Other_Worlds;_Karma,_the_Soul_and_Immortality
2.2.2_-_Sorrow_and_Suffering
2.22_-_THE_MASTER_AT_COSSIPORE
2.22_-_THE_STILLEST_HOUR
2.22_-_The_Supreme_Secret
2.2.3_-_Depression_and_Despondency
2.2.3_-_The_Aitereya_Upanishad
2.23_-_The_Conditions_of_Attainment_to_the_Gnosis
2.23_-_THE_MASTER_AND_BUDDHA
2.24_-_Gnosis_and_Ananda
2.2.4_-_Sentimentalism,_Sensitiveness,_Instability,_Laxity
2.24_-_The_Evolution_of_the_Spiritual_Man
2.24_-_THE_MASTERS_LOVE_FOR_HIS_DEVOTEES
2.24_-_The_Message_of_the_Gita
2.25_-_AFTER_THE_PASSING_AWAY
2.25_-_List_of_Topics_in_Each_Talk
2.25_-_The_Triple_Transformation
2.26_-_The_Ascent_towards_Supermind
2.2.7.01_-_Some_General_Remarks
2.27_-_Hathayoga
2.27_-_The_Gnostic_Being
2.28_-_The_Divine_Life
2.3.02_-_Opening,_Sincerity_and_the_Mother's_Grace
2.3.03_-_The_Mother's_Presence
2.3.04_-_The_Mother's_Force
2.3.06_-_The_Mind
2.3.07_-_The_Mother_in_Visions,_Dreams_and_Experiences
2.3.07_-_The_Vital_Being_and_Vital_Consciousness
2.3.08_-_The_Mother's_Help_in_Difficulties
2.3.08_-_The_Physical_Consciousness
2.3.1.06_-_Opening_to_the_Force
23.10_-_Observations_II
2.3.10_-_The_Subconscient_and_the_Inconscient
2.3.1.20_-_Aspiration
2.3.1.54_-_An_Epic_Line
2.3.1_-_Ego_and_Its_Forms
2.3.2_-_Chhandogya_Upanishad
2.3.2_-_Desire
2.3.3_-_Anger_and_Violence
2.4.02_-_Bhakti,_Devotion,_Worship
24.05_-_Vision_of_Dante
2.4.2_-_Interactions_with_Others_and_the_Practice_of_Yoga
2.4.3_-_Problems_in_Human_Relations
27.03_-_The_Great_Holocaust_-_Chhinnamasta
29.04_-_Mothers_Playground
2_-_Other_Hymns_to_Agni
30.01_-_World-Literature
30.02_-_Greek_Drama
3.00.2_-_Introduction
30.03_-_Spirituality_in_Art
30.05_-_Rhythm_in_Poetry
30.06_-_The_Poet_and_The_Seer
30.08_-_Poetry_and_Mantra
3.00_-_Introduction
30.10_-_The_Greatness_of_Poetry
30.11_-_Modern_Poetry
30.13_-_Rabindranath_the_Artist
30.14_-_Rabindranath_and_Modernism
30.15_-_The_Language_of_Rabindranath
30.17_-_Rabindranath,_Traveller_of_the_Infinite
30.18_-_Boris_Pasternak
3.01_-_Fear_of_God
3.01_-_INTRODUCTION
3.01_-_Natural_Morality
3.01_-_THE_BIRTH_OF_THOUGHT
3.01_-_The_Principles_of_Ritual
3.01_-_The_Soul_World
3.01_-_THE_WANDERER
3.01_-_Towards_the_Future
3.02_-_Aridity_in_Prayer
3.02_-_King_and_Queen
3.02_-_Mysticism
3.02_-_Nature_And_Composition_Of_The_Mind
3.02_-_ON_THE_VISION_AND_THE_RIDDLE
3.02_-_SOL
3.02_-_THE_DEPLOYMENT_OF_THE_NOOSPHERE
3.02_-_The_Great_Secret
3.02_-_The_Practice_Use_of_Dream-Analysis
3.02_-_The_Psychology_of_Rebirth
3.02_-_The_Soul_in_the_Soul_World_after_Death
3.03_-_Faith_and_the_Divine_Grace
3.03_-_ON_INVOLUNTARY_BLISS
3.03_-_On_Thought_-_II
3.03_-_SULPHUR
3.03_-_The_Ascent_to_Truth
3.03_-_The_Consummation_of_Mysticism
3.03_-_The_Four_Foundational_Practices
3.03_-_The_Godward_Emotions
3.03_-_THE_MODERN_EARTH
3.03_-_The_Naked_Truth
3.03_-_The_Soul_Is_Mortal
3.03_-_The_Spirit_Land
3.04_-_Folly_Of_The_Fear_Of_Death
3.04_-_Immersion_in_the_Bath
3.04_-_LUNA
3.04_-_The_Way_of_Devotion
3.05_-_SAL
3.05_-_The_Conjunction
3.05_-_The_Formula_of_I.A.O.
3.06_-_Charity
3.06_-_Death
3.06_-_Thought-Forms_and_the_Human_Aura
3.06_-_UPON_THE_MOUNT_OF_OLIVES
3.07_-_The_Formula_of_the_Holy_Grail
3.08_-_Of_Equilibrium
3.08_-_Purification
3.08_-_The_Mystery_of_Love
3.09_-_THE_RETURN_HOME
3.09_-_The_Return_of_the_Soul
3.0_-_THE_ETERNAL_RECURRENCE
3.1.01_-_The_Problem_of_Suffering_and_Evil
3.1.02_-_Asceticism_and_the_Integral_Yoga
3.1.02_-_Spiritual_Evolution_and_the_Supramental
3.1.02_-_Who
3.1.03_-_A_Realistic_Adwaita
3.1.03_-_Miracles
31.04_-_Sri_Ramakrishna
3.1.04_-_Transformation_in_the_Integral_Yoga
3.1.08_-_To_the_Sea
31.09_-_The_Cause_of_Indias_Decline
3.10_-_ON_THE_THREE_EVILS
3.10_-_Punishment
3.10_-_The_New_Birth
31.10_-_East_and_West
3.1.19_-_Parabrahman
3.11_-_Epilogue
3.11_-_Spells
3.1.23_-_The_Rishi
3.1.24_-_In_the_Moonlight
3.1.2_-_Levels_of_the_Physical_Being
3.1.3_-_Difficulties_of_the_Physical_Being
3.13_-_Of_the_Banishings
3.13_-_THE_CONVALESCENT
3.14_-_Of_the_Consecrations
3.16.1_-_Of_the_Oath
3.16.2_-_Of_the_Charge_of_the_Spirit
3.16_-_THE_SEVEN_SEALS_OR_THE_YES_AND_AMEN_SONG
3.18_-_Of_Clairvoyance_and_the_Body_of_Light
31_Hymns_to_the_Star_Goddess
32.01_-_Where_is_God?
3.2.02_-_Yoga_and_Skill_in_Works
3.2.03_-_Jainism_and_Buddhism
3.2.03_-_To_the_Ganges
3.2.05_-_Our_Ideal
32.06_-_The_Novel_Alchemy
3.2.08_-_Bhakti_Yoga_and_Vaishnavism
32.08_-_Fit_and_Unfit_(A_Letter)
3.2.09_-_The_Teachings_of_Some_Modern_Indian_Yogis
32.12_-_The_Evolutionary_Imperative
3.2.1_-_Food
3.21_-_Of_Black_Magic
3.2.2_-_Sleep
33.02_-_Subhash,_Oaten:_atlas,_Russell
33.03_-_Muraripukur_-_I
33.04_-_Deoghar
33.06_-_Alipore_Court
33.08_-_I_Tried_Sannyas
33.09_-_Shyampukur
33.10_-_Pondicherry_I
33.13_-_My_Professors
33.14_-_I_Played_Football
33.15_-_My_Athletics
33.16_-_Soviet_Gymnasts
33.17_-_Two_Great_Wars
33.18_-_I_Bow_to_the_Mother
3.3.1_-_Illness_and_Health
3.3.2_-_Doctors_and_Medicines
3.3.3_-_Specific_Illnesses,_Ailments_and_Other_Physical_Problems
3.4.02_-_The_Inconscient
34.03_-_Hymn_To_Dawn
3.4.1.01_-_Poetry_and_Sadhana
3.4.1.06_-_Reading_and_Sadhana
3.4.2.04_-_Dance_and_Sadhana
3.5.01_-_Aphorisms
3.5.02_-_Thoughts_and_Glimpses
3-5_Full_Circle
36.07_-_An_Introduction_To_The_Vedas
37.02_-_The_Story_of_Jabala-Satyakama
37.03_-_Satyakama_And_Upakoshala
37.05_-_Narada_-_Sanatkumara_(Chhandogya_Upanishad)
3.7.1.02_-_The_Reincarnating_Soul
3.7.1.05_-_The_Significance_of_Rebirth
3.7.1.06_-_The_Ascending_Unity
3.7.1.07_-_Involution_and_Evolution
3.7.1.09_-_Karma_and_Freedom
3.7.1.10_-_Karma,_Will_and_Consequence
3.7.1.12_-_Karma_and_Justice
3.7.2.02_-_The_Terrestial_Law
3.7.2.03_-_Mind_Nature_and_Law_of_Karma
3.7.2.04_-_The_Higher_Lines_of_Karma
38.01_-_Asceticism_and_Renunciation
38.02_-_Hymns_and_Prayers
38.03_-_Mute
3.8.1.01_-_The_Needed_Synthesis
3_-_Commentaries_and_Annotated_Translations
4.01_-_INTRODUCTION
4.01_-_Prayers_and_Meditations
4.01_-_Sweetness_in_Prayer
4.01_-_The_Presence_of_God_in_the_World
4.02_-_BEYOND_THE_COLLECTIVE_-_THE_HYPER-PERSONAL
4.02_-_Difficulties
4.02_-_Divine_Consolations.
4.02_-_Humanity_in_Progress
4.02_-_The_Psychology_of_the_Child_Archetype
4.03_-_CONVERSATION_WITH_THE_KINGS
4.03_-_Mistakes
4.03_-_Prayer_of_Quiet
4.03_-_The_Meaning_of_Human_Endeavor
4.03_-_The_Senses_And_Mental_Pictures
4.03_-_The_Special_Phenomenology_of_the_Child_Archetype
4.03_-_THE_ULTIMATE_EARTH
4.04_-_Conclusion
4.04_-_In_the_Total_Christ
4.04_-_Some_Vital_Functions
4.04_-_THE_LEECH
4.04_-_THE_REGENERATION_OF_THE_KING
4.04_-_Weaknesses
4.05_-_THE_DARK_SIDE_OF_THE_KING
4.05_-_The_Instruments_of_the_Spirit
4.05_-_THE_MAGICIAN
4.05_-_The_Passion_Of_Love
4.06_-_Purification-the_Lower_Mentality
4.06_-_RETIRED
4.06_-_THE_KING_AS_ANTHROPOS
4.07_-_Purification-Intelligence_and_Will
4.07_-_THE_UGLIEST_MAN
4.08_-_The_Liberation_of_the_Spirit
4.08_-_THE_RELIGIOUS_PROBLEM_OF_THE_KINGS_RENEWAL
4.09_-_REGINA
4.09_-_The_Liberation_of_the_Nature
4.0_-_NOTES_TO_ZARATHUSTRA
4.0_-_The_Path_of_Knowledge
4.1.01_-_The_Intellect_and_Yoga
4.1.1.05_-_The_Central_Process_of_the_Yoga
4.1.1_-_The_Difficulties_of_Yoga
4.11_-_The_Perfection_of_Equality
4.11_-_THE_WELCOME
4.1.2_-_The_Difficulties_of_Human_Nature
4.12_-_The_Way_of_Equality
4.13_-_ON_THE_HIGHER_MAN
4.13_-_The_Action_of_Equality
4.1.4_-_Resistances,_Sufferings_and_Falls
4.14_-_The_Power_of_the_Instruments
4.14_-_THE_SONG_OF_MELANCHOLY
4.18_-_Faith_and_shakti
4.19_-_THE_DRUNKEN_SONG
4.1_-_Jnana
4.2.03_-_The_Birth_of_Sin
4.2.04_-_Epiphany
4.2.1_-_The_Right_Attitude_towards_Difficulties
4.2.2_-_Steps_towards_Overcoming_Difficulties
4.2.3.05_-_Obstacles_to_the_Psychic's_Emergence
4.2.3_-_Vigilance,_Resolution,_Will_and_the_Divine_Help
4.2.4_-_Time_and_CHange_of_the_Nature
4.2.5_-_Dealing_with_Depression_and_Despondency
4.2_-_Karma
4.3.1_-_The_Hostile_Forces_and_the_Difficulties_of_Yoga
4.3.2.03_-_Wideness_and_the_Higher_Consciousness
4.3.2_-_Attacks_by_the_Hostile_Forces
4.3.3_-_Dealing_with_Hostile_Attacks
4.3.4_-_Accidents,_Possession,_Madness
4.3_-_Bhakti
4.41_-_Chapter_One
4.42_-_Chapter_Two
4.4.5.02_-_Descent_and_Psychic_Experiences
4.4.6.01_-_Sensations_in_the_Inner_Centres
5.01_-_ADAM_AS_THE_ARCANE_SUBSTANCE
5.01_-_EPILOGUE
5.01_-_On_the_Mysteries_of_the_Ascent_towards_God
5.03_-_ADAM_AS_THE_FIRST_ADEPT
5.03_-_The_Divine_Body
5.04_-_THE_POLARITY_OF_ADAM
5.06_-_Origins_And_Savage_Period_Of_Mankind
5.06_-_THE_TRANSFORMATION
5.07_-_Beginnings_Of_Civilization
5.07_-_ROTUNDUM,_HEAD,_AND_BRAIN
5.08_-_ADAM_AS_TOTALITY
5.1.01.1_-_The_Book_of_the_Herald
5.1.01.2_-_The_Book_of_the_Statesman
5.1.01.3_-_The_Book_of_the_Assembly
5.1.01.4_-_The_Book_of_Partings
5.1.01.5_-_The_Book_of_Achilles
5.1.01.6_-_The_Book_of_the_Chieftains
5.1.01.7_-_The_Book_of_the_Woman
5.1.01.8_-_The_Book_of_the_Gods
5.1.02_-_Ahana
5.1.03_-_The_Hostile_Forces_and_Hostile_Beings
5.2.01_-_The_Descent_of_Ahana
5.2.02_-_The_Meditations_of_Mandavya
5.3.04_-_Roots_in_M
5.4.01_-_Notes_on_Root-Sounds
5.4.01_-_Occult_Knowledge
5.4.02_-_Occult_Powers_or_Siddhis
5_-_The_Phenomenology_of_the_Spirit_in_Fairytales
6.01_-_THE_ALCHEMICAL_VIEW_OF_THE_UNION_OF_OPPOSITES
6.02_-_STAGES_OF_THE_CONJUNCTION
6.03_-_Extraordinary_And_Paradoxical_Telluric_Phenomena
6.04_-_THE_MEANING_OF_THE_ALCHEMICAL_PROCEDURE
6.05_-_THE_PSYCHOLOGICAL_INTERPRETATION_OF_THE_PROCEDURE
6.06_-_Remembrances
6.07_-_THE_MONOCOLUS
6.08_-_THE_CONTENT_AND_MEANING_OF_THE_FIRST_TWO_STAGES
6.09_-_Imaginary_Visions
6.0_-_Conscious,_Unconscious,_and_Individuation
6.1.07_-_Life
6.10_-_THE_SELF_AND_THE_BOUNDS_OF_KNOWLEDGE
7.02_-_Courage
7.05_-_Patience_and_Perseverance
7.07_-_Prudence
7.08_-_Sincerity
7.10_-_Order
7.11_-_Building_and_Destroying
7.13_-_The_Conquest_of_Knowledge
7.14_-_Modesty
7.15_-_The_Family
7.3.10_-_The_Lost_Boat
7.4.03_-_The_Cosmic_Dance
7.5.29_-_The_Universal_Incarnation
7.6.04_-_One
7.6.09_-_Despair_on_the_Staircase
7_-_Yoga_of_Sri_Aurobindo
9.99_-_Glossary
Aeneid
A_God's_Labour
Apology
Appendix_4_-_Priest_Spells
APPENDIX_I_-_Curriculum_of_A._A.
Averroes_Search
Big_Mind_(non-dual)
Big_Mind_(ten_perfections)
Blazing_P1_-_Preconventional_consciousness
Blazing_P2_-_Map_the_Stages_of_Conventional_Consciousness
Blazing_P3_-_Explore_the_Stages_of_Postconventional_Consciousness
Book_1_-_The_Council_of_the_Gods
BOOK_I._-_Augustine_censures_the_pagans,_who_attri_buted_the_calamities_of_the_world,_and_especially_the_sack_of_Rome_by_the_Goths,_to_the_Christian_religion_and_its_prohibition_of_the_worship_of_the_gods
BOOK_II._-_A_review_of_the_calamities_suffered_by_the_Romans_before_the_time_of_Christ,_showing_that_their_gods_had_plunged_them_into_corruption_and_vice
BOOK_III._-_The_external_calamities_of_Rome
BOOK_II._--_PART_I._ANTHROPOGENESIS.
BOOK_II._--_PART_III._ADDENDA._SCIENCE_AND_THE_SECRET_DOCTRINE_CONTRASTED
BOOK_II._--_PART_II._THE_ARCHAIC_SYMBOLISM_OF_THE_WORLD-RELIGIONS
BOOK_I._--_PART_I._COSMIC_EVOLUTION
BOOK_I._--_PART_III._SCIENCE_AND_THE_SECRET_DOCTRINE_CONTRASTED
BOOK_IV._-_That_empire_was_given_to_Rome_not_by_the_gods,_but_by_the_One_True_God
BOOK_IX._-_Of_those_who_allege_a_distinction_among_demons,_some_being_good_and_others_evil
Book_of_Genesis
Book_of_Imaginary_Beings_(text)
Book_of_Proverbs
Book_of_Psalms
BOOK_VIII._-_Some_account_of_the_Socratic_and_Platonic_philosophy,_and_a_refutation_of_the_doctrine_of_Apuleius_that_the_demons_should_be_worshipped_as_mediators_between_gods_and_men
BOOK_VII._-_Of_the_select_gods_of_the_civil_theology,_and_that_eternal_life_is_not_obtained_by_worshipping_them
BOOK_VI._-_Of_Varros_threefold_division_of_theology,_and_of_the_inability_of_the_gods_to_contri_bute_anything_to_the_happiness_of_the_future_life
BOOK_V._-_Of_fate,_freewill,_and_God's_prescience,_and_of_the_source_of_the_virtues_of_the_ancient_Romans
BOOK_XI._-_Augustine_passes_to_the_second_part_of_the_work,_in_which_the_origin,_progress,_and_destinies_of_the_earthly_and_heavenly_cities_are_discussed.Speculations_regarding_the_creation_of_the_world
BOOK_XIII._-_That_death_is_penal,_and_had_its_origin_in_Adam's_sin
BOOK_XII._-_Of_the_creation_of_angels_and_men,_and_of_the_origin_of_evil
BOOK_XIV._-_Of_the_punishment_and_results_of_mans_first_sin,_and_of_the_propagation_of_man_without_lust
BOOK_XIX._-_A_review_of_the_philosophical_opinions_regarding_the_Supreme_Good,_and_a_comparison_of_these_opinions_with_the_Christian_belief_regarding_happiness
BOOK_X._-_Porphyrys_doctrine_of_redemption
BOOK_XVIII._-_A_parallel_history_of_the_earthly_and_heavenly_cities_from_the_time_of_Abraham_to_the_end_of_the_world
BOOK_XVII._-_The_history_of_the_city_of_God_from_the_times_of_the_prophets_to_Christ
BOOK_XVI._-_The_history_of_the_city_of_God_from_Noah_to_the_time_of_the_kings_of_Israel
BOOK_XV._-_The_progress_of_the_earthly_and_heavenly_cities_traced_by_the_sacred_history
BOOK_XXII._-_Of_the_eternal_happiness_of_the_saints,_the_resurrection_of_the_body,_and_the_miracles_of_the_early_Church
BOOK_XXI._-_Of_the_eternal_punishment_of_the_wicked_in_hell,_and_of_the_various_objections_urged_against_it
BOOK_XX._-_Of_the_last_judgment,_and_the_declarations_regarding_it_in_the_Old_and_New_Testaments
BS_1_-_Introduction_to_the_Idea_of_God
Chapter_III_-_WHEREIN_IS_RELATED_THE_DROLL_WAY_IN_WHICH_DON_QUIXOTE_HAD_HIMSELF_DUBBED_A_KNIGHT
Chapter_II_-_WHICH_TREATS_OF_THE_FIRST_SALLY_THE_INGENIOUS_DON_QUIXOTE_MADE_FROM_HOME
City_of_God_-_BOOK_I
Conversations_with_Sri_Aurobindo
COSA_-_BOOK_I
COSA_-_BOOK_III
COSA_-_BOOK_IV
COSA_-_BOOK_IX
COSA_-_BOOK_V
COSA_-_BOOK_VI
COSA_-_BOOK_VII
COSA_-_BOOK_VIII
COSA_-_BOOK_X
COSA_-_BOOK_XII
Cratylus
Deutsches_Requiem
ENNEAD_01.01_-_The_Organism_and_the_Self.
ENNEAD_01.02_-_Concerning_Virtue.
ENNEAD_01.02_-_Of_Virtues.
ENNEAD_01.04_-_Whether_Animals_May_Be_Termed_Happy.
ENNEAD_01.06_-_Of_Beauty.
ENNEAD_01.08_-_Of_the_Nature_and_Origin_of_Evils.
ENNEAD_02.03_-_Whether_Astrology_is_of_any_Value.
ENNEAD_02.09_-_Against_the_Gnostics;_or,_That_the_Creator_and_the_World_are_Not_Evil.
ENNEAD_03.02_-_Of_Providence.
ENNEAD_03.06_-_Of_the_Impassibility_of_Incorporeal_Entities_(Soul_and_and_Matter).
ENNEAD_03.07_-_Of_Time_and_Eternity.
ENNEAD_04.02_-_How_the_Soul_Mediates_Between_Indivisible_and_Divisible_Essence.
ENNEAD_04.04_-_Questions_About_the_Soul.
ENNEAD_04.07_-_Of_the_Immortality_of_the_Soul:_Polemic_Against_Materialism.
ENNEAD_04.08_-_Of_the_Descent_of_the_Soul_Into_the_Body.
ENNEAD_05.01_-_The_Three_Principal_Hypostases,_or_Forms_of_Existence.
ENNEAD_05.03_-_The_Self-Consciousnesses,_and_What_is_Above_Them.
ENNEAD_05.05_-_That_Intelligible_Entities_Are_Not_External_to_the_Intelligence_of_the_Good.
ENNEAD_05.08_-_Concerning_Intelligible_Beauty.
ENNEAD_05.09_-_Of_Intelligence,_Ideas_and_Essence.
ENNEAD_06.02_-_The_Categories_of_Plotinos.
ENNEAD_06.03_-_Plotinos_Own_Sense-Categories.
ENNEAD_06.04_-_The_One_Identical_Essence_is_Everywhere_Entirely_Present.
ENNEAD_06.05_-_The_One_and_Identical_Being_is_Everywhere_Present_In_Its_Entirety.345
ENNEAD_06.06_-_Of_Numbers.
ENNEAD_06.07_-_How_Ideas_Multiplied,_and_the_Good.
ENNEAD_06.08_-_Of_the_Will_of_the_One.
Epistle_to_the_Romans
Euthyphro
Ex_Oblivione
For_a_Breath_I_Tarry
Gorgias
Guru_Granth_Sahib_first_part
Ion
I._THE_ATTRACTIVE_POWER_OF_GOD
Liber_111_-_The_Book_of_Wisdom_-_LIBER_ALEPH_VEL_CXI
Liber_46_-_The_Key_of_the_Mysteries
Liber_71_-_The_Voice_of_the_Silence_-_The_Two_Paths_-_The_Seven_Portals
LUX.01_-_GNOSIS
LUX.02_-_EVOCATION
Medea_-_A_Vergillian_Cento
Meno
MoM_References
Partial_Magic_in_the_Quixote
Phaedo
Prayers_and_Meditations_by_Baha_u_llah_text
r1912_01_13
r1912_01_14
r1912_01_14a
r1912_01_16
r1912_01_17
r1912_01_22
r1912_01_27
r1912_07_01
r1912_07_04
r1912_07_13
r1912_07_15
r1912_12_03b
r1912_12_14
r1912_12_16
r1912_12_18
r1912_12_20
r1912_12_26
r1912_12_27
r1912_12_31
r1913_01_02
r1913_01_03
r1913_01_04
r1913_01_06
r1913_01_09
r1913_01_14
r1913_01_20
r1913_01_29
r1913_05_21
r1913_06_21
r1913_09_05b
r1913_11_12
r1913_11_13
r1913_11_18
r1913_11_26
r1913_11_27
r1913_12_01a
r1913_12_02a
r1913_12_09
r1913_12_13
r1913_12_14
r1913_12_16
r1913_12_23
r1913_12_28
r1913_12_31
r1914_01_04
r1914_01_08
r1914_01_11
r1914_03_13
r1914_03_19
r1914_03_20
r1914_03_22
r1914_03_23
r1914_03_25
r1914_03_26
r1914_04_04
r1914_04_05
r1914_04_09
r1914_04_11
r1914_04_12
r1914_04_13
r1914_04_15
r1914_04_19
r1914_04_21
r1914_04_28
r1914_05_29
r1914_06_10
r1914_06_11
r1914_06_16
r1914_06_18
r1914_07_06
r1914_07_08
r1914_07_10
r1914_07_15
r1914_07_16
r1914_07_28
r1914_08_01
r1914_08_08
r1914_08_13
r1914_08_20
r1914_09_27
r1914_10_09
r1914_10_13
r1914_10_23
r1914_11_18
r1914_11_19
r1914_11_21
r1914_12_09
r1914_12_10
r1914_12_11
r1914_12_12
r1915_05_01
r1915_05_02
r1915_05_07
r1915_05_19
r1915_05_22
r1915_05_31
r1915_06_11
r1915_06_13
r1915_06_17
r1915_07_07
r1915_07_13
r1917_01_24
r1917_01_27
r1917_01_29
r1917_01_30
r1917_02_11
r1917_02_17
r1917_02_22
r1917_03_10
r1917_09_12
r1917_09_23
r1918_02_24
r1918_02_27
r1918_05_11
r1918_05_17
r1918_05_18
r1918_05_19
r1918_05_24
r1918_06_14
r1919_06_27
r1919_07_10
r1919_07_14
r1919_07_15
r1919_08_04
r1920_02_21
r1920_02_22
r1920_03_04
r1927_01_23
r1927_01_28
r1927_02_01
Sayings_of_Sri_Ramakrishna_(text)
Sophist
Symposium_translated_by_B_Jowett
Tablets_of_Baha_u_llah_text
Talks_001-025
Talks_026-050
Talks_176-200
Talks_225-239
Talks_500-550
Talks_600-652
Talks_With_Sri_Aurobindo_1
Talks_With_Sri_Aurobindo_2
The_Act_of_Creation_text
Theaetetus
The_Aleph
The_Anapanasati_Sutta__A_Practical_Guide_to_Mindfullness_of_Breathing_and_Tranquil_Wisdom_Meditation
The_Book_of_Certitude_-_P1
The_Book_of_Certitude_-_P2
The_Book_of_Job
The_Book_of_the_Prophet_Isaiah
The_Book_of_the_Prophet_Micah
The_Book_of_Wisdom
The_Circular_Ruins
The_Dream_of_a_Ridiculous_Man
The_Dwellings_of_the_Philosophers
The_Egg
the_Eternal_Wisdom
The_Five,_Ranks_of_The_Apparent_and_the_Real
The_Garden_of_Forking_Paths_1
The_Garden_of_Forking_Paths_2
The_Golden_Sentences_of_Democrates
The_Golden_Verses_of_Pythagoras
The_Gospel_According_to_Luke
The_Gospel_According_to_Mark
The_Gospel_According_to_Matthew
The_Great_Sense
The_Hidden_Words_text
The_Immortal
The_Letter_to_the_Hebrews
The_Logomachy_of_Zos
The_Mirror_of_Enigmas
The_Monadology
The_One_Who_Walks_Away
The_Pilgrims_Progress
The_Poems_of_Cold_Mountain
The_Pythagorean_Sentences_of_Demophilus
The_Revelation_of_Jesus_Christ_or_the_Apocalypse
The_Riddle_of_this_World
The_Shadow_Out_Of_Time
The_Theologians
The_Waiting
The_Zahir
Thus_Spoke_Zarathustra_text
Timaeus
Verses_of_Vemana

PRIMARY CLASS

Songs_of_God
SIMILAR TITLES
pai
pairs of rhythmic lines

DEFINITIONS

1. An intense, painful feeling of repugnance, fear and shock. 2. Something or someone that inspires dislike; dread; fright; something horrible.

1. A physical likeness or representation of a person, animal, or thing, photographed, painted, sculptured, or otherwise made visible. 2. A mental representation; idea; conception. 3. Form; appearance; semblance. 4. A type; embodiment. 5. An idol or representation of a deity. 6. A person or thing that resembles another closely; counterpart, double or copy. 7. A concrete representation, as in art, literature, or music, that is expressive or evocative of something else. images, image-face.

1. The expenditure of something, such as time or labour, necessary for the attainment of a goal. Also fig. **2. The price paid or required for acquiring, producing, or maintaining something, usually measured in money, time, or energy; expense or expenditure; outlay. 3. **Suffering or sacrifice; loss; penalty.

1. To support or defend, as against opposition or criticism. 2. To support, sustain, maintain, by aid or assistance; to preserve unimpaired or intact. upholds, upheld.

able ::: superl. --> Fit; adapted; suitable.
Having sufficient power, strength, force, skill, means, or resources of any kind to accomplish the object; possessed of qualifications rendering competent for some end; competent; qualified; capable; as, an able workman, soldier, seaman, a man able to work; a mind able to reason; a person able to be generous; able to endure pain; able to play on a piano.
Specially: Having intellectual qualifications, or strong


apaid ::: a. --> Paid; pleased.

a painful burden, as of suffering, guilt, anxiety, etc. (From the wreath of thorns placed on Christ"s head to mock him before he was crucified.)

apair ::: v. t. & i. --> To impair or become impaired; to injure.

abstinent ::: a. --> Refraining from indulgence, especially from the indulgence of appetite; abstemious; continent; temperate. ::: n. --> One who abstains.
One of a sect who appeared in France and Spain in the 3d century.


accord ::: v. t. --> Agreement or concurrence of opinion, will, or action; harmony of mind; consent; assent.
Harmony of sounds; agreement in pitch and tone; concord; as, the accord of tones.
Agreement, harmony, or just correspondence of things; as, the accord of light and shade in painting.
Voluntary or spontaneous motion or impulse to act; -- preceded by own; as, of one&


accurate ::: a. --> In exact or careful conformity to truth, or to some standard of requirement, the result of care or pains; free from failure, error, or defect; exact; as, an accurate calculator; an accurate measure; accurate expression, knowledge, etc.
Precisely fixed; executed with care; careful.


acerbity ::: n. --> Sourness of taste, with bitterness and astringency, like that of unripe fruit.
Harshness, bitterness, or severity; as, acerbity of temper, of language, of pain.


acetanilide ::: n. --> A compound of aniline with acetyl, used to allay fever or pain; -- called also antifebrine.

ache ::: a continuous or abiding pain, in contrast to a sudden or sharp one. Used of both physical and mental sensations.

ache ::: n. --> A name given to several species of plants; as, smallage, wild celery, parsley. ::: v. i. --> Continued pain, as distinguished from sudden twinges, or spasmodic pain. "Such an ache in my bones."
To suffer pain; to have, or be in, pain, or in continued


aching ::: 1. Having the sensation of continuous or ever-recurring pain, throbbing painfully. 2. Full of or precipitating nostalgia, grief, loneliness, etc.

aching ::: p. pr. & vb. n. --> of Ache ::: a. --> That aches; continuously painful. See Ache.

acraze ::: v. t. --> To craze.
To impair; to destroy.


actinost ::: n. --> One of the bones at the base of a paired fin of a fish.

acute ::: a. --> Sharp at the end; ending in a sharp point; pointed; -- opposed to blunt or obtuse; as, an acute angle; an acute leaf.
Having nice discernment; perceiving or using minute distinctions; penetrating; clever; shrewd; -- opposed to dull or stupid; as, an acute observer; acute remarks, or reasoning.
Having nice or quick sensibility; susceptible to slight impressions; acting keenly on the senses; sharp; keen; intense; as, a man of acute eyesight, hearing, or feeling; acute pain or pleasure.


adenalgy ::: n. --> Pain in a gland.

adj. 1. Beautiful. 2. Fine, bright, sunny. 3. Free from blemish, imperfection, or anything that impairs the appearance, quality, or character. 4. Of pleasing form or appearance. 5. Neither excellent nor poor; moderately or tolerably good. fairer.* *n. 6.* That which is fair (in senses of the adj.*).

adoration ::: n. --> The act of playing honor to a divine being; the worship paid to God; the act of addressing as a god.
Homage paid to one in high esteem; profound veneration; intense regard and love; fervent devotion.
A method of electing a pope by the expression of homage from two thirds of the conclave.


Adversary ::: “When there is some lowering or diminution of the consciousness or some impairing of it at one place or another, the Adversary—or the Censor—who is always on the watch presses with all his might wherever there is a weak point lying covered from your own view, and suddenly a wrong movement leaps up with unexpected force. Become conscious and cast out the possibility of its renewal, that is all that is to be done.” Letters on Yoga

advertisement ::: n. --> The act of informing or notifying; notification.
Admonition; advice; warning.
A public notice, especially a paid notice in some public print; anything that advertises; as, a newspaper containing many advertisements.


afflicted ::: distressed with mental or bodily pain; troubled greatly; grievously depressed, oppressed, cast down; tormented.

afflicting ::: 1. Grievously painful, distressing. 2. Distressing with bodily or mental suffering; troubling grievously, tormenting. self-afflicting.

afflicting ::: p. pr. & vb. n. --> of Afflict ::: a. --> Grievously painful; distressing; afflictive; as, an afflicting event. -- Af*flict"ing*ly, adv.

affliction ::: n. --> The cause of continued pain of body or mind, as sickness, losses, etc.; an instance of grievous distress; a pain or grief.
The state of being afflicted; a state of pain, distress, or grief.


afflictive ::: a. --> Giving pain; causing continued or repeated pain or grief; distressing.

afflict ::: v. t. --> To strike or cast down; to overthrow.
To inflict some great injury or hurt upon, causing continued pain or mental distress; to trouble grievously; to torment.
To make low or humble. ::: p. p. & a. --> Afflicted.


afterpains ::: n. pl. --> The pains which succeed childbirth, as in expelling the afterbirth.

aggrieve ::: v. t. --> To give pain or sorrow to; to afflict; hence, to oppress or injure in one&

agistment ::: n. --> Formerly, the taking and feeding of other men&

agonised ::: suffered extreme pain or anguish; tortured.

agonize ::: v. i. --> To writhe with agony; to suffer violent anguish.
To struggle; to wrestle; to strive desperately. ::: v. t. --> To cause to suffer agony; to subject to extreme pain; to torture.


agony ::: n. --> Violent contest or striving.
Pain so extreme as to cause writhing or contortions of the body, similar to those made in the athletic contests in Greece; and hence, extreme pain of mind or body; anguish; paroxysm of grief; specifically, the sufferings of Christ in the garden of Gethsemane.
Paroxysm of joy; keen emotion.
The last struggle of life; death struggle.


aguardiente ::: n. --> A inferior brandy of Spain and Portugal.
A strong alcoholic drink, especially pulque.


ail ::: v. t. --> To affect with pain or uneasiness, either physical or mental; to trouble; to be the matter with; -- used to express some uneasiness or affection, whose cause is unknown; as, what ails the man? I know not what ails him. ::: v. i. --> To be affected with pain or uneasiness of any sort; to be

alcalde ::: n. --> A magistrate or judge in Spain and in Spanish America, etc.

alguazil ::: n. --> An inferior officer of justice in Spain; a warrant officer; a constable.

alicant ::: n. --> A kind of wine, formerly much esteemed; -- said to have been made near Alicant, in Spain.

"All disease is a means towards some new joy of health, all evil & pain a tuning of Nature for some more intense bliss & good, all death an opening on widest immortality. Why and how this should be so, is God"s secret which only the soul purified of egoism can penetrate.” Essays Divine and Human

“All disease is a means towards some new joy of health, all evil & pain a tuning of Nature for some more intense bliss & good, all death an opening on widest immortality. Why and how this should be so, is God’s secret which only the soul purified of egoism can penetrate.” Essays Divine and Human

alleviate ::: v. t. --> To lighten or lessen the force or weight of.
To lighten or lessen (physical or mental troubles); to mitigate, or make easier to be endured; as, to alleviate sorrow, pain, care, etc. ; -- opposed to aggravate.
To extenuate; to palliate.


almagra ::: n. --> A fine, deep red ocher, somewhat purplish, found in Spain. It is the sil atticum of the ancients. Under the name of Indian red it is used for polishing glass and silver.

almighty ::: ”See God everywhere and be not frightened by masks. Believe that all falsehood is truth in the making or truth in the breaking, all failure an effectuality concealed, all weakness strength hiding itself from its own vision, all pain a secret & violent ecstasy. If thou believest firmly & unweariedly, in the end thou wilt see & experience the All-true, Almighty & All-blissful.” Essays Divine and Human

altarpiece ::: n. --> The painting or piece of sculpture above and behind the altar; reredos.

amassette ::: n. --> An instrument of horn used for collecting painters&

amateur ::: n. --> A person attached to a particular pursuit, study, or science as to music or painting; esp. one who cultivates any study or art, from taste or attachment, without pursuing it professionally.

amortization ::: n. --> The act or right of alienating lands to a corporation, which was considered formerly as transferring them to dead hands, or in mortmain.
The extinction of a debt, usually by means of a sinking fund; also, the money thus paid.


amphipoda ::: n. pl. --> A numerous group of fourteen -- footed Crustacea, inhabiting both fresh and salt water. The body is usually compressed laterally, and the anterior pairs or legs are directed downward and forward, but the posterior legs are usually turned upward and backward. The beach flea is an example. See Tetradecapoda and Arthrostraca.

anaesthetic ::: a. --> Capable of rendering insensible; as, anaesthetic agents.
Characterized by, or connected with, insensibility; as, an anaesthetic effect or operation. ::: n. --> That which produces insensibility to pain, as


analgesia ::: n. --> Absence of sensibility to pain.

anaptychus ::: n. --> One of a pair of shelly plates found in some cephalopods, as the ammonites.

andalusite ::: n. --> A silicate of aluminium, occurring usually in thick rhombic prisms, nearly square, of a grayish or pale reddish tint. It was first discovered in Andalusia, Spain.

And in Book VI, Canto II, The Way of Fate and the Problem of Pain, Sri Aurobindo speaks to us again of man’s science:

andiron ::: n. --> A utensil for supporting wood when burning in a fireplace, one being placed on each side; a firedog; as, a pair of andirons.

:::   "And this bliss is not a supreme pleasure of the heart and sensations with the experience of pain and sorrow as its background, but a delight also self-existent and independent of objects and particular experiences, a self-delight which is the very nature, the very stuff, as it were, of a transcendent and infinite existence.” The Synthesis of Yoga

“And this bliss is not a supreme pleasure of the heart and sensations with the experience of pain and sorrow as its background, but a delight also self-existent and independent of objects and particular experiences, a self-delight which is the very nature, the very stuff, as it were, of a transcendent and infinite existence.” The Synthesis of Yoga

angelolatry ::: n. --> Worship paid to angels.

anger ::: n. --> Trouble; vexation; also, physical pain or smart of a sore, etc.
A strong passion or emotion of displeasure or antagonism, excited by a real or supposed injury or insult to one&


angor ::: n. --> Great anxiety accompanied by painful constriction at the upper part of the belly, often with palpitation and oppression.

angry ::: superl. --> Troublesome; vexatious; rigorous.
Inflamed and painful, as a sore.
Touched with anger; under the emotion of anger; feeling resentment; enraged; -- followed generally by with before a person, and at before a thing.
Showing anger; proceeding from anger; acting as if moved by anger; wearing the marks of anger; as, angry words or tones; an angry sky; angry waves.


anguish ::: excruciating or acute distress, suffering, or pain. anguished.

anguish ::: n. --> Extreme pain, either of body or mind; excruciating distress. ::: v. t. --> To distress with extreme pain or grief.

anise ::: n. --> An umbelliferous plant (Pimpinella anisum) growing naturally in Egypt, and cultivated in Spain, Malta, etc., for its carminative and aromatic seeds.
The fruit or seeds of this plant.


annates ::: n. pl. --> The first year&

anodyne ::: a. --> Serving to assuage pain; soothing.
Any medicine which allays pain, as an opiate or narcotic; anything that soothes disturbed feelings.


anorthoscope ::: n. --> An optical toy for producing amusing figures or pictures by means of two revolving disks, on one of which distorted figures are painted.

antalgic ::: a. --> Alleviating pain. ::: n. --> A medicine to alleviate pain; an anodyne.

antennule ::: n. --> A small antenna; -- applied to the smaller pair of antennae or feelers of Crustacea.

anxiety ::: n. --> Concern or solicitude respecting some thing or event, future or uncertain, which disturbs the mind, and keeps it in a state of painful uneasiness.
Eager desire.
A state of restlessness and agitation, often with general indisposition and a distressing sense of oppression at the epigastrium.


anxious ::: a. --> Full of anxiety or disquietude; greatly concerned or solicitous, esp. respecting something future or unknown; being in painful suspense; -- applied to persons; as, anxious for the issue of a battle.
Accompanied with, or causing, anxiety; worrying; -- applied to things; as, anxious labor.
Earnestly desirous; as, anxious to please.


anxiously ::: adv. --> In an anxious manner; with painful uncertainty; solicitously.

apathy ::: n. --> Want of feeling; privation of passion, emotion, or excitement; dispassion; -- applied either to the body or the mind. As applied to the mind, it is a calmness, indolence, or state of indifference, incapable of being ruffled or roused to active interest or exertion by pleasure, pain, or passion.

appair ::: v. t. & i. --> To impair; to grow worse.

aquapuncture ::: n. --> The introduction of water subcutaneously for the relief of pain.

aquarelle ::: n. --> A design or painting in thin transparent water colors; also, the mode of painting in such colors.

aquarellist ::: n. --> A painter in thin transparent water colors.

arabesque ::: n. --> A style of ornamentation either painted, inlaid, or carved in low relief. It consists of a pattern in which plants, fruits, foliage, etc., as well as figures of men and animals, real or imaginary, are fantastically interlaced or put together. ::: a. --> Arabian.

arapaima ::: n. --> A large fresh-water food fish of South America.

aragonese ::: a. --> Of or pertaining to Aragon, in Spain, or to its inhabitants. ::: n. sing. & pl. --> A native or natives of Aragon, in Spain.

arles ::: n. pl. --> An earnest; earnest money; money paid to bind a bargain.

armorer ::: n. --> One who makes or repairs armor or arms.
Formerly, one who had care of the arms and armor of a knight, and who dressed him in armor.
One who has the care of arms and armor, cleans or repairs them, etc.


arrear ::: adv. --> To or in the rear; behind; backwards. ::: n. --> That which is behind in payment, or which remains unpaid, though due; esp. a remainder, or balance which remains due when some part has been paid; arrearage; -- commonly used in the plural, as, arrears of rent, wages, or taxes.

arrearage ::: n. --> That which remains unpaid and overdue, after payment of a part; arrears.

arthrodynia ::: n. --> An affection characterized by pain in or about a joint, not dependent upon structural disease.

arthrodynic ::: a. --> Pertaining to arthrodynia, or pain in the joints; rheumatic.

artiodactyla ::: n. pl. --> One of the divisions of the ungulate animals. The functional toes of the hind foot are even in number, and the third digit of each foot (corresponding to the middle finger in man) is asymmetrical and paired with the fourth digit, as in the hog, the sheep, and the ox; -- opposed to Perissodactyla.

  "As long as we live in the ignorant seeming, we are the ego and are subject to the modes of Nature. Enslaved to appearances, bound to the dualities, tossed between good and evil, sin and virtue, grief and joy, pain and pleasure, good fortune and ill fortune, success and failure, we follow helplessly the iron or gilt and iron round of the wheel of Maya.” *The Synthesis of Yoga

“As long as we live in the ignorant seeming, we are the ego and are subject to the modes of Nature. Enslaved to appearances, bound to the dualities, tossed between good and evil, sin and virtue, grief and joy, pain and pleasure, good fortune and ill fortune, success and failure, we follow helplessly the iron or gilt and iron round of the wheel of Maya.” The Synthesis of Yoga

assessment ::: n. --> The act of assessing; the act of determining an amount to be paid; as, an assessment of damages, or of taxes; an assessment of the members of a club.
A valuation of property or profits of business, for the purpose of taxation; such valuation and an adjudging of the proper sum to be levied on the property; as, an assessment of property or an assessment on property.
The specific sum levied or assessed.


assess ::: v. --> To value; to make a valuation or official estimate of for the purpose of taxation.
To apportion a sum to be paid by (a person, a community, or an estate), in the nature of a tax, fine, etc.; to impose a tax upon (a person, an estate, or an income) according to a rate or apportionment.
To determine and impose a tax or fine upon (a person, community, estate, or income); to tax; as, the club assessed each member twenty-five cents.


assiento ::: n. --> A contract or convention between Spain and other powers for furnishing negro slaves for the Spanish dominions in America, esp. the contract made with Great Britain in 1713.

As Sri Aurobindo once wrote to Dilip Kumar Roy, (I paraphrase) ‘ The earth is a conscious being and the world is only the form it takes to manifest.’ This statement of the Avatar, predating the GAIA theory by many years and far surpassing it in its infinite scope, promises an earth returned to beauty to manifest, unknown to man, an inconceivable perfection. I once wrote to Mother with a question about what would happen to plants and flowers in the New Creation. Her reply filled me with joy and gratitude for She said that the flowers would be among the first to change (be transformed) because their entire life is an aspiration for light. Imagine the beauty to come with flowers brilliant with the Divine Light, colours such as never seen before, fragrances that can transofrm suffering and sorrow into a life free of pain and filled with joy.

assuage ::: to mitigate, alleviate, soothe, relieve (physical or mental pain).

assuage ::: v. t. --> To soften, in a figurative sense; to allay, mitigate, ease, or lessen, as heat, pain, or grief; to appease or pacify, as passion or tumult; to satisfy, as appetite or desire. ::: v. i. --> To abate or subside.

asturian ::: a. --> Of or pertaining to Asturias in Spain. ::: n. --> A native of Asturias.

at ease ::: free from pain, trouble, or anxiety; comfortable.

attention ::: n. --> The act or state of attending or heeding; the application of the mind to any object of sense, representation, or thought; notice; exclusive or special consideration; earnest consideration, thought, or regard; obedient or affectionate heed; the supposed power or faculty of attending.
An act of civility or courtesy; care for the comfort and pleasure of others; as, attentions paid to a stranger.


aureole ::: n. --> A celestial crown or accidental glory added to the bliss of heaven, as a reward to those (as virgins, martyrs, preachers, etc.) who have overcome the world, the flesh, and the devil.
The circle of rays, or halo of light, with which painters surround the figure and represent the glory of Christ, saints, and others held in special reverence.
A halo, actual or figurative.
See Areola, 2.


auto-da-fe ::: n. --> A judgment of the Inquisition in Spain and Portugal condemning or acquitting persons accused of religious offenses.
An execution of such sentence, by the civil power, esp. the burning of a heretic. It was usually held on Sunday, and was made a great public solemnity by impressive forms and ceremonies.
A session of the court of Inquisition.


autoplasty ::: n. --> The process of artificially repairing lesions by taking a piece of healthy tissue, as from a neighboring part, to supply the deficiency caused by disease or wounds.

avenage ::: n. --> A quantity of oats paid by a tenant to a landlord in lieu of rent.

avenge ::: v. t. --> To take vengeance for; to exact satisfaction for by punishing the injuring party; to vindicate by inflicting pain or evil on a wrongdoer.
To treat revengefully; to wreak vengeance on. ::: v. i. --> To take vengeance.


avercorn ::: n. --> A reserved rent in corn, formerly paid to religious houses by their tenants or farmers.

averpenny ::: n. --> Money paid by a tenant in lieu of the service of average.

avignon berry ::: --> The fruit of the Rhamnus infectorius, eand of other species of the same genus; -- so called from the city of Avignon, in France. It is used by dyers and painters for coloring yellow. Called also French berry.

ayuntamiento ::: n. --> In Spain and Spanish America, a corporation or body of magistrates in cities and towns, corresponding to mayor and aldermen.

azygous ::: a. --> Odd; having no fellow; not one of a pair; single; as, the azygous muscle of the uvula.

backwardation ::: n. --> The seller&

bad ::: imp. --> Bade. ::: superl. --> Wanting good qualities, whether physical or moral; injurious, hurtful, inconvenient, offensive, painful, unfavorable, or defective, either physically or morally; evil; vicious; wicked; -- the opposite of good; as, a bad man; bad conduct; bad habits; bad soil; bad

bale ::: 1. Evil. 2. Woe, suffering, pain; 3. Mental suffering, anguish.

ballastage ::: n. --> A toll paid for the privilege of taking up ballast in a port or harbor.

balm ::: n. --> An aromatic plant of the genus Melissa.
The resinous and aromatic exudation of certain trees or shrubs.
Any fragrant ointment.
Anything that heals or that mitigates pain. ::: v. i.


bantam work ::: --> Carved and painted work in imitation of Japan ware.

banxring ::: n. --> An East Indian insectivorous mammal of the genus Tupaia.

barbacanage ::: n. --> See Barbicanage.
Money paid for the support of a barbican.


barking irons ::: --> Instruments used in taking off the bark of trees.
A pair of pistols.


barter ::: v. i. --> To traffic or trade, by exchanging one commodity for another, in distinction from a sale and purchase, in which money is paid for the commodities transferred; to truck. ::: v. t. --> To trade or exchange in the way of barter; to exchange (frequently for an unworthy consideration); to traffic; to truck; --

basque ::: a. --> Pertaining to Biscay, its people, or their language. ::: n. --> One of a race, of unknown origin, inhabiting a region on the Bay of Biscay in Spain and France.
The language spoken by the Basque people.
A part of a lady&


baston ::: n. --> A staff or cudgel.
See Baton.
An officer bearing a painted staff, who formerly was in attendance upon the king&


bathorse ::: n. --> A horse which carries an officer&

batter ::: v. t. --> To beat with successive blows; to beat repeatedly and with violence, so as to bruise, shatter, or demolish; as, to batter a wall or rampart.
To wear or impair as if by beating or by hard usage.
To flatten (metal) by hammering, so as to compress it inwardly and spread it outwardly.
A semi-liquid mixture of several ingredients, as, flour, eggs, milk, etc., beaten together and used in cookery.


battler ::: n. --> A student at Oxford who is supplied with provisions from the buttery; formerly, one who paid for nothing but what he called for, answering nearly to a sizar at Cambridge.

bawl ::: v. i. --> To cry out with a loud, full sound; to cry with vehemence, as in calling or exultation; to shout; to vociferate.
To cry loudly, as a child from pain or vexation. ::: v. t. --> To proclaim with a loud voice, or by outcry, as a hawker or town-crier does.


beaconage ::: n. --> Money paid for the maintenance of a beacon; also, beacons, collectively.

bepaint ::: v. t. --> To paint; to cover or color with, or as with, paint.

been accustomed to act in that way, and it goes on even if the doing brings a painful reaction.

being in us for a definite end ; thirdly, liberation, that is to say, the release of our being from the narrow and painful knots of the individualised energy in a false . and limited play, which at present are the law of our nature. The enjoyment of our libera- ted being which brings us into um'ty or union with the Supreme, is the consummation ; it is ihat for which Yoga is done.

bellyache ::: n. --> Pain in the bowels; colic.

Belphegor ::: Amal: “This name of a star brought in by Sri Aurobindo with powerful effect has practically no place in popular astronomy and figured rarely in past literary usage. In Syrian theology, Belphegor was a deity who symbolised the Sun. The Israelites also paid homage to him sometimes.” Sri Aurobindo—The Poet

benthamism ::: n. --> That phase of the doctrine of utilitarianism taught by Jeremy Bentham; the doctrine that the morality of actions is estimated and determined by their utility; also, the theory that the sensibility to pleasure and the recoil from pain are the only motives which influence human desires and actions, and that these are the sufficient explanation of ethical and jural conceptions.

beriberi ::: n. --> An acute disease occurring in India, characterized by multiple inflammatory changes in the nerves, producing great muscular debility, a painful rigidity of the limbs, and cachexy.

bertram ::: n. --> Pellitory of Spain (Anacyclus pyrethrum).

bete ::: v. t. --> To mend; to repair.
To renew or enkindle (a fire).
To better; to mend. See Beete.


betterment ::: n. --> A making better; amendment; improvement.
An improvement of an estate which renders it better than mere repairing would do; -- generally used in the plural.


biconjugate ::: a. --> Twice paired, as when a petiole forks twice.

bigeminate ::: a. --> Having a forked petiole, and a pair of leaflets at the end of each division; biconjugate; twice paired; -- said of a decompound leaf.

bijugate ::: a. --> Having two pairs, as of leaflets.

bilbo ::: n. --> A rapier; a sword; so named from Bilbao, in Spain.
A long bar or bolt of iron with sliding shackles, and a lock at the end, to confine the feet of prisoners or offenders, esp. on board of ships.


binate ::: a. --> Double; growing in pairs or couples.

biscayan ::: a. --> Of or pertaining to Biscay in Spain. ::: n. --> A native or inhabitant of Biscay.

bite ::: v. t. --> To seize with the teeth, so that they enter or nip the thing seized; to lacerate, crush, or wound with the teeth; as, to bite an apple; to bite a crust; the dog bit a man.
To puncture, abrade, or sting with an organ (of some insects) used in taking food.
To cause sharp pain, or smarting, to; to hurt or injure, in a literal or a figurative sense; as, pepper bites the mouth.
To cheat; to trick; to take in.


bitter ::: 1. Having or being a taste that is sharp, acrid, and unpleasant. 2. Difficult or distasteful to accept, admit; bear or endure. 3. Proceeding from or exhibiting strong animosity. 4. Causing a sharply unpleasant, painful, or stinging sensation; harsh; severe. bitterness.

bittersweet ::: a. --> Sweet and then bitter or bitter and then sweet; esp. sweet with a bitter after taste; hence (Fig.), pleasant but painful. ::: n. --> Anything which is bittersweet.
A kind of apple so called.
A climbing shrub, with oval coral-red berries (Solanum


bivium ::: n. --> One side of an echinoderm, including a pair of ambulacra, in distinction from the opposite side (trivium), which includes three ambulacra.

blackboard ::: n. --> A broad board painted black, or any black surface on which writing, drawing, or the working of mathematical problems can be done with chalk or crayons. It is much used in schools.

blackmail ::: n. --> A certain rate of money, corn, cattle, or other thing, anciently paid, in the north of England and south of Scotland, to certain men who were allied to robbers, or moss troopers, to be by them protected from pillage.
Payment of money exacted by means of intimidation; also, extortion of money from a person by threats of public accusation, exposure, or censure.
Black rent, or rent paid in corn, flesh, or the lowest


blemishment ::: n. --> The state of being blemished; blemish; disgrace; damage; impairment.

blemish ::: v. t. --> To mark with deformity; to injure or impair, as anything which is well formed, or excellent; to mar, or make defective, either the body or mind.
To tarnish, as reputation or character; to defame. ::: n. --> Any mark of deformity or injury, whether physical or


blickey ::: n. --> A tin dinner pail.

blindfold ::: fig. With the awareness or clear thinking impaired, the mind blinded and without perception.

blindness ::: 1. A lack or impairment of vision. 2. *Fig.* Lack of vision or awareness.

blood money ::: --> Money paid to the next of kin of a person who has been killed by another.
Money obtained as the price, or at the cost, of another&


bloodroot ::: n. --> A plant (Sanguinaria Canadensis), with a red root and red sap, and bearing a pretty, white flower in early spring; -- called also puccoon, redroot, bloodwort, tetterwort, turmeric, and Indian paint. It has acrid emetic properties, and the rootstock is used as a stimulant expectorant. See Sanguinaria.

bloodwit ::: n. --> A fine or amercement paid as a composition for the shedding of blood; also, a riot wherein blood was spilled.

blot ::: v. t. --> To spot, stain, or bespatter, as with ink.
To impair; to damage; to mar; to soil.
To stain with infamy; to disgrace.
To obliterate, as writing with ink; to cancel; to efface; -- generally with out; as, to blot out a word or a sentence. Often figuratively; as, to blot out offenses.
To obscure; to eclipse; to shadow.
To dry, as writing, with blotting paper.


blow ::: v. i. --> To flower; to blossom; to bloom.
To produce a current of air; to move, as air, esp. to move rapidly or with power; as, the wind blows.
To send forth a forcible current of air, as from the mouth or from a pair of bellows.
To breathe hard or quick; to pant; to puff.
To sound on being blown into, as a trumpet.
To spout water, etc., from the blowholes, as a whale.


bobsleigh ::: n. --> A short sled, mostly used as one of a pair connected by a reach or coupling; also, the compound sled so formed.

boneache ::: n. --> Pain in the bones.

bonus ::: n. --> A premium given for a loan, or for a charter or other privilege granted to a company; as the bank paid a bonus for its charter.
An extra dividend to the shareholders of a joint stock company, out of accumulated profits.
Money paid in addition to a stated compensation.


both ::: a. or pron. --> The one and the other; the two; the pair, without exception of either. ::: conj. --> As well; not only; equally.

bow-compass ::: n. --> An arcograph.
A small pair of compasses, one leg of which carries a pencil, or a pen, for drawing circles. Its legs are often connected by a bow-shaped spring, instead of by a joint.
A pair of compasses, with a bow or arched plate riveted to one of the legs, and passing through the other.


pain ::: 1. An unpleasant sensation occurring in varying degrees of severity as a consequence of injury, disease, or emotional disorder. 2. The sensation of acute physical hurt or discomfort caused by injury, illness, etc. **Pain, pain"s, pains, earth-pain, life-pain, world-pain, pain-forgetting, pain-fraught.

painful ::: adj. Requiring care and labor; irksome.

painfully ::: adv. In a laborious; exacting or difficult manner. 2. In a manner characterized by pain or causing pain.

pain ::: “Pain is the key that opens the gates of strength; it is the high-road that leads to the city of beatitude.” Essays Divine and Human

brachiate ::: a. --> Having branches in pairs, decussated, all nearly horizontal, and each pair at right angles with the next, as in the maple and lilac.

breakdown ::: n. --> The act or result of breaking down, as of a carriage; downfall.
A noisy, rapid, shuffling dance engaged in competitively by a number of persons or pairs in succession, as among the colored people of the Southern United States, and so called, perhaps, because the exercise is continued until most of those who take part in it break down.
Any rude, noisy dance performed by shuffling the feet,


brennage ::: n. --> A tribute which tenants paid to their lord, in lieu of bran, which they were obliged to furnish for his hounds.

broken-hearted ::: a. --> Having the spirits depressed or crushed by grief or despair.

brontotherium ::: n. --> A genus of large extinct mammals from the miocene strata of western North America. They were allied to the rhinoceros, but the skull bears a pair of powerful horn cores in front of the orbits, and the fore feet were four-toed. See Illustration in Appendix.

bronzing ::: p. pr. & vb. n. --> of Bronze ::: n. --> The act or art of communicating to articles in metal, wood, clay, plaster, etc., the appearance of bronze by means of bronze powders, or imitative painting, or by chemical processes.
A material for bronzing.


brooch ::: n. --> An ornament, in various forms, with a tongue, pin, or loop for attaching it to a garment; now worn at the breast by women; a breastpin. Formerly worn by men on the hat.
A painting all of one color, as a sepia painting, or an India painting. ::: imp. & p. p.


brush ::: n. --> An instrument composed of bristles, or other like material, set in a suitable back or handle, as of wood, bone, or ivory, and used for various purposes, as in removing dust from clothes, laying on colors, etc. Brushes have different shapes and names according to their use; as, clothes brush, paint brush, tooth brush, etc.
The bushy tail of a fox.
A tuft of hair on the mandibles.
Branches of trees lopped off; brushwood.


bullfighting ::: n. --> A barbarous sport, of great antiquity, in which men torment, and fight with, a bull or bulls in an arena, for public amusement, -- still popular in Spain.

burghbote ::: n. --> A contribution toward the building or repairing of castles or walls for the defense of a city or town.

bursar ::: n. --> A treasurer, or cash keeper; a purser; as, the bursar of a college, or of a monastery.
A student to whom a stipend or bursary is paid for his complete or partial support.


bushelman ::: n. --> A tailor&

butlerage ::: n. --> A duty of two shillings on every tun of wine imported into England by merchant strangers; -- so called because paid to the king&

But with all the krpa is there working in one way or another and it can only abandon the disciple if the disciple himself abandons or rejects it — by decisive and deSnitive revolts, by rejection of the Guru, by cutting the painter and declaring his

buy ::: v. t. --> To acquire the ownership of (property) by giving an accepted price or consideration therefor, or by agreeing to do so; to acquire by the payment of a price or value; to purchase; -- opposed to sell.
To acquire or procure by something given or done in exchange, literally or figuratively; to get, at a cost or sacrifice; to buy pleasure with pain.


cabrerite ::: n. --> An apple-green mineral, a hydrous arseniate of nickel, cobalt, and magnesia; -- so named from the Sierra Cabrera, Spain.

cachexy ::: n. --> A condition of ill health and impairment of nutrition due to impoverishment of the blood, esp. when caused by a specific morbid process (as cancer or tubercle).

calipers ::: n. pl. --> An instrument, usually resembling a pair of dividers or compasses with curved legs, for measuring the diameter or thickness of bodies, as of work shaped in a lathe or planer, timber, masts, shot, etc.; or the bore of firearms, tubes, etc.; -- called also caliper compasses, or caliber compasses.

callisection ::: n. --> Painless vivisection; -- opposed to sentisection.

callus ::: n. --> Same as Callosity
The material of repair in fractures of bone; a substance exuded at the site of fracture, which is at first soft or cartilaginous in consistence, but is ultimately converted into true bone and unites the fragments into a single piece.
The new formation over the end of a cutting, before it puts out rootlets.


camaieu ::: n. --> A cameo.
Painting in shades of one color; monochrome.


cambium ::: n. --> A series of formative cells lying outside of the wood proper and inside of the inner bark. The growth of new wood takes place in the cambium, which is very soft.
A fancied nutritive juice, formerly supposed to originate in the blood, to repair losses of the system, and to promote its increase.


campaigner ::: n. --> One who has served in an army in several campaigns; an old soldier; a veteran.

campaign ::: n. --> An open field; a large, open plain without considerable hills. SeeChampaign.
A connected series of military operations forming a distinct stage in a war; the time during which an army keeps the field.
Political operations preceding an election; a canvass.
The period during which a blast furnace is continuously in operation.


cantabrian ::: a. --> Of or pertaining to Cantabria on the Bay of Biscay in Spain.

cantarro ::: n. --> A weight used in southern Europe and East for heavy articles. It varies in different localities; thus, at Rome it is nearly 75 pounds, in Sardinia nearly 94 pounds, in Cairo it is 95 pounds, in Syria about 503 pounds.
A liquid measure in Spain, ranging from two and a half to four gallons.


canvas ::: 1. A piece of such fabric on which a painting, especially an oil painting, is executed. 2. A painting executed on such fabric, esp. an oil painting. 3. The background against which events unfold. canvases, canvas-strips.

canvas ::: n. --> A strong cloth made of hemp, flax, or cotton; -- used for tents, sails, etc.
A coarse cloth so woven as to form regular meshes for working with the needle, as in tapestry, or worsted work.
A piece of strong cloth of which the surface has been prepared to receive painting, commonly painting in oil.
Something for which canvas is used: (a) A sail, or a collection of sails. (b) A tent, or a collection of tents. (c) A


capivi ::: n. --> A balsam of the Spanish West Indies. See Copaiba.

carbuncle ::: n. --> A beautiful gem of a deep red color (with a mixture of scarlet) called by the Greeks anthrax; found in the East Indies. When held up to the sun, it loses its deep tinge, and becomes of the color of burning coal. The name belongs for the most part to ruby sapphire, though it has been also given to red spinel and garnet.
A very painful acute local inflammation of the subcutaneous tissue, esp. of the trunk or back of the neck, characterized by brawny hardness of the affected parts, sloughing of


cardiacle ::: n. --> A pain about the heart.

cardialgy ::: n. --> A burning or gnawing pain, or feeling of distress, referred to the region of the heart, accompanied with cardiac palpitation; heartburn. It is usually a symptom of indigestion.

careen ::: v. t. --> To cause (a vessel) to lean over so that she floats on one side, leaving the other side out of water and accessible for repairs below the water line; to case to be off the keel. ::: v. i. --> To incline to one side, or lie over, as a ship when sailing on a wind; to be off the keel.

careful ::: a. --> Full of care; anxious; solicitous.
Filling with care or solicitude; exposing to concern, anxiety, or trouble; painful.
Taking care; giving good heed; watchful; cautious; provident; not indifferent, heedless, or reckless; -- often followed by of, for, or the infinitive; as, careful of money; careful to do right.


carelessness ::: the quality of not being careful or taking pains; being negligent.

carlist ::: n. --> A partisan of Charles X. of France, or of Don Carlos of Spain.

carmine ::: n. --> A rich red or crimson color with a shade of purple.
A beautiful pigment, or a lake, of this color, prepared from cochineal, and used in miniature painting.
The essential coloring principle of cochineal, extracted as a purple-red amorphous mass. It is a glucoside and possesses acid properties; -- hence called also carminic acid.


cartage ::: n. --> The act of carrying in a cart.
The price paid for carting.


cartbote ::: n. --> Wood to which a tenant is entitled for making and repairing carts and other instruments of husbandry.

case-bay ::: n. --> The space between two principals or girders
One of the joists framed between a pair of girders in naked flooring.


cashbook ::: n. --> A book in which is kept a register of money received or paid out.

cash ::: n. --> A place where money is kept, or where it is deposited and paid out; a money box.
Ready money; especially, coin or specie; but also applied to bank notes, drafts, bonds, or any paper easily convertible into money
Immediate or prompt payment in current funds; as, to sell goods for cash; to make a reduction in price for cash. ::: v. t.


cassius ::: n. --> A brownish purple pigment, obtained by the action of some compounds of tin upon certain salts of gold. It is used in painting and staining porcelain and glass to give a beautiful purple color. Commonly called Purple of Cassius.

castilian ::: n. --> An inhabitant or native of Castile, in Spain.
The Spanish language as spoken in Castile.


castillan ::: a. --> Of or pertaining to Castile, in Spain.

cataract ::: n. --> A great fall of water over a precipice; a large waterfall.
An opacity of the crystalline lens, or of its capsule, which prevents the passage of the rays of light and impairs or destroys the sight.
A kind of hydraulic brake for regulating the action of pumping engines and other machines; -- sometimes called dashpot.


caterpillar ::: n. --> The larval state of a butterfly or any lepidopterous insect; sometimes, but less commonly, the larval state of other insects, as the sawflies, which are also called false caterpillars. The true caterpillars have three pairs of true legs, and several pairs of abdominal fleshy legs (prolegs) armed with hooks. Some are hairy, others naked. They usually feed on leaves, fruit, and succulent vegetables, being often very destructive, Many of them are popularly called worms, as the cutworm, cankerworm, army worm, cotton worm,

celtiberian ::: a. --> Of or pertaining to the ancient Celtiberia (a district in Spain lying between the Ebro and the Tagus) or its inhabitants the Celtiberi (Celts of the river Iberus). ::: n. --> An inhabitant of Celtiberia.

centesimo ::: n. --> A copper coin of Italy and Spain equivalent to a centime.

Central faith ::: A faith in the soul or the central being behind, a faith which is there even when the mind doubts and (he vital despairs and the physical wants to collapse, and after the attack is over, reappears and pushes on the path again.

cephalalgy ::: n. --> Pain in the head; headache.

champaign ::: n. --> A flat, open country. ::: a. --> Flat; open; level.

chapelet ::: n. --> A pair of straps, with stirrups, joined at the top and fastened to the pommel or the frame of the saddle, after they have been adjusted to the convenience of the rider.
A kind of chain pump, or dredging machine.


chasten ::: v. t. --> To correct by punishment; to inflict pain upon the purpose of reclaiming; to discipline; as, to chasten a son with a rod.
To purify from errors or faults; to refine.


chastisement ::: n. --> The act of chastising; pain inflicted for punishment and correction; discipline; punishment.

chastise ::: v. t. --> To inflict pain upon, by means of stripes, or in any other manner, for the purpose of punishment or reformation; to punish, as with stripes.
To reduce to order or obedience; to correct or purify; to free from faults or excesses.


checkrein ::: n. --> A short rein looped over the check hook to prevent a horse from lowering his head; -- called also a bearing rein.
A branch rein connecting the driving rein of one horse of a span or pair with the bit of the other horse.


cheek ::: n. --> The side of the face below the eye.
The cheek bone.
Those pieces of a machine, or of any timber, or stone work, which form corresponding sides, or which are similar and in pair; as, the cheeks (jaws) of a vise; the cheeks of a gun carriage, etc.
The branches of a bridle bit.
A section of a flask, so made that it can be moved laterally, to permit the removal of the pattern from the mold; the


chelicera ::: n. --> One of the anterior pair of mouth organs, terminated by a pincherlike claw, in scorpions and allied Arachnida. They are homologous with the falcers of spiders, and probably with the mandibles of insects.

cherub ::: n. --> A mysterious composite being, the winged footstool and chariot of the Almighty, described in Ezekiel i. and x.
A symbolical winged figure of unknown form used in connection with the mercy seat of the Jewish Ark and Temple.
One of a order of angels, variously represented in art. In European painting the cherubim have been shown as blue, to denote knowledge, as distinguished from the seraphim (see Seraph), and in later art the children&


chiaro-oscuro ::: n. --> The arrangement of light and dark parts in a work of art, such as a drawing or painting, whether in monochrome or in color.
The art or practice of so arranging the light and dark parts as to produce a harmonious effect. Cf. Clair-obscur.


chiaroscurist ::: n. --> A painter who cares for and studies light and shade rather than color.

chiefrie ::: n. --> A small rent paid to the lord paramount.

chilblain ::: n. --> A blain, sore, or inflammatory swelling, produced by exposure of the feet or hands to cold, and attended by itching, pain, and sometimes ulceration. ::: v. t. --> To produce chilblains upon.

chilognatha ::: n. pl. --> One of the two principal orders of myriapods. They have numerous segments, each bearing two pairs of small, slender legs, which are attached ventrally, near together.

chilopoda ::: n. pl. --> One of the orders of myriapods, including the centipeds. They have a single pair of elongated legs attached laterally to each segment; well developed jaws; and a pair of thoracic legs converted into poison fangs. They are insectivorous, very active, and some species grow to the length of a foot.

chloroform ::: n. --> A colorless volatile liquid, CHCl3, having an ethereal odor and a sweetish taste, formed by treating alcohol with chlorine and an alkali. It is a powerful solvent of wax, resin, etc., and is extensively used to produce anaesthesia in surgical operations; also externally, to alleviate pain. ::: v. t.

chordee ::: n. --> A painful erection of the penis, usually with downward curvature, occurring in gonorrhea.

christcross ::: n. --> The mark of the cross, as cut, painted, written, or stamped on certain objects, -- sometimes as the sign of 12 o&

cicada ::: n. --> Any species of the genus Cicada. They are large hemipterous insects, with nearly transparent wings. The male makes a shrill sound by peculiar organs in the under side of the abdomen, consisting of a pair of stretched membranes, acted upon by powerful muscles. A noted American species (C. septendecim) is called the seventeen year locust. Another common species is the dogday cicada.

cipher ::: n. --> A character [0] which, standing by itself, expresses nothing, but when placed at the right hand of a whole number, increases its value tenfold.
One who, or that which, has no weight or influence.
A character in general, as a figure or letter.
A combination or interweaving of letters, as the initials of a name; a device; a monogram; as, a painter&


clamp ::: n. --> Something rigid that holds fast or binds things together; a piece of wood or metal, used to hold two or more pieces together.
An instrument with a screw or screws by which work is held in its place or two parts are temporarily held together.
A piece of wood placed across another, or inserted into another, to bind or strengthen.
One of a pair of movable pieces of lead, or other soft material, to cover the jaws of a vise and enable it to grasp without


clasper ::: n. --> One who, or that which, clasps, as a tendril.
One of a pair of organs used by the male for grasping the female among many of the Crustacea.
One of a pair of male copulatory organs, developed on the anterior side of the ventral fins of sharks and other elasmobranchs. See Illust. of Chimaera.


coachfellow ::: n. --> One of a pair of horses employed to draw a coach; hence (Fig.), a comrade.

copaiba ::: n. --> Alt. of Copaiva

copaiva ::: n. --> A more or less viscid, yellowish liquid, the bitter oleoresin of several species of Copaifera, a genus of trees growing in South America and the West Indies. It is stimulant and diuretic, and is much used in affections of the mucous membranes; -- called also balsam of copaiba.

cocaine ::: n. --> A powerful alkaloid, C17H21NO4, obtained from the leaves of coca. It is a bitter, white, crystalline substance, and is remarkable for producing local insensibility to pain.

cocket ::: n. --> Pert; saucy.
A customhouse seal; a certified document given to a shipper as a warrant that his goods have been duly entered and have paid duty.
An office in a customhouse where goods intended for export are entered.
A measure for bread.


cogue ::: n. --> A small wooden vessel; a pail.

coleoptera ::: n. pl. --> An order of insects having the anterior pair of wings (elytra) hard and horny, and serving as coverings for the posterior pair, which are membranous, and folded transversely under the others when not in use. The mouth parts form two pairs of jaws (mandibles and maxillae) adapted for chewing. Most of the Coleoptera are known as beetles and weevils.

colic ::: n. --> A severe paroxysmal pain in the abdomen, due to spasm, obstruction, or distention of some one of the hollow viscera. ::: a. --> Of or pertaining to colic; affecting the bowels.
Of or pertaining to the colon; as, the colic arteries.


colored ::: imp. & p. p. --> of Color ::: a. --> Having color; tinged; dyed; painted; stained.
Specious; plausible; adorned so as to appear well; as, a highly colored description.
Of some other color than black or white.


colorman ::: n. --> A vender of paints, etc.

color ::: n. --> A property depending on the relations of light to the eye, by which individual and specific differences in the hues and tints of objects are apprehended in vision; as, gay colors; sad colors, etc.
Any hue distinguished from white or black.
The hue or color characteristic of good health and spirits; ruddy complexion.
That which is used to give color; a paint; a pigment; as, oil colors or water colors.


comfortable ::: a. --> Strong; vigorous; valiant.
Serviceable; helpful.
Affording or imparting comfort or consolation; able to comfort; cheering; as, a comfortable hope.
In a condition of comfort; having comforts; not suffering or anxious; hence, contented; cheerful; as, to lead a comfortable life.
Free, or comparatively free, from pain or distress; --


commiserate ::: v. t. --> To feel sorrow, pain, or regret for; to pity.

complained ::: expressed feelings of pain, dissatisfaction, or resentment. complaining.

complaint ::: an expression of pain, dissatisfaction, discontent or resentment.

complaint ::: n. --> Expression of grief, regret, pain, censure, or resentment; lamentation; murmuring; accusation; fault-finding.
Cause or subject of complaint or murmuring.
An ailment or disease of the body.
A formal allegation or charge against a party made or presented to the appropriate court or officer, as for a wrong done or a crime committed (in the latter case, generally under oath); an information; accusation; the initial bill in proceedings in equity.


complain ::: v. i. --> To give utterance to expression of grief, pain, censure, regret. etc.; to lament; to murmur; to find fault; -- commonly used with of. Also, to creak or squeak, as a timber or wheel.
To make a formal accusation; to make a charge. ::: v. t. --> To lament; to bewail.


compunction ::: n. --> A pricking; stimulation.
A picking of heart; poignant grief proceeding from a sense of guilt or consciousness of causing pain; the sting of conscience.


conceptacle ::: n. --> That in which anything is contained; a vessel; a receiver or receptacle.
A pericarp, opening longitudinally on one side and having the seeds loose in it; a follicle; a double follicle or pair of follicles.
One of the cases containing the spores, etc., of flowerless plants, especially of algae.


conjugate ::: a. --> United in pairs; yoked together; coupled.
In single pairs; coupled.
Containing two or more radicals supposed to act the part of a single one.
Agreeing in derivation and radical signification; -- said of words.
Presenting themselves simultaneously and having reciprocal properties; -- frequently used in pure and applied


conjugation ::: n. --> the act of uniting or combining; union; assemblage.
Two things conjoined; a pair; a couple.
The act of conjugating a verb or giving in order its various parts and inflections.
A scheme in which are arranged all the parts of a verb.
A class of verbs conjugated in the same manner.
A kind of sexual union; -- applied to a blending of


consulage ::: n. --> A duty or tax paid by merchants for the protection of their commerce by means of a consul in a foreign place.

contango ::: n. --> The premium or interest paid by the buyer to the seller, to be allowed to defer paying for the stock purchased until the next fortnightly settlement day.
The postponement of payment by the buyer of stock on the payment of a premium to the seller. See Backwardation.


contribution ::: n. --> The act of contributing.
That which is contributed; -- either the portion which an individual furnishes to the common stock, or the whole which is formed by the gifts of individuals.
An irregular and arbitrary imposition or tax leved on the people of a town or country.
Payment, by each of several jointly liable, of a share in a loss suffered or an amount paid by one of their number for


convulse ::: v. t. --> To contract violently and irregulary, as the muscular parts of an animal body; to shake with irregular spasms, as in excessive laughter, or in agony from grief or pain.
To agitate greatly; to shake violently.


cooperage ::: n. --> Work done by a cooper.
The price paid for coopers; work.
A place where coopers&


cooper ::: n. --> One who makes barrels, hogsheads, casks, etc.
Work done by a cooper in making or repairing barrels, casks, etc.; the business of a cooper. ::: v. t. --> To do the work of a cooper upon; as, to cooper a cask or barrel.


copy ::: n. --> An abundance or plenty of anything.
An imitation, transcript, or reproduction of an original work; as, a copy of a letter, an engraving, a painting, or a statue.
An individual book, or a single set of books containing the works of an author; as, a copy of the Bible; a copy of the works of Addison.
That which is to be imitated, transcribed, or reproduced; a pattern, model, or example; as, his virtues are an excellent copy for


corn ::: n. --> A thickening of the epidermis at some point, esp. on the toes, by friction or pressure. It is usually painful and troublesome.
A single seed of certain plants, as wheat, rye, barley, and maize; a grain.
The various farinaceous grains of the cereal grasses used for food, as wheat, rye, barley, maize, oats.
The plants which produce corn, when growing in the field; the stalks and ears, or the stalks, ears, and seeds, after reaping and


corroded ::: impaired; deteriorated.

corrode ::: v. t. --> To eat away by degrees; to wear away or diminish by gradually separating or destroying small particles of, as by action of a strong acid or a caustic alkali.
To consume; to wear away; to prey upon; to impair. ::: v. i. --> To have corrosive action; to be subject to corrosion.


corruption ::: n. --> The act of corrupting or making putrid, or state of being corrupt or putrid; decomposition or disorganization, in the process of putrefaction; putrefaction; deterioration.
The product of corruption; putrid matter.
The act of corrupting or of impairing integrity, virtue, or moral principle; the state of being corrupted or debased; loss of purity or integrity; depravity; wickedness; impurity; bribery.
The act of changing, or of being changed, for the


cortes ::: n. pl. --> The legislative assembly, composed of nobility, clergy, and representatives of cities, which in Spain and in Portugal answers, in some measure, to the Parliament of Great Britain.

corvee ::: n. --> An obligation to perform certain services, as the repair of roads, for the lord or sovereign.

cosmolatry ::: n. --> Worship paid to the world.

counterdraw ::: v. t. --> To copy, as a design or painting, by tracing with a pencil on oiled paper, or other transparent substance.

couple ::: a. --> That which joins or links two things together; a bond or tie; a coupler.
Two of the same kind connected or considered together; a pair; a brace.
A male and female associated together; esp., a man and woman who are married or betrothed.
See Couple-close.
One of the pairs of plates of two metals which compose a


couple-close ::: n. --> A diminutive of the chevron, containing one fourth of its surface. Couple-closes are generally borne one on each side of a chevron, and the blazoning may then be either a chevron between two couple-closes or chevron cottised.
A pair of rafters framed together with a tie fixed at their feet, or with a collar beam.


couplement ::: n. --> Union; combination; a coupling; a pair.

couplet ::: n. --> Two taken together; a pair or couple; especially two lines of verse that rhyme with each other.

cover ::: v. t. --> To overspread the surface of (one thing) with another; as, to cover wood with paint or lacquer; to cover a table with a cloth.
To envelop; to clothe, as with a mantle or cloak.
To invest (one&


coxalgy ::: n. --> Pain in the hip.

crack-brained ::: a. --> Having an impaired intellect; whimsical; crazy.

crack ::: v. t. --> To break or burst, with or without entire separation of the parts; as, to crack glass; to crack nuts.
To rend with grief or pain; to affect deeply with sorrow; hence, to disorder; to distract; to craze.
To cause to sound suddenly and sharply; to snap; as, to crack a whip.
To utter smartly and sententiously; as, to crack a joke.
To cry up; to extol; -- followed by up.


cranage ::: n. --> The liberty of using a crane, as for loading and unloading vessels.
The money or price paid for the use of a crane.


crazedness ::: n. --> A broken state; decrepitude; an impaired state of the intellect.

craze ::: v. t. --> To break into pieces; to crush; to grind to powder. See Crase.
To weaken; to impair; to render decrepit.
To derange the intellect of; to render insane. ::: v. i. --> To be crazed, or to act or appear as one that is crazed;


cremocarp ::: n. --> The peculiar fruit of fennel, carrot, parsnip, and the like, consisting of a pair of carpels pendent from a supporting axis.

creole ::: n. --> One born of European parents in the American colonies of France or Spain or in the States which were once such colonies, esp. a person of French or Spanish descent, who is a native inhabitant of Louisiana, or one of the States adjoining, bordering on the Gulf of of Mexico. ::: a.

crick ::: n. --> The creaking of a door, or a noise resembling it.
A painful, spasmodic affection of the muscles of some part of the body, as of the neck or back, rendering it difficult to move the part.
A small jackscrew.


crimpage ::: n. --> The act or practice of crimping; money paid to a crimp for shipping or enlisting men.

crippled ::: impaired or flawed.

croon ::: v. i. --> To make a continuous hollow moan, as cattle do when in pain.
To hum or sing in a low tone; to murmur softly. ::: v. t. --> To sing in a low tone, as if to one&


cross ::: 1. A structure consisting essentially of an upright and a transverse piece, upon which persons were formerly put to a cruel and ignominious death by being nailed or otherwise fastened to it by their extremities. 2. A representation or delineation of a cross on any surface, varying in elaborateness from two lines crossing each other to an ornamental design painted, embroidered, carved, etc.; used as a sacred mark, symbol, badge, or the like. 3. A trouble, vexation, annoyance; misfortune, adversity; sometimes anything that thwarts or crosses. v. 4. To go or extend across; pass from one side of to the other: pass over. 5. To extend or pass through or over; intersect. 6. To encounter in passing. crosses, crossed, crossing.

cross-stitch ::: n. --> A form of stitch, where the stitches are diagonal and in pairs, the thread of one stitch crossing that of the other.

crucified ::: 1. Afflicted with severe pain or distress; tormented. 2. In reference to being put to death by nailing or otherwise fastening to a cross.

crucifier ::: n. --> One who crucifies; one who subjects himself or another to a painful trial.

crucifixion ::: n. --> The act of nailing or fastening a person to a cross, for the purpose of putting him to death; the use of the cross as a method of capital punishment.
The state of one who is nailed or fastened to a cross; death upon a cross.
Intense suffering or affliction; painful trial.


cruel ::: 1. Causing or inflicting pain or suffering without pity. 2. Pleased at causing pain; merciless. 3. Rigid; stern; strict; unrelentingly severe. cruelly.

cruel ::: n. --> See Crewel. ::: a. --> Disposed to give pain to others; willing or pleased to hurt, torment, or afflict; destitute of sympathetic kindness and pity; savage; inhuman; hard-hearted; merciless.
Causing, or fitted to cause, pain, grief, or misery.


cruelty ::: n. --> The attribute or quality of being cruel; a disposition to give unnecessary pain or suffering to others; inhumanity; barbarity.
A cruel and barbarous deed; inhuman treatment; the act of willfully causing unnecessary pain.


cruelty ::: the quality or characteristic of being cruel and delighting in the deliberate infliction of pain or suffering. cruelties.

crus ::: n. --> That part of the hind limb between the femur, or thigh, and the ankle, or tarsus; the shank.
Often applied, especially in the plural, to parts which are supposed to resemble a pair of legs; as, the crura of the diaphragm, a pair of muscles attached to it; crura cerebri, two bundles of nerve fibers in the base of the brain, connecting the medulla and the forebrain.


cry ::: 1. To entreat loudly; supplicate. 2. To call loudly; shout. 3. To sob or shed tears because of grief, sorrow, or pain; weep. 4. To utter or shout (words of appeal, exclamation, fear, etc.) 5. To utter a characteristic sound or call. Used of an animal. cries, cried, criedst, criest, crying.

cry ::: v. i. --> To make a loud call or cry; to call or exclaim vehemently or earnestly; to shout; to vociferate; to proclaim; to pray; to implore.
To utter lamentations; to lament audibly; to express pain, grief, or distress, by weeping and sobbing; to shed tears; to bawl, as a child.
To utter inarticulate sounds, as animals.
A loud utterance; especially, the inarticulate sound


cumshaw ::: n. --> A present or bonus; -- originally applied to that paid on ships which entered the port of Canton. ::: v. t. --> To give or make a present to.

cup ::: 1. A small open container, usually with a flat bottom and a handle, used for drinking, or something resembling it. cup"s 2. *Fig.* Something that one must endure; one"s lot to be experienced or endured with pain or happiness, as these lines in Savitri:

curiousness ::: n. --> Carefulness; painstaking.
The state of being curious; exactness of workmanship; ingenuity of contrivance.
Inquisitiveness; curiosity.


daddy longlegs ::: --> An arachnidan of the genus Phalangium, and allied genera, having a small body and four pairs of long legs; -- called also harvestman, carter, and grandfather longlegs.
A name applied to many species of dipterous insects of the genus Tipula, and allied genera, with slender bodies, and very long, slender legs; the crane fly; -- called also father longlegs.


dakir ::: n. --> A measure of certain commodities by number, usually ten or twelve, but sometimes twenty; as, a daker of hides consisted of ten skins; a daker of gloves of ten pairs.

damageable ::: a. --> Capable of being injured or impaired; liable to, or susceptible of, damage; as, a damageable cargo.
Hurtful; pernicious.


damage ::: n. --> Injury or harm to person, property, or reputation; an inflicted loss of value; detriment; hurt; mischief.
The estimated reparation in money for detriment or injury sustained; a compensation, recompense, or satisfaction to one party, for a wrong or injury actually done to him by another.
To ocassion damage to the soudness, goodness, or value of; to hurt; to injure; to impair.


damnify ::: v. t. --> To cause loss or damage to; to injure; to impair.

danger ::: n. --> Authority; jurisdiction; control.
Power to harm; subjection or liability to penalty.
Exposure to injury, loss, pain, or other evil; peril; risk; insecurity.
Difficulty; sparingness.
Coyness; disdainful behavior. ::: v. t.


dark ::: a. --> Destitute, or partially destitute, of light; not receiving, reflecting, or radiating light; wholly or partially black, or of some deep shade of color; not light-colored; as, a dark room; a dark day; dark cloth; dark paint; a dark complexion.
Not clear to the understanding; not easily seen through; obscure; mysterious; hidden.
Destitute of knowledge and culture; in moral or intellectual darkness; unrefined; ignorant.


DARK PATH. ::: The dark path is there and there are many who make a Gospel of spiritual suffering; many hold it to be the unavoidable price of victory. It may be so under certain circumstances, as it has been in so many lives at the beginning. or one may choose to make it so. But then the price has to be paid with resignation, fortitude or a tenacious resilience. Borne that way, the attacks of the dark forces or the ordeals they impose have a meaning. After each victory gained over them, there is then a sensible advance; often they seem to show us the difficulties in ourselves which we have to overcome. But all the same it is a too dark and difficult way which nobody need follow on whom the necessity does not lie.

daub ::: 1. Fig. To smear or spread or apply (paint, mud, etc.), esp. carelessly.

dauber ::: n. --> One who, or that which, daubs; especially, a coarse, unskillful painter.
A pad or ball of rags, covered over with canvas, for inking plates; a dabber.
A low and gross flatterer.
The mud wasp; the mud dauber.


daub ::: v. t. --> To smear with soft, adhesive matter, as pitch, slime, mud, etc.; to plaster; to bedaub; to besmear.
To paint in a coarse or unskillful manner.
To cover with a specious or deceitful exterior; to disguise; to conceal.
To flatter excessively or glossy.
To put on without taste; to deck gaudily.


deaden ::: a. --> To make as dead; to impair in vigor, force, activity, or sensation; to lessen the force or acuteness of; to blunt; as, to deaden the natural powers or feelings; to deaden a sound.
To lessen the velocity or momentum of; to retard; as, to deaden a ship&


debenture ::: n. --> A writing acknowledging a debt; a writing or certificate signed by a public officer, as evidence of a debt due to some person; the sum thus due.
A customhouse certificate entitling an exporter of imported goods to a drawback of duties paid on their importation.


debilitate ::: v. t. --> To impair the strength of; to weaken; to enfeeble; as, to debilitate the body by intemperance.

depainted ::: imp. & p. p. --> of Depaint

depainter ::: n. --> One who depaints.

depainting ::: p. pr. & vb. n. --> of Depaint

depaint ::: p. p. --> Painted. ::: v. t. --> To paint; to picture; hence, to describe; to delineate in words; to depict.
To mark with, or as with, color; to color.


decay ::: v. i. --> To pass gradually from a sound, prosperous, or perfect state, to one of imperfection, adversity, or dissolution; to waste away; to decline; to fail; to become weak, corrupt, or disintegrated; to rot; to perish; as, a tree decays; fortunes decay; hopes decay. ::: v. t. --> To cause to decay; to impair.

decline ::: v. i. --> To bend, or lean downward; to take a downward direction; to bend over or hang down, as from weakness, weariness, despondency, etc.; to condescend.
To tend or draw towards a close, decay, or extinction; to tend to a less perfect state; to become diminished or impaired; to fail; to sink; to diminish; to lessen; as, the day declines; virtue declines; religion declines; business declines.
To turn or bend aside; to deviate; to stray; to


decollation ::: n. --> The act of beheading or state of one beheaded; -- especially used of the execution of St. John the Baptist.
A painting representing the beheading of a saint or martyr, esp. of St. John the Baptist.


decussated ::: imp. & p. p. --> of Decussate ::: a. --> Crossed; intersected.
Growing in pairs, each of which is at right angles to the next pair above or below; as, decussated leaves or branches.
Consisting of two rising and two falling clauses,


deduplication ::: n. --> The division of that which is morphologically one organ into two or more, as the division of an organ of a plant into a pair or cluster.

delenifical ::: a. --> Assuaging pain.

demitint ::: n. --> That part of a painting, engraving, or the like, which is neither in full darkness nor full light.
The shade itself; neither the darkest nor the lightest in a composition. Also called half tint.


dengue ::: n. --> A specific epidemic disease attended with high fever, cutaneous eruption, and severe pains in the head and limbs, resembling those of rheumatism; -- called also breakbone fever. It occurs in India, Egypt, the West Indies, etc., is of short duration, and rarely fatal.

dentist ::: n. --> One whose business it is to clean, extract, or repair natural teeth, and to make and insert artificial ones; a dental surgeon.

depeinct ::: v. t. --> To paint.

deperditely ::: adv. --> Hopelessly; despairingly; in the manner of one ruined; as, deperditely wicked.

depiction ::: n. --> A painting or depicting; a representation.

depict ::: p. p. --> Depicted.
Depicted. ::: v. t. --> To form a colored likeness of; to represent by a picture; to paint; to portray.
To represent in words; to describe vividly.


depicture ::: v. t. --> To make a picture of; to paint; to picture; to depict.

dermopteran ::: n. --> An insect which has the anterior pair of wings coriaceous, and does not use them in flight, as the earwig.

despaired ::: imp. & p. p. --> of Despair

despairer ::: n. --> One who despairs.

despairful ::: a. --> Hopeless.

despairing ::: p. pr. & vb. n. --> of Despair ::: a. --> Feeling or expressing despair; hopeless.

despair ::: the state in which all hope is lost or absent. despairs, despairing *adj.* Characterized by or resulting from despair; hopeless.

despair ::: v. i. --> To be hopeless; to have no hope; to give up all hope or expectation; -- often with of. ::: v. t. --> To give up as beyond hope or expectation; to despair of.
To cause to despair.


Descent into the most physical ::: It brings light, consciousness, force, Ananda into the cells and all the physical movements. The body becomes conscious and vi^ant and performs the right movements, obeying the higher will or else automatically by the force of the consciousness that has come into iL It becomes more possible to control the functions of the body and set right any> thing that is mong, to deal with illness and pain etc. A greater control comes over the actions of the body and even ov'er bap> penings to it from outside, e.g. minimising of aeddents and small happenings. The body becomes a more effective instrument for work. It becomes possible to mimmise fatigue. Peace, happiness, strength, lightness come in the whole system. There is also the unity with the earth-consdousness, the constant sense of the

desperate ::: actuated by a feeling of hopelessness; that leaves little or no room for hope; such as to be despaired of; extremely dangerous or serious.

desperate ::: a. --> Without hope; given to despair; hopeless.
Beyond hope; causing despair; extremely perilous; irretrievable; past cure, or, at least, extremely dangerous; as, a desperate disease; desperate fortune.
Proceeding from, or suggested by, despair; without regard to danger or safety; reckless; furious; as, a desperate effort.
Extreme, in a bad sense; outrageous; -- used to mark the extreme predominance of a bad quality.


desperation ::: n. --> The act of despairing or becoming desperate; a giving up of hope.
A state of despair, or utter hopeless; abandonment of hope; extreme recklessness; reckless fury.


destemper ::: n. --> A kind of painting. See Distemper.

destroy ::: 1. To reduce anything to useless fragments, a useless form, or remains, as by rending, burning, or dissolving; injuring beyond repair or renewal; demolish; ruin; annihilate. 2. To subdue or defeat completely; crush. 3. To slay, to kill. destroys, destroyed, destroying, world-destroying.

deteriorate ::: v. t. --> To make worse; to make inferior in quality or value; to impair; as, to deteriorate the mind. ::: v. i. --> To grow worse; to be impaired in quality; to degenerate.

detriment ::: n. --> That which injures or causes damage; mischief; harm; diminution; loss; damage; -- used very generically; as, detriments to property, religion, morals, etc.
A charge made to students and barristers for incidental repairs of the rooms they occupy. ::: v. t.


devoir ::: n. --> Duty; service owed; hence, due act of civility or respect; -- now usually in the plural; as, they paid their devoirs to the ladies.

discredit ::: loss or lack of repute or esteem; impaired reputation; disrepute.

dolorous ::: full of, expressing, or causing pain or sorrow; grievous; mournful. dolorously.

dragonflies ::: any of various large insects of the order Odonata or suborder Anisoptera, having a long slender body and two pairs of narrow, net-veined wings that are usually held outstretched while the insect is at rest.

Durga ::: “In Hindu religion, the goddess who is the Energy of Shiva and the conquering and protecting aspect of the Universal Mother. She is the slayer of many demons including Mahisasura. Durga is usually depicted in painting and sculpture riding a lion, having eight or ten arms, each holding the special weapon of one or another of the gods who gave them to her for her battles with demons. (A; Enc. Br). Glossary and Index of Proper Names in Sri Aurobindo’s Works.

durga ::: "In Hindu religion, the goddess who is the Energy of Shiva and the conquering and protecting aspect of the Universal Mother. She is the slayer of many demons including Mahisasura. Durga is usually depicted in painting and sculpture riding a lion, having eight or ten arms, each holding the special weapon of one or another of the gods who gave them to her for her battles with demons. (A; Enc. Br.)” *Glossary and Index of Proper Names in Sri Aurobindo"s Works.

earth ::: 1. The realm of mortal existence; the temporal world. 2. The softer, friable part of land; soil, especially productive soil. **Earth, earth"s, earth-beauty"s, earth-being"s, earth-beings, earth-bounds, earth-bride, earth-fact, earth-force, Earth-Goddess, earth-hearts, earth-habit"s, earth-heart, earth-instruments, earth-kind, earth-life, earth-light, earth-made, earth-matter"s, earth-mind, earth-mind"s, earth-myth, earth-nature, earth-nature"s, Earth-Nature"s, earth-nursed, earth-pain, Earth-plasm, earth-poise, earth-scene, earth-scene"s, earth-seat, earth-shapes, earth-stage, earth-stuff, earth-time, earth-time"s, earth-use, earth-vision, earth-ways, summer-earth.

ease ::: 1. Freedom from labour, pain, or physical annoyance; tranquil rest; comfort. 2. Freedom from difficulty, hardship, or effort. 3. Freedom from concern or anxiety; a quiet state of mind.

Egocentric and unegoistic ::: The egocentric man feels and takes things as they affect him. Does this please me or displease, give me gladness or pain, flatter my pride, vanity, ambition or hurt it, satisfy my desires or thwart them, etc. The unegoistic man does not look at things like that. He looks to see what things arc in themselves and would be if he were not there, what is their meaniog, how tlicy get into the scheme of things

Every sadbaka Is faced with two elements in him, the inner being which wants the Divine and the sadhana and the outer mainly vital and physical being which does not want them but remains attached to the things of the ordinary life. The mind is sometimes led by one, someUoves by the other. One of the most important things he has to do, therefore, is to decide fundamentally the quarrel between these two parts and to persuade or compel by psychic aspiration, by steadiness of the mind’s thought and will, by the choice of the higher vital in his emotional being, the opposing elements to be first quiescent and then consenting. So long as he is not able to do that his progress must be either very slow or fluctuating and chequered as the aspiration within cannot have a continuous action or a continuous result. Besides so long as thb is so, there are likely to be periodical revolts of the vita! repining at the slow progress, des- pairing, desponding, declaring the Adhar unfit ; calls from old life will come ; circumstances will be attracted which seem to justify it, suggestions will come from men and unseen powers pressing the sadhaka away from the sadhana and pointing back- ward to the former life. And yet in that life he is not likely to get any real satisfaction.

exquisite ::: 1. Extraordinarily fine or admirable; consummate. 2. Intense, acute, or keen, as pleasure or pain.

fear ::: n. 1. A distressing emotion aroused by impending danger, evil, pain, etc., whether the threat is real or imagined; the feeling or condition of being afraid. v. 2. To regard with fear; be afraid of. 3. To have reverential awe of.** fear"s, fears, feared, fearing, fear-filled.

fig. Hearts filled with despair; disillusionment; devastating sorrow, especially from disappointment or tragedy in love.

fraught ::: filled or charged; attended. deep-fraught, marvel-fraught, pain-fraught.

Freed from thy clutch of pain and ignorance

frescoed ::: painted on fresh moist plaster with pigments dissolved in water. many-frescoed.

grimacing ::: making a sharp contortion of the face expressive of pain, contempt, or disgust.

“Hell and heaven are often imaginary states of the soul or rather of the vital which it constructs about it after its passing. What is meant by hell is a painful passage through the vital or lingering there, as for instance, in many cases of suicide where one remains surrounded by the forces of suffering and turmoil created by this unnatural and violent exit. There are, of course, also worlds of mind and vital worlds which are penetrated with joyful or dark experiences. One may pass through these as the result of things formed in the nature which create the necessary affinities, but the idea of reward or retribution is a crude and vulgar conception which is a mere popular error.” Letters on Yoga

HELL AND HEAVEN. ::: They arc often imaginary states of the soul or rather of the vital which it constructs about It after its passing. What is meant by hell is a painful passage through the vital or lingering there, as for instance, in many cases of suicide where one remains surrounded by the forces of suffering and turmoil created by this unnatural and violent exit. There are, of course, also worlds of mind and vital worlds which are penetrated with Joyful or dark experiences. One may pass through these as the result of things formed in the nature which create the necessary affimties, but the Idea of reward or retri- bution is a crude and vulgar conception which is a mere popular error.

hell ::: “What is meant by hell is a painful passage through the vital or lingering there, as for instance, in many cases of suicide where one remains surrounded by the forces of suffering and turmoil created by this unnatural and violent exit.” Letters on Yoga

HOLOCAUST OF THE DIVINE. ::: The Mother not only governs all from above but she descends into this lesser tnple universe. Impersonally, all things here, even the movements of the Ignorance, are herself in veiled power and her creations in diminished substance, her Nafure-b^y and Nature-force, and they exist because moved by the mysterious fiat of the Supreme to work out something that was fbere «i the possibilities of The Infinite she has consented to the great sacrifice and has put on like a mask the soul and forms of the Ignorance. But personally too she has stooped to descend here into the Darkness that she may lead it to the Light, into the Falsehood and Error that she may convert it to the Truth, into this Death that she may turn it to godlike Life, into this world-pain and its obstinate sorrow assimilate it ; avoid self-dispersion and all externalising of the consciousness.

holocaust ::: “The Mother not only governs all from above but she descends into this lesser triple universe. Impersonally, all things here, even the movements of the Ignorance, are herself in veiled power and her creations in diminished substance, her Nature-body and Nature-force, and they exist because, moved by the mysterious fiat of the Supreme to work out something that was there in the possibilities of the Infinite, she has consented to the great sacrifice and has put on like a mask the soul and forms of the Ignorance. But personally too she has stooped to descend here into the Darkness that she may lead it to the Light, into the Falsehood and Error that she may convert it to the Truth, into this Death that she may turn it to godlike Life, into this world-pain and its obstinate sorrow and suffering that she may end it in the transforming ecstasy of her sublime Ananda. In her deep and great love for her children she has consented to put on herself the cloak of this obscurity, condescended to bear the attacks and torturing influences of the powers of the Darkness and the Falsehood, borne to pass though the portals of the birth that is a death, taken upon herself the pangs and sorrows and sufferings of the creation, since it seemed that thus alone could it be lifted to the Light and Joy and Truth and eternal Life. This is the great sacrifice called sometimes the sacrifice of the Purusha, but much more deeply the holocaust of Prakriti, the sacrifice of the Divine Mother.” The Mother

hounds of pain

:::   "If there is an evolution in material Nature and if it is an evolution of being with consciousness and life as its two key-terms and powers, this fullness of being, fullness of consciousness, fullness of life must be the goal of development towards which we are tending and which will manifest at an early or later stage of our destiny. The Self, the Spirit, the Reality that is disclosing itself out of the first inconscience of life and matter, would evolve its complete truth of being and consciousness in that life and matter. It would return to itself, — or, if its end as an individual is to return into its Absolute, it could make that return also, — not through a frustration of life but through a spiritual completeness of itself in life. Our evolution in the Ignorance with its chequered joy and pain of self-discovery and world-discovery, its half-fulfilments, its constant finding and missing, is only our first state. It must lead inevitably towards an evolution in the Knowledge, a self-finding and self-unfolding of the Spirit, a self-revelation of the Divinity in things in that true power of itself in Nature which is to us still a Supernature.” The Life Divine

“If there is an evolution in material Nature and if it is an evolution of being with consciousness and life as its two key-terms and powers, this fullness of being, fullness of consciousness, fullness of life must be the goal of development towards which we are tending and which will manifest at an early or later stage of our destiny. The Self, the Spirit, the Reality that is disclosing itself out of the first inconscience of life and matter, would evolve its complete truth of being and consciousness in that life and matter. It would return to itself,—or, if its end as an individual is to return into its Absolute, it could make that return also,—not through a frustration of life but through a spiritual completeness of itself in life. Our evolution in the Ignorance with its chequered joy and pain of self-discovery and world-discovery, its half-fulfilments, its constant finding and missing, is only our first state. It must lead inevitably towards an evolution in the Knowledge, a self-finding and self-unfolding of the Spirit, a self-revelation of the Divinity in things in that true power of itself in Nature which is to us still a Supernature.” The Life Divine

IGNORANCE. ::: Avidya, the separative consciousness and the egoistic mind and life that flow from it and all that is natural to the separative consciousness and the egoistic mind and life.

This Ignorance is the result of a movement by which the cosmic Intelligence separated itself from the light of the Supermind (the divine Gnosis) and lost the Truth.

Sevenfold Ignorance ::: If we look at this Ignorance in which ordinarily we live by the very circumstance of our separative existence in a material, ip a spatial and temporal universe, wc see that on its obscurer side it reduces itself, from whatever direction we look at or approach it, into the fact of a many- sided self-ignorance. We are Ignorant of the Absolute which is the source of all being and becoming ; we take partial facts of being, temporal relations of the becoming for the whole truth of existence — that is the first, the original ignorance. We are ignorant of the spaceless, timeless, immobile and immutable Self ; we take the constant mobility and mutation of the cosmic becom- ing in Time and Space for the whole truth of existence — that is the second, the cosmic ignorance. We are ignorant of our universal self, the cosmic existence, the cosmic consciousness, our infinite unity with all being and becoming ; we take our limited egoistic mentality, vitality, corporeality for our true self and regard everything other than that as not-sclf — that is the tViTid, \Vie egoistic ignorance. V/c aie ignorant of oat eteinai becoming in Time ; we take this Uttle life in a small span of Time, in a petty field of Space for our beginning, our middle and our end, — that is the fourth, the temporal ignorance. Even within this brief temporal becoming we are ignorant of our large and complex being, of that in us which is super-conscient, sub- conscient, intraconscient, circumcooscient to our surface becoming; we take that surface becoming with its small selection of overtly mentalised experiences for our whole existence — that is the fifth, the psychological ignorance. We are ignorant of the true constitution of our becoming ; we take the mind or life or body or any two or all three tor our true principle or the whole account of what we are, losing sight of that which constitutes them and determines by its occult presence and is meant to deter- mine sovereignly by its emergence from their operations, — that is the sixth, the constitutional ignorance. As a result of all these ignorances, we miss the true knowledge, government and enjoy- ment of our life in the world ; we are ignorant in our thought, will, sensations, actions, return wrong or imperfect responses at every point to the questionings of the world, wander in a maze of errors and desires, strivings and failures, pain and pleasure, sin and stumbling, follow a crooked road, grope blindly for a changing goal, — that is the seventh, the practical ignorance.


immensitudes ::: Sri Aurobindo: “I take upon myself the right to coin new words. ‘Immensitudes’ is not any more fantastic than ‘infinitudes’ to pair ‘infinity’.” immensitude, Immensitudes.

immensitudes ::: Sri Aurobindo: “I take upon myself the right to coin new words. ‘Immensitudes’ is not any more fantastic than ‘infinitudes’ to pair ‘infinity’.”

inflict ::: 1. To lay on or set as something to be borne, endured, obeyed, fulfilled, paid, etc. 2. To deal or mete out (something punishing or burdensome); impose. inflicted, inflicting.

intact ::: not altered, broken, or impaired; remaining uninjured, sound, or whole; untouched; unblemished.

  "In the spiritual sense, however, sacrifice has a different meaning — it does not so much indicate giving up what is held dear as an offering of oneself, one"s being, one"s mind, heart, will, body, life, actions to the Divine. It has the original sense of ‘making sacred" and is used as an equivalent of the word yajna. When the Gita speaks of the ‘sacrifice of knowledge", it does not mean a giving up of anything, but a turning of the mind towards the Divine in the search for knowledge and an offering of oneself through it. It is in this sense, too, that one speaks of the offering or sacrifice of works. The Mother has written somewhere that the spiritual sacrifice is joyful and not painful in its nature. On the spiritual path, very commonly, if a seeker still feels the old ties and responsibilities strongly he is not asked to sever or leave them, but to let the call in him grow till all within is ready. Many, indeed, come away earlier because they feel that to cut loose is their only chance, and these have to go sometimes through a struggle. But the pain, the struggle, is not the essential character of this spiritual self-offering.” Letters on Yoga

“In the spiritual sense, however, sacrifice has a different meaning—it does not so much indicate giving up what is held dear as an offering of oneself, one’s being, one’s mind, heart, will, body, life, actions to the Divine. It has the original sense of ‘making sacred’ and is used as an equivalent of the word yajna. When the Gita speaks of the ‘sacrifice of knowledge’, it does not mean a giving up of anything, but a turning of the mind towards the Divine in the search for knowledge and an offering of oneself through it. It is in this sense, too, that one speaks of the offering or sacrifice of works. The Mother has written somewhere that the spiritual sacrifice is joyful and not painful in its nature. On the spiritual path, very commonly, if a seeker still feels the old ties and responsibilities strongly he is not asked to sever or leave them, but to let the call in him grow till all within is ready. Many, indeed, come away earlier because they feel that to cut loose is their only chance, and these have to go sometimes through a struggle. But the pain, the struggle, is not the essential character of this spiritual self-offering.” Letters on Yoga

It is necessary to keep equality under pain and suffering — and that means to endure firmly and calmly, not to be restless

jaws ::: 1. In pl. The bones of the skull that frame the mouth and serve to open it; the bones that hold the teeth. 2. In pl. Anything resembling a pair of jaws or evoking the concept of grasping and holding, as the ‘jaws of death" etc.

Jhumur: “The soul has made this sacrifice of entering into darkness and now it has to pay the price of pain and suffering and work its way up. But each time it makes some kind of forward progress, more darkness, constantly more unconscious movements, imperfections, pile up. One might say the price that the spirit has to pay for having made this daring descent keeps on going up. It is like a very long journey and she [Savitri] has come to strike that out.”

Joy ::: “Pleasure, joy and delight, as man uses the words, are limited and occasional movements which depend on certain habitual causes and emerge, like their opposites pain and grief which are equally limited and occasional movements, from a background other than themselves. Delight of being is universal, illimitable and self-existent, not dependent on particular causes, the background of all backgrounds, from which pleasure, pain and other more neutral experiences emerge. When delight of being seeks to realise itself as delight of becoming, it moves in the movement of force and itself takes different forms of movement of which pleasure and pain are positive and negative currents.” The Life Divine

Knowledge, when it goes to the root of our troubles, has in itself a marvellous healing-power as it were. As soon as you touch the quick of the trouble, as soon as you, diving down and down, get at what really ails you, the pain disappears as though by a miracle.

lacerated ::: 1. *Lit. Torn; mangled. 2. Fig.* Torn with deep emotional pain; distress.

lash ::: n. **1. A whip. 2. Something that goads or pains in a manner compared to that of a whip. lashed, lashing.**

limned ::: depicted by or as painting or drawing. half-limned.

Madhav: “A kakemono is a Japanese painting which is hung on the wall. It is a print in many colours, many designs. And this world picture is compared to a kakemono of significant forms. Each form is significant, each line is meaningful.” The Book of the Divine Mother

Madhav: Here it looks as if there is a reference to Christ, but it is not to him alone. Cross signifies suffering; whoever comes from on high and does something for the earth, the return is suffering inflicted upon him. So, not only Christ, but anybody like Christ who does something for humanity and the world , has to pay for it with pain and suffering. Sat-Sang Vol. VIII

maim ::: 1. To injure, disable, or disfigure, usually by depriving of the use of a limb or other part of the body. 2. To make imperfect or defective; impair. Also fig. maims.

mar ::: to damage or spoil to a certain extent; to render less perfect, attractive, useful; impair or spoil. Now poet. or rhet. **marred.**

mate ::: n. 1. A good friend or companion. 2. A counterpart. 3. A husband or wife; spouse. 4. The partner of a bird or an animal; one of a pair. 5. An equal in reputation; peer. v. 6. To fit or join with or to. 7. To match or marry. 8. To connect or link. mates, mated.

Maya, are extraordinarily skilful ; the reason is an insufficient guide and often turns traitor ; vital desire is always with us tempting to follow any alluring call. This is the reason why in this yoga we insist so much on what we call samarpaifa — rather inadequately rendered by the English word surrender. If the heart centre is fully opened and the psychic is always in control, then there is no question ; all is safe. But the psychic can at any moment be veiled by a lower upsurge. It is only a few who are exempt from these dangers and it is precisely those to whom surrender is easily possible. The guidance of one who is himself, by identity or represents the Divine is in this difficult endeavour imperative and indispensable.

mechanic ::: n. 1. A worker skilled in making, using, or repairing machines, vehicles, and tools. mechanic"s. adj. **2. Resembling the action of a machine. 3. Resembling (inanimate) machines or their operations; acting or performed without the exercise of thought or volition; lacking spontaneity or originality; machine-like; automatic. 4. Habitual; routine; automatic. 5. Pertaining to, or controlled or affected by, physical force. mechanical, mechanically.**

**Mended, repaired, or put together, especially hastily, clumsily, or poorly.

moan ::: n. 1. A low, sustained, mournful cry, usually indicative of sorrow or pain. 2. A grumble or complaint. moaning. v. 3. To utter sounds in a low mournful manner. 4. To grumble or complain. moaned, moaning.

n. 1. The discomfort, weakness, or pain caused by a prolonged lack of food. v. 2.* Fig. To have a strong desire or craving. Hunger, *hunger"s, hungers hungered, hungering.

night-repairs ::: resorts or haunts of the night.

oh ::: used to express strong emotion, such as surprise, fear, anger, or pain.

*One dealt with her who meets the burdened great. ::: Q. "Who is ‘One" here? Is it Love, the godhead mentioned before? If not, does this ‘dubious godhead with his torch of pain" correspond to the ‘image white and high of godlike pain" spoken of a little earlier? Or is it time whose ‘snare" occurs in the last line of the preceding passage?”

— opposition, calumny, attacks, persecution, misfortunes of many kinds, adverse conditions and circumstances, pain, illness.

"Pain and grief are Nature"s reminder to the soul that the pleasure it enjoys is only a feeble hint of the real delight of existence. In each pain and torture of our being is the secret of a flame of rapture compared with which our greatest pleasures are only as dim flickerings.” Essays in Philosophy and Yoga*

“Pain and grief are Nature’s reminder to the soul that the pleasure it enjoys is only a feeble hint of the real delight of existence. In each pain and torture of our being is the secret of a flame of rapture compared with which our greatest pleasures are only as dim flickerings.” Essays in Philosophy and Yoga

Pain and pleasure arc both of them degradations of an origi- nal Ananda and can be reduced Into terms of each other or else sublimated into their original principle of Ananda.

"Pain is caused because the physical consciousness in the Ignorance is too limited to bear the touches that come upon it. Otherwise, to cosmic consciousness in its state of complete knowledge and complete experience all touches come as Ananda.” Letters on Yoga

“Pain is caused because the physical consciousness in the Ignorance is too limited to bear the touches that come upon it. Otherwise, to cosmic consciousness in its state of complete knowledge and complete experience all touches come as Ananda.” Letters on Yoga

PAIN. ::: Pain and suffering arc necessary results of the Igno- rance in which we live ; men grow by all l>.inds of experience, pain and suflcring as well as their opposites, joy and happiness and ecstasy. One can get strength from them if one meets them in the right way.

pang ::: 1. A sudden sharp spasm of pain. 2. Fig. A sudden sharp feeling of emotional distress. pangs, sense-pangs.

patient ::: adj. Sustaining pain, delay, etc. calmly and without complaint; not easily provoked; persevering in long-continued or intricate work; expecting with calmness; enduring.

picture ::: 1. A visual representation or image painted, drawn, photographed, or otherwise rendered on a flat surface. 2. A visible image however produced. 3. A particular image or reality as portrayed in an account or description; depiction; version. pictures. (See also moving picture (‘s).)

poignant ::: 1. Piercing; incisive. 2. Agreeably intense or stimulating. 3. Sharply distressing or painful to the feelings. poignancy.

pointillage ::: A word coined by Sri Aurobindo. The suffix age, originally in words adopted from Fr., is typically used in abstract nouns to indicate”aggregate”. Hence, pointillage indicates something made up of minute details; particularized. The root word, pointillism, refers to a method, invented by French impressionist painters, of producing luminous effects by crowding a surface with small spots of various colours, which are blended by the eye.

pointillage ::: a word coined by Sri Aurobindo. The suffix age, originally in words adopted from Fr., is typically used in abstract nouns to indicate "aggregate”. Hence, pointillage indicates something made up of minute details; particularized. The root word, pointillism, refers to a method, invented by French impressionist painters, of producing luminous effects by crowding a surface with small spots of various colours, which are blended by the eye.

prophecy ::: “If this higher buddhi {{understanding in the profoundest sense] could act pure of the interference of these lower members, it would give pure forms of the truth; observation would be dominated or replaced by a vision which could see without subservient dependence on the testimony of the sense-mind and senses; imagination would give place to the self-assured inspiration of the truth, reasoning to the spontaneous discernment of relations and conclusion from reasoning to an intuition containing in itself those relations and not building laboriously upon them, judgment to a thought-vision in whose light the truth would stand revealed without the mask which it now wears and which our intellectual judgment has to penetrate; while memory too would take upon itself that larger sense given to it in Greek thought and be no longer a paltry selection from the store gained by the individual in his present life, but rather the all-recording knowledge which secretly holds and constantly gives from itself everything that we now seem painfully to acquire but really in this sense remember, a knowledge which includes the future(1) no less than the past.

Psychic sadness ::: “ Painful longing ” belongs to the vital, not

pylons ::: monumental gateways in the form of a pair of truncated pyramids serving as entrances to ancient Egyptian temples.

Q.”Who is ‘One’ here? Is it Love, the godhead mentioned before? If not, does this ‘dubious godhead with his torch of pain’ correspond to the ‘image white and high of godlike pain’ spoken of a little earlier? Or is it time whose ‘snare’ occurs in the last line of the preceding passage?”

rails ::: 1. Naut. Horizontal members capping a bulwark (a solid wall enclosing the perimeter of a weather or main deck of a ship). 2. Steel bars used, usually in pairs, as tracks for railroad cars or other wheeled vehicles.

release ::: n. 1. A deliverance as from confinement, restraint, pain, grief or suffering or tension. 2. Liberation from confinement or anything that restrains or fastens; or some device or agency for effecting such liberation. v. 3. To relieve of debt or obligation. 4. To free from anything that restrains, fastens, etc. released, releasing.

relief ::: alleviation, ease, or deliverance through the removal of pain, distress, oppression, etc.

rend ::: 1. To tear apart; split; divide. Also fig. 2. To cause pain or distress to; esp. the heart.** rends, rent, rending.**

reredos ::: ornamental screens or wall decorations at the back of an altar, in the form of a hanging, tapestry, painting, or piece of metalwork or sculpture.

sadistic ::: pertaining to cruelty that evidences a subconscious craving and is apparently satisfied, sexually or otherwise, by the infliction of pain on another by means of aggressive or destructive behaviour or the assertion of power over that person; also loosely, deliberate or excessive cruelty morbidly enjoyed.

scrupulous ::: conscientious and exact; painstaking; attentive and careful in every detail.

::: **"See God everywhere and be not frightened by masks. Believe that all falsehood is truth in the making or truth in the breaking, all failure an effectuality concealed, all weakness strength hiding itself from its own vision, all pain a secret & violent ecstasy.” Essays Divine and Human

“See God everywhere and be not frightened by masks. Believe that all falsehood is truth in the making or truth in the breaking, all failure an effectuality concealed, all weakness strength hiding itself from its own vision, all pain a secret & violent ecstasy.” Essays Divine and Human

self-expression ::: the expression or assertion of one"s own personality, as in conversation, behaviour, poetry, or painting.

-shackled ::: bound with a chain, ring, or other fastening as of iron for the ankle or wrist of a prisoner, usually one of a pair, which is fastened to a ring-bolt in the floor or wall of the cell. sense-shackled.

shame ::: 1. A painful emotion caused by a strong sense of guilt, embarassment, unworthiness, or disgrace. 2. Something that brings one dishonour, disgrace, or condemnation. Now poet.

shatter ::: 1. To break or burst suddenly into pieces, as with a violent blow; smash. 2. To impair or destroy (health, nerves, etc.). 3. To weaken, destroy, or refute (ideas, opinions, etc.). 4. To damage, as by breaking or crushing. shattered, shatterer.

Shruti: “The prelude to the destruction or dissolution of the body, the mind, the ego, where any breaking down of any formation is painful. So the hounds are agents which lead to dissolution.”

shun ::: to keep away from (a place, person, object, etc.), from motives of dislike, caution, etc.; take pains to avoid. shuns, shunned, shunning.

sketch ::: n. 1. A rough plan, drawing or painting giving a preliminary presentation of something to be completed at a later date. v. 2. To make a rough outline of. sketched.

slake ::: to lessen the force, pain, acuteness or activity of; (as thirst, anger, etc.); moderate.

soft ::: 1. Mild and pleasant; in a relaxed manner. 2. Smooth and agreeable to the touch; not rough or coarse. 3. Not hard or sharp. 4. Mild and pleasant weather. 5. Not loud, harsh, or irritating to the ear; melodious. 6. Of a gentle disposition; tender. 7. Not burdensome or demanding; borne or done easily and without hardship. 8. Of words, speech, etc.: Smooth, soothing; expressive of what is tender or peaceful. (Sri Aurobindo also employs the word as an adv.: Gently, carefully, tenderly; in such a manner as to avoid causing pain or injury; without force or violence; with gentle action.) soft-winged.

soothe ::: 1. To calm, as a person or the feelings; relieve, comfort. 2. To relieve or assuage (pain, longing, etc.) soothes, soothed.

sorrow ::: 1. Mental suffering or pain caused by injury, loss, or despair. 2. Expression of sorrow; grieving; poet., tears. sorrow"s, Sorrow"s, sorrows, Man of Sorrows (see Man)

SPIRITISM. ::: It is quite possible for the dead or rather the departed — for they are not dead — who are still in regions rear the earth to have communication with the living ; some- times it happens automatically, sometimes by an effort at com- munication on one side of the curtain or the other. There is no impossibility of such communication by the means used by the spiritists ; usually however, genuine communications or a contact can only be with those who are yet m a wodd which is s sort of idealised replica of the earth-consciousness and in which the same personality, ideas, memories persist that the person had here. But all that pretends to be communications with departed souls is not genuine, especially when it is done through a paid professional medium. There is there an enormous amount of mixture of a very undesirable kind — for apart from the great mass of unconscious suggestions from the sitters or the contn-

spouse ::: either member of a married pair in relation to the other; one"s husband or wife. Spouse.

Sri Aurobindo: "Hell and heaven are often imaginary states of the soul or rather of the vital which it constructs about it after its passing. What is meant by hell is a painful passage through the vital or lingering there, as for instance, in many cases of suicide where one remains surrounded by the forces of suffering and turmoil created by this unnatural and violent exit. There are, of course, also worlds of mind and vital worlds which are penetrated with joyful or dark experiences. One may pass through these as the result of things formed in the nature which create the necessary affinities, but the idea of reward or retribution is a crude and vulgar conception which is a mere popular error.” Letters on Yoga

Sri Aurobindo: "If this higher buddhi {{understanding in the profoundest sense] could act pure of the interference of these lower members, it would give pure forms of the truth; observation would be dominated or replaced by a vision which could see without subservient dependence on the testimony of the sense-mind and senses; imagination would give place to the self-assured inspiration of the truth, reasoning to the spontaneous discernment of relations and conclusion from reasoning to an intuition containing in itself those relations and not building laboriously upon them, judgment to a thought-vision in whose light the truth would stand revealed without the mask which it now wears and which our intellectual judgment has to penetrate; while memory too would take upon itself that larger sense given to it in Greek thought and be no longer a paltry selection from the store gained by the individual in his present life, but rather the all-recording knowledge which secretly holds and constantly gives from itself everything that we now seem painfully to acquire but really in this sense remember, a knowledge which includes the future(1) no less than the past. ::: Footnote: In this sense the power of prophecy has been aptly called a memory of the future.]” *The Synthesis of Yoga

Sri Aurobindo: "I take upon myself the right to coin new words. ‘Immensitudes" is not any more fantastic than ‘infinitudes" to pair ‘infinity".” immensitude, Immensitudes.

Sri Aurobindo: " Love? It is not Love who meets the burdened great and governs the fate of men! Nor is it Pain. Time also does not do these things — it only provides the field and movement of events. If I had wanted to give a name, I would have done it, but it has purposely to be left nameless because it is indefinable. He may use Love or Pain or Time or any of these powers but is not any of them. You can call him the Master of the Evolution, if you like. Letters of Savitri

Sri Aurobindo: “ Love? It is not Love who meets the burdened great and governs the fate of men! Nor is it Pain. Time also does not do these things—it only provides the field and movement of events. If I had wanted to give a name, I would have done it, but it has purposely to be left nameless because it is indefinable. He may use Love or Pain or Time or any of these powers but is not any of them. You can call him the Master of the Evolution, if you like. Letters of Savitri

*Sri Aurobindo: "Pain is the key that opens the gates of strength; it is the high-road that leads to the city of beatitude.” Essays Divine and Human

*Sri Aurobindo: "Pleasure, joy and delight, as man uses the words, are limited and occasional movements which depend on certain habitual causes and emerge, like their opposites pain and grief which are equally limited and occasional movements, from a background other than themselves. Delight of being is universal, illimitable and self-existent, not dependent on particular causes, the background of all backgrounds, from which pleasure, pain and other more neutral experiences emerge. When delight of being seeks to realise itself as delight of becoming, it moves in the movement of force and itself takes different forms of movement of which pleasure and pain are positive and negative currents.” The Life Divine*

Sri Aurobindo: ” See God everywhere and be not frightened by masks. Believe that all falsehood is truth in the making or truth in the breaking, all failure an effectuality concealed, all weakness strength hiding itself from its own vision, all pain a secret & violent ecstasy. If thou believest firmly & unweariedly, in the end thou wilt see & experience the All-true, Almighty & All-blissful.” Essays Divine and Human*

Sri Aurobindo: "The Mother not only governs all from above but she descends into this lesser triple universe. Impersonally, all things here, even the movements of the Ignorance, are herself in veiled power and her creations in diminished substance, her Nature-body and Nature-force, and they exist because, moved by the mysterious fiat of the Supreme to work out something that was there in the possibilities of the Infinite, she has consented to the great sacrifice and has put on like a mask the soul and forms of the Ignorance. But personally too she has stooped to descend here into the Darkness that she may lead it to the Light, into the Falsehood and Error that she may convert it to the Truth, into this Death that she may turn it to godlike Life, into this world-pain and its obstinate sorrow and suffering that she may end it in the transforming ecstasy of her sublime Ananda. In her deep and great love for her children she has consented to put on herself the cloak of this obscurity, condescended to bear the attacks and torturing influences of the powers of the Darkness and the Falsehood, borne to pass though the portals of the birth that is a death, taken upon herself the pangs and sorrows and sufferings of the creation, since it seemed that thus alone could it be lifted to the Light and Joy and Truth and eternal Life. This is the great sacrifice called sometimes the sacrifice of the Purusha, but much more deeply the holocaust of Prakriti, the sacrifice of the Divine Mother.” The Mother

Sri Aurobindo: "What is meant by hell is a painful passage through the vital or lingering there, as for instance, in many cases of suicide where one remains surrounded by the forces of suffering and turmoil created by this unnatural and violent exit.” *Letters on Yoga

*Sri Aurobindo: "When there is some lowering or diminution of the consciousness or some impairing of it at one place or another, the Adversary — or the Censor — who is always on the watch presses with all his might wherever there is a weak point lying covered from your own view, and suddenly a wrong movement leaps up with unexpected force. Become conscious and cast out the possibility of its renewal, that is all that is to be done.” Letters on Yoga

stab ::: 1. A wound inflicted with or as if with a pointed weapon. 2. Sudden, brief, and usually painful, sensations. 3. A thrust. Also fig. stabs, flame-stabs.

sting ::: 1. Pain or irritation resulting from a wound inflicted by an venomous insect, reptile, poisonous plant, etc. 2. Fig. A mental or emotional pain or suffering inflicted on someone, or a stimulus, goad or spur.

sting ::: fig. Something that wounds the mind, heart, or spirit with or as if with a sudden sharp pain, stinging, stings.

stricken ::: affected by something overwhelming, such as disease, trouble, or painful emotion.

stroke ::: 1. The act or an instance of striking, as with the hand, a weapon, or a tool; a blow or impact. 2. A blow struck at an object; e.g. with a hammer, axe, etc. 3. An act of hitting, or the blow given; also said of divine retribution. 4. A movement or mark made in one direction by a pen, pencil, paintbrush etc. 5. A single complete movement, esp. one continuously repeated in some process. strokes.

strophes ::: the first of a pair of stanzas of alternating form on which the structure of a given poem is based.

suffer ::: 1. To undergo or sustain (something painful, injurious, or unpleasant). distress, grief, etc. 2. To tolerate or allow. 3. To undergo or experience (any action, process, or condition). 4. To submit to endure or to be something. suffers, suffered.

Suffering in yoga ::: There are two ways to meet ::: first that of the Self, calm, equality, a spint, a will, a mind, a vital, a physical consciousness that remain resolutely turned towards the Divine and unshaken by all suggestion of doubt, desire, attachment, depression, sorrow, pain, inertia. This is possible when the inner being awakens, when one becomes conscious of the Self, of the inner Mind, the inner Vital, the inner Physical, for that can more easily attune itself to the divine Will, and then there is a division in the being as if there were two beings, one within calm, strong, equal, unperturbed, a charmel of the Divine Consciousness and

" Suffering is not inflicted as a punishment for sin or for hostility — that is a wrong idea. Suffering comes like pleasure and good fortune as an inevitable part of life in the ignorance. The dualities of pleasure and pain, joy and grief, good fortune and ill-fortune are the inevitable results of the ignorance which separates us from our true consciousness and from the Divine. Only by coming back to it can we get rid of suffering. Karma from the past lives exists, much of what happens is due to it, but not all. For we can mend our karma by our own consciousness and efforts. But the suffering is simply a natural consequence of past errors, not a punishment, just as a burn is the natural consequence of playing with fire. It is part of the experience by which the soul through its instruments learns and grows until it is ready to turn to the Divine.” Letters on Yoga

“ Suffering is not inflicted as a punishment for sin or for hostility—that is a wrong idea. Suffering comes like pleasure and good fortune as an inevitable part of life in the ignorance. The dualities of pleasure and pain, joy and grief, good fortune and ill-fortune are the inevitable results of the ignorance which separates us from our true consciousness and from the Divine. Only by coming back to it can we get rid of suffering. Karma from the past lives exists, much of what happens is due to it, but not all. For we can mend our karma by our own consciousness and efforts. But the suffering is simply a natural consequence of past errors, not a punishment, just as a burn is the natural consequence of playing with fire. It is part of the experience by which the soul through its instruments learns and grows until it is ready to turn to the Divine.” Letters on Yoga

suffering ::: n. 1. The condition of one who suffers; the bearing of pain or distress. 2. Pain, misery, or loss experienced by a person who suffers. adj. 3. Troubled by pain or loss. suffering"s, sufferings.

Tamasie vairSgya arises from dissatisfaction, disappointment, a feeling of inability to succeed or face life, a crushing under the grips and pains of life.

The artificers of Nature’s fall and pain

:::   "The greater the destruction, the freer the chances of creation; but the destruction is often long, slow and oppressive, the creation tardy in its coming or interrupted in its triumph. The night returns again and again and the day lingers or seems even to have been a false dawning. Despair not therefore, but watch and work. Those who hope violently, despair swiftly: neither hope nor fear, but be sure of God"s purpose and thy will to accomplish.” *Essays in Philosophy and Yoga

“The greater the destruction, the freer the chances of creation; but the destruction is often long, slow and oppressive, the creation tardy in its coming or interrupted in its triumph. The night returns again and again and the day lingers or seems even to have been a false dawning. Despair not therefore, but watch and work. Those who hope violently, despair swiftly: neither hope nor fear, but be sure of God’s purpose and thy will to accomplish.” Essays in Philosophy and Yoga

The more intimate Yo^a of Bhakti resolves itself simply into these four movements, tlic desire of the Soul when it turns towards God and the straining of its emotion towards him, the pain of love and the divine return of love, the delight of love possessed and the play of that delight, and the eternal enjoy- ment of the divine Lover which is the heart of celestial bliss.

  "The progress of Life involves the development and interlocking of an immense number of things that are in conflict with each other and seem often to be absolute oppositions and contraries. To find amid these oppositions some principle or standing-ground of unity, some workable lever of reconciliation which will make possible a larger and better development on a basis of harmony and not of conflict and struggle, must be increasingly the common aim of humanity in its active life-evolution, if it at all means to rise out of life"s more confused, painful and obscure movement, out of the compromises made by Nature with the ignorance of the Life-mind and the nescience of Matter. This can only be truly and satisfactorily done when the soul discovers itself in its highest and completest spiritual reality and effects a progressive upward transformation of its life-values into those of the spirit; for there they will all find their spiritual truth and in that truth their standing-ground of mutual recognition and reconciliation. The spiritual is the one truth of which all others are the veiled aspects, the brilliant disguises or the dark disfigurements, and in which they can find their own right form and true relation to each other.” *The Human Cycle, etc.

“The progress of Life involves the development and interlocking of an immense number of things that are in conflict with each other and seem often to be absolute oppositions and contraries. To find amid these oppositions some principle or standing-ground of unity, some workable lever of reconciliation which will make possible a larger and better development on a basis of harmony and not of conflict and struggle, must be increasingly the common aim of humanity in its active life-evolution, if it at all means to rise out of life’s more confused, painful and obscure movement, out of the compromises made by Nature with the ignorance of the Life-mind and the nescience of Matter. This can only be truly and satisfactorily done when the soul discovers itself in its highest and completest spiritual reality and effects a progressive upward transformation of its life-values into those of the spirit; for there they will all find their spiritual truth and in that truth their standing-ground of mutual recognition and reconciliation. The spiritual is the one truth of which all others are the veiled aspects, the brilliant disguises or the dark disfigurements, and in which they can find their own right form and true relation to each other.” The Human Cycle, etc.

There is after death a period In which one passes through the vital world and lives there for a time, it is only the first part of this transit that can be dangerous or painful ; in the rest one vsorks out, under certain surroundings, the remnant of the vital desires which one had in the body. As soon as one is tired of these and able to go beyond, the vital sheath is dropped and the soul, after a time needed to get rid of some mental survivals, passes into a state of rest in the psychic world and remains there till the next life on earth.

thorns ::: 1. Any of various sharp, spiny protuberances. 2. Fig. Things that cause sharp pain, irritation, or discomfort.

throe ::: a severe pang or spasm, as in the pain of childbirth. throes.

ticket ::: a paper slip or card indicating that its holder has paid for or is entitled to a specified service, right, or consideration.

tions; but here there comes in the Overmind law of each Force working out its own possibilities. The natural possibilities of a world in which an original Inconscience and a division of consciousness are the main principles, would be the emergence of Forces of Darkness impelled to maintain the Ignorance by which they live, an ignorant struggle to know originative of falsehood and error, an ignorant struggle to live engendering wrong and evil, an egoistic struggle to enjoy, parent of fragmentary joys and pains and sufferings; these are therefore the inevitable first-imprinted characters, though not the sole possibilities of our evolutionary existence. Still, because the Non-Existence is a concealed Existence, the Inconscience a concealed Consciousness, the insensibility a masked and dormant Ananda, these secret realities must emerge; the hidden Overmind and Supermind too must in the end fulfil themselves in this apparently opposite organisation from a dark Infinite. …

To bear extreme heat and cold it is necessary to have peace in the cells first, then consolidated force. Pain and discomfort come from a physical consciousness not forceful enough to deter- mine its own reaction to things.

torment ::: n. 1. An action that causes great pain, suffering, or anguish; torture. 2. A state of great physical pain or mental torture; anguish. v. 3. To annoy, pester, or harass. tormented, tormenting, torment-craft.

torture ::: n. 1. Infliction of severe physical pain as a means of punishment, coercion or malevolent purpose. 2. Excruciating physical or mental pain; agony. self-torture. *v. *3. To bring great physical or mental pain upon another. tortures.

torturing ::: that causes excruciating physical or mental pain.

travail ::: n. 1. Painfully difficult or burdensome work; toil; labour. v. 2. To work strenuously toil. travailed.

twin ::: n. 1. One of two offspring born at the same birth. 2. Either of two persons or things that are identical or very similar; counterpart. 3. One of a pair; identical. twins. adj. 4. Being two identical. 5. Twofold or double. v. 6. To bring two objects, ideas, or people together; unite. lit. and fig. **twinned.**

Un of the Spirit in things, and only outwardly an evolution of species. Thus also, the delight of existence emerges from the original insentience, first in the contrary forms of pleasure and pain and then has to find itself in the bliss of the Spirit or as it is called in the Upanishads, the bliss of the Brahman.

wage ::: 1. Payment for labour or services to a worker, especially remuneration on an hourly, daily, or weekly basis or by the piece. 2. Fig. A fitting return; a reward; a recompense. wages. *v. *3. To engage in (a war or campaign, for example).

When the physical consciousness is being changed,' the chkl resistance comes from the subconscient. It is constantly main- taining or bringing back the inertia, weakness, obscurity, lack of intelligence which afflict the physical mind and vitd or' the obscure fears, desires, angers, Jiisis of the physical vital, or the illnesses, dullnesses, pains, incapabilUies to which the body- nature is prone.

When there is some lowering or dlroinulion of the conscious- ness or some impairing of it at one place or another, the Adver- sary— or the CcMor — who is always on the watch presses with all his might wherever there is a weak point lying covered from your own view and suddenly a wrong movement leaps up with unexpected force.

"When we study this Life as it manifests itself upon earth with Matter as its basis, we observe that essentially it is a form of the one cosmic Energy, a dynamic movement or current of it positive and negative, a constant act or play of the Force which builds up forms, energises them by a continual stream of stimulation and maintains them by an unceasing process of disintegration and renewal of their substance. This would tend to show that the natural opposition we make between death and life is an error of our mentality, one of those false oppositions — false to inner truth though valid in surface practical experience — which, deceived by appearances, it is constantly bringing into the universal unity.” The Life Divine ::: *life"s, life-born, life-curve, life-delight"s, life-drift, life-foam, life-giving, life-impulse, life-impulse"s, life-motives, life-nature"s, life-pain, life-plan, life-power, life-room, life-scene, life-self, life-thought, life-wants, all-life, sense-life.

::: "Wherever thou seest a great end, be sure of a great beginning. Where a monstrous and painful destruction appals thy mind, console it with the certainty of a large and great creation. God is there not only in the still small voice, but in the fire and in the whirlwind.” Essays in Philosophy and Yoga

“Wherever thou seest a great end, be sure of a great beginning. Where a monstrous and painful destruction appals thy mind, console it with the certainty of a large and great creation. God is there not only in the still small voice, but in the fire and in the whirlwind.” Essays in Philosophy and Yoga

world ::: 1. Everything that exists; the universe; the macrocosm. 2. The earth with its inhabitants. 3. Any sphere, realm, or domain, with all pertaining to it. 4. Any period, state, or sphere of existence. world"s, worlds, wonder-world, wonder-worlds, world-adventure, world-adventure"s, world-being"s, World-Bliss, world-cloak, world-conjecture"s, world-creating, world-creators, world-delight, World-Delight, world-destiny, world-destroying, world-disillusion"s, world-dream, world-drowse, world-egos, world-energies, world-energy, World-Energy, world-force, world-experience, world-fact, world-failure"s, world-fate, World-Force, world-forces, World-free, World-Geometer"s, world-heart, world-idea, world-ignorance, World-Ignorance, World-maker"s, world-indifference, world-interpreting, world-kindergarten, world-knowledge, world-law, world-laws, world-libido"s, world-making"s, World-Matter"s, World-naked, world-need, world-ocean"s, world-outline, world-pain, world-passion, World-personality, world-pile, world-plan, world-power, World-Power, World-Power"s, World-Puissance, world-rapture, world-redeemer"s, world-rhyme, world-rhythms, world-scene, world-scheme, world-sea, World-Self, world-shape, world-shapes, world-space, world-stuff, world-symbol, World-symbols, World-task, world-time, World-Time‘s, world-tree, world-ways, world-whim, dream-world, heaven-world, mid-world.

You must learn to stand back from the physical pain or uneasi- ness and localise it. If you can do that and do it completely, the pain or uneasiness itself will be more easily and quietly removed and you will not be overpowered. You can see that the Force has the power to lake away the pains.



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1:Sonetos Ao Pai
~ Augosto dos Anjos,
2:Para Onde Fores, Pai, Para Onde Fores
~ Augosto dos Anjos,
3:Se pudesse tinha-te protegido. A esperança, pai. ~ Jos Lu s Peixoto,
4:Meu pai odeia The Who."
"Seu pai é um babaca ~ Alaya Dawn Johnson,
5:No fim das contas, pai, a garra pode valer mais do que o talento. ~ Angela Duckworth,
6:Pai, ter a tua memória dentro da minha é como carregar uma vingança. ~ Jos Lu s Peixoto,
7:uma filha não
deveria ter que
implorar ao pai
por um relacionamento ~ Rupi Kaur,
8:Livros, como costuma dizer o meu pai, são árvores que aprenderam a falar. ~ Jos Eduardo Agualusa,
9:Que vergonha, senhor meu Pai, para um país com tantas glórias como o nosso! ~ Maria Teresa Horta,
10:- Que vida triste! - tornou o pai.
- Uma vida de mulher - murmurou a filha. ~ Honor de Balzac,
11:Pai may be corrupt, but she knows who owns which parts, and so she trusts him. ~ Paolo Bacigalupi,
12:O Tao imaginou o Um, o Um exalou o Dois, o Dois é pai do Três e o Três, pai de todas as coisas. ~ Lao Tzu,
13:Os homens se esquecem com maior rapidez da morte de um pai que da perda de um patrimônio. ~ Niccol Machiavelli,
14:Ai sim, e eu sou o Pai Natal, Dill. Cala-te, mas é - disse o Jem. - A que é que vamos brincar hoje? ~ Anonymous,
15:não sei dizer se minha mãe está
aterrorizada ou apaixonada pelo
meu pai parece tudo
a mesma coisa ~ Rupi Kaur,
16:Jobs lembrou-se do incidente vividamente porque foi a primeira vez que percebeu que seu pai não sabia tudo. ~ Walter Isaacson,
17:Ser pai ou mãe é uma preparação para aquele dia, quando seu filho estará diante do tribunal de Cristo e prestará contas. ~ C J Mahaney,
18:O meu pai entregava-se de alma e coração a todas as causas perdidas, aos vencidos da vida, aos lugares sem salvação. ~ Jos Eduardo Agualusa,
19:É. Ele é muito bom em xadrez.
A gramática era o único lugar onde poderia manter seu pai vivo, e tinha intenção de fazê-lo. ~ Anthony Marra,
20:- Mas você ficaria à vontade passando a noite toda longe do pobre menino? - Sim; se o pai pode fazê-lo, por que eu não poderia? ~ Jane Austen,
21:Assim como Cristo manteve a comunhão com o Pai ao levar fardos, o discípulo, ao levar fardos, mantém a comunhão com Cristo. ~ Dietrich Bonhoeffer,
22:Os livros ou, dizia o pai com sulcos de muito matutar na testa, os cabrões dos livros. O rapaz tinha contraído a febre de ler. ~ Fernando Aramburu,
23:(…) jurara a si próprio que permaneceria, fiel toda a sua vida à premissa que fizera um dia ao seu pai, a de nunca deixar de se maravilhar. ~ Marc Levy,
24:Pensando na morte de seu irmão - e no ataque mortal do pai - me peguei comparando aquele sorriso seu com um curativo sobre uma ferida.

(p.75) ~ Philip Roth,
25:[…] e chorei de alegria e confiança sobre as páginas do escritor como nos braços de um pai reencontrado."
Marcel Proust, in: No caminho de Swann ~ Marcel Proust,
26:Em toda a vida, teve um único desempenho: ser pai. E todo o bom pai enfrenta a mesma tentação: guardar para si os filhos, fora do mundo, longe do tempo. ~ Mia Couto,
27:åpana teja samhåro åpai, tino° loka hå° ka te° kå° pai. It is only you who can manage and control your power. All the three worlds tremble when you roar. ~ Anonymous,
28:esse cara é legal. ele se matou e a seu pai, sua mãe, e à mulher, mas não atirou nos três filhos nem no cachorro. um dos melhores poetas desde Baudelaire ~ Charles Bukowski,
29:Nessa mesma noite, o pai de Rosa deitava-se em cima de Isabel, com o seu cheiro a bode, a alecrim e a Deus. (...)Deus cheira a touro, a terra e ao ventre das coisas. ~ Afonso Cruz,
30:Adversário, Destruidor de Reis, Anjo do Poço Sem Fundo, Grande Besta que é chamada de Dragão, Príncipe Deste Mundo, Pai das Mentiras, Filho de Satã e Senhor das Trevas. ~ Anonymous,
31:Continuei a ler compulsivamente e julgo que acabei por encontrar o meu pai. Não por ter lido um sótão inteiro (e mais, muito mais), mas por ter-me tornado pai eu próprio. ~ Afonso Cruz,
32:Os meninos eram uns brutos, como o pai. Quando crescessem, guardariam as reses de um patrão invisível, seriam pisados, maltratados, machucados por um soldado amarelo ~ Graciliano Ramos,
33:Romeu, Romeu! Ah! Porque és tu Romeu? Renega o pai, despoja-te do nome; ou então, se não quiseres juro ao menos que amor me tens, porque uma Capuleto deixarei de ser logo. ~ William Shakespeare,
34:Numa ocasião ouvi um cliente habitual comentar na livraria do meu pai que poucas coisas marcam tanto um leitor como o primeiro livro que realmente abre caminho até ao seu coração. ~ Carlos Ruiz Zaf n,
35:Mefistófeles:
Sexo desgraçado, sempre na ilusão!
Seduzidos sempre, desde o pai Adão!
Velhos ficam todos - mas inteligentes?
Não caíste ainda em logros bastantes? ~ Johann Wolfgang von Goethe,
36:O segredo que não contei a meu pai foi o segredo que escondi a mim mesma. Minha mãe sabia. O único medo que ele tinha era que ela descobrisse. Assim, esse foi o dia em que nosso jogo começou. ~ Toni Maguire,
37:E tu, sincero, a dizeres apenas um olhar suplicante, um olhar para eu nunca mais esquecer. Pai. À hora, mandaram-nos sair. Quando saímos, agarrados como náufragos, a luz abundante bebia-nos ~ Jos Lu s Peixoto,
38:O pai faz abrir a mala do automóvel e de lá espreitam embrulhos e celofanes. São mais os enfeites que os conteúdos, mas não é assim mesmo a festa: feita de ilusão e brilhos maiores que as substâncias? ~ Mia Couto,
39:o problema de ter
um pai alcoólatra
é que um pai alcoólatra
não existe

simplesmente
um alcoólatra
que não conseguiria ficar sóbrio
tempo o suficiente para criar os filhos ~ Rupi Kaur,
40:Nasci em Blunderstone, Suffolk, ou “por ali”, como dizem na Escócia. Fui filho póstumo. Os olhos de meu pai estavam fechados para a luz deste mundo havia seis meses quando os meus se abriram para ele. ~ Charles Dickens,
41:Por isso, para muita gente, a prece mais fervorosa, na hora de ir para a cairia, não é o consabido pai-nosso ou a sempiterna ave-maria, mas sim esta, Livrai-nos, Senhor, de todo o mal, e em particular da ira dos mansos. ~ Jos Saramago,
42:(...)depois de acordar de um pesadelo, nada a sossegava mais do que a respiração do pai, ali ao seu lado, e o folhear das páginas. Nada conseguia espantar mais rapidamente os sonhos maus do que o sussurrar do papel impresso. ~ Cornelia Funke,
43:If one limb of the body is defected or inflicted with, disease, the whole feels tha pai. Some way if any department, minister or official of the state is faulty, the whole country is effected. An administrator should try hard to curb it. ~ Chanakya,
44:- Am sa-mi fac desteptatorul la sase dimineata.
- Sase? am interogat eu.
Daca vreti sa stiti de ce am interogat, pai asta e din cauza ca pentru mine sase nu inseamna foarte devreme dimineata, ci foarte intarziat noaptea. ~ Jonathan Safran Foer,
45:Havia muitos miúdos-a-caminho-de-trabalharem-na-empresa-do-pai, muitos artistas-até-se-desiludirem, muitos perdidos, muitos activistas-de-algo-que-só-eles-conheciam, muitos deslocados, muitos existencialistas e muitos neo-qualquer-coisa. ~ Jos Lu s Peixoto,
46:O meu pai declarou: a Islândia pensa. A Islândia é temperamental, imatura como as crianças, mimada. Tem uma idade geológica pueril. É, no cômputo do mundo, infante. Por viver a infância, decide com muito erro, agressiva e exuberantemente. ~ Valter Hugo M e,
47:O jokal Eugene tem de parar de fazer o trabalho de Deus. Deus é grande o suficiente para fazer seu próprio trabalho. Se Deus for julgar nosso pai por escolher o caminho de nossos ancestrais, então Ele que faça o julgamento, não Eugene. ~ Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie,
48:Ela era a única pessoa que ele não conseguia ofuscar, e ele a adorava por isso.
Foi só muitos anos depois que Ronan ficou sabendo que o rei havia sonhado a sua rainha. Mas, pensando bem, fazia sentido. Seu pai adorava sonhar com a luz também. ~ Maggie Stiefvater,
49:Embora Mr. Gulliver tenha nascido em Nottinghamshire, onde seu pai viveu, eu o ouvi dizer que sua família veio de Oxfordshire; confirmando o fato, observei no cemitério da igrega em Bandury, neste condado, diversas tumbas e monumentos dos Gullivers. ~ Jonathan Swift,
50:Pai, ter a tua memória dentro da minha é como carregar uma saca às costas com uma vingança guardada para este mundo que nos castiga, cruel, este mundo que pisa aquele outro que pudemos viver juntos, que sempre nos orgulharemos, que amámos para nunca esquecer. ~ Jos Lu s Peixoto,
51:(...) pareceu-me de súbito que a minha humilde vida e os reinos da verdade não estavam tão separados como supusera, que chegavam até a coincidir em certos pontos, e chorei de alegria e confiança sobre as páginas do escritor, como nos braços de um pai reencontrado. ~ Marcel Proust,
52:Se tudo o que eu tivesse feito na vida fosse ter nascido e ser descoberto, ainda assim teria deixado uma marca em toda aquela terra, para todo sempre. Cresci sem pai nem mãe, numa corte onde todos me conheciam como um divisor de águas. E um divisor de águas eu me tornei. ~ Robin Hobb,
53:II John 1:8 Look to yourselves, that ye lose not the things which we have wrought, but that ye receive a full reward. II João 1:9 Todo aquele que vai além do ensino de Cristo e não permanece nele, não tem a Deus; quem permanece neste ensino, esse tem tanto ao Pai como ao Filho. ~ Anonymous,
54:Gansey piscou os olhos, e então seu rosto se transformou no sorriso de Richard Campbell Gansey III. Que tesouro era aquele sorriso, transmitido através de eras de pai para filho, guardado em baús de noivas em gerações sem filhos, polido e exibido orgulhosamente sempre que uma companhia partia. ~ Maggie Stiefvater,
55:Meu pai era um homem que enchia o mundo, o pé dele entrava em casa e sentíamos o balanço do seu peso como se, de repente, estivéssemos num pequeno barco”.
My father was a men that filled the world, his foot entered homeand we felt the the swing of its weight, like, suddenly, we were in a little boat. ~ Mia Couto,
56:Contava-te tudo na certeza de não te perder e perdi-te. Perdi o meu amigo. Tantas saudades. Pai amigo. Estamos a chegar. E o sol estende-se em tudo, como o inverno se espraiou, fúnebre, na noite em que te perdi, na noite em que vi surgir, como vejo agora, o perfil da nossa terra, desta terra agora cruel. ~ Jos Lu s Peixoto,
57:No dia de sua morte, minha avó entregou ao meu pai o relógio de bolso do senhor arcebispo, de ouro maciço, marca Ferrocarril de Antioquia, mas fabricado na Suíça, que conservo até hoje e que passará ao meu filho, como um testemunho e um estandarte (embora eu não saiba do quê), no dia em que eu morrer [60]. ~ H ctor Abad Faciolince,
58:-Você chora a morte de seu pai, Branford? - berrou novamente o pirata. - Eu choro a morte do meu! - e o pirata bateu forte duas vezes no peito. - Você sente pela morte de seus soldados? Eu sinto pela morte dos meus! Mas sabe qual é a nossa diferença, príncipe?
Eu sou filho de um pirata, e você é filho de um Rei. ~ Raphael Draccon,
59:Meu pai era dono de botequim, porém insistia que era preciso escolher as palavras com precisão, e nisso sou como ele. As palavras têm significados — meu pai só estudou até a sétima série, mas até ele sabia disso. Atrás do balcão ele guardava duas coisas pra resolver discussões entre seus clientes: um porrete e um dicionário. ~ Philip Roth,
60:Um pardal pousou no pessegueiro, bicou uma folha e prosseguiu seu voo. Virgínia seguiu-o com o olhar. Devia ser bom, também, nascer passarinho. Passarinho não tem essa complicação de pai e mãe assim separados. E passarinho não fica louco nunca. Franziu a testa: ou fica? Beija-flor era um que não parecia muito certo. ~ Lygia Fagundes Telles,
61:I'm Cooper Taylor. I'm a Scorpio. I enjoy women, long walks on the beach, and my roommate says I use girly shampoo. Oh, and I generally hate anyone in the film industry because they're total assholes. Guess you could say I'm you Pai Mei."

"Willow Avery. Actress, Cancer, and according to my team, on my last leg before porn. ~ Emily Snow,
62:Sócrates – Mas se te tornares sábio, meu filho, todos serão teus amigos e teus parentes: serás útil e bom. Se não, nem os estranhos, nem teu pai, nem tua mãe, nem os teus familiares serão teus amigos. Como é possível ter pensamentos de arrogância sobre assuntos em que nem sequer se sabe pensar ainda? (PLATÃO. Lísias). ~ Cl vis de Barros Filho,
63:E este lugar que era mundo, agora, vazio oco quer ser mundo ainda. E, realmente, tudo se mantém suspenso. Tudo quer e tenta ser igual. Todos parecem acreditar. Sem ti, as pessoas ainda vão para onde iam, ainda seguem as mesmas linhas invisíveis. Mas eu sei, pai. Perderam-se as leis contigo. Perdeu-se a ordem que trazias. Pai ~ Jos Lu s Peixoto,
64:O Crisóstomo então levantou-se, atravessou o quarto, saiu, foi ver o Camilo deitado e beijá-lo para dormir e disse-lhe: nunca limites o amor, filho, nunca por preconceito algum limites o amor. O miúdo perguntou: por que dizes isso, pai. O pescador respondeu: porque é o único modo de também tu, um dia, te sentires o dobro do que és. ~ Valter Hugo M e,
65:Há frases assim felizes. Nascem modestamente, como a gente pobre; quando menos pensam, estão governando o mundo, à semelhança das idéias. As próprias idéias nem sempre conservam o nome do pai; muitas aparecem órfãs, nascidas de nada e de ninguém. Cada um pega delas, verte-as como pode, e vai levá-las à feira, onde todos as têm por suas ~ Machado de Assis,
66:Depois,inesperadamente,os lábios do pai curvaram-se num sorriso que lhe transmitiu esperança,mas que era dirigido ao corpo da mãe e não para si.O pai sorria à mãe, mas ela não via.Talvez tivesse sido assim desde sempre.(...)Ocorreu-lhe que,talvez,durante todo aquele tempo,o pai tivesse sorrido à mãe sem que ela visse,e vice-versa. ~ C lia Correia Loureiro,
67:Há pessoas com quem as palavras são desnecessárias. Nos entendíamos e amávamos mudamente, meu pai e eu. Talvez pelo fato de sua figura emocionar-me tanto, evitei sempre pisar com ele o terreno das coisas emocionais, pois estou certo de que, se começássemos a falar, cairíamos os dois em pranto, tão grandes eram em nós os motivos para chorar. ~ Vinicius de Moraes,
68:Onde se deve construir a própria casa
Se te sentes grande e fecundo na solidão, a sociedade dos homens te diminuirá e te tornará estéril; e inversamente. Uma poderosa doçura como aquela de um pai, onde esse sentimento se apoderar de ti, é lá que deves edificar a tua morada; quer seja no tumulto ou no silêncio. "Ubi pater sum, ibi patria". ~ Friedrich Nietzsche,
69:Portanto, a primeira coisa é que a obediência tem que ser forçada, ou seja, para obedecer, usa-se o medo. Esse medo se torna o inferno, em termos religiosos. Para a obediência, tem que ser usada a recompensa, o que, em termos religiosos, torna-se o paraíso ou o céu. E, para manter o controle de tudo, é necessária a figura do pai. E assim Deus se torna o pai. ~ Osho,
70:Em primeiro lugar — começou — Scout, você tem de conseguir aprender uma coisa bastante simples, assim verá que se dará melhor com todo o tipo de pessoas. Nunca conseguirá compreender totalmente uma pessoa se não ver as coisas do seu ponto de vista...
— Mas, pai?
— ...se não for capaz de se colocar na pele dessa pessoa e aí permanecer bastante tempo. ~ Harper Lee,
71:Houve um momento grande, parado, sem nada dentro. Dilatou os olhos, esperou. Nada veio. Branco. Mas de repente num estremecimento deram corda no dia e tudo recomeçou a funcionar, a máquina trotando, o cigarro do pai fumegando, o silêncio, as folhinhas, os frangos pelados, a claridade, as coisas revivendo cheias de pressa como uma chaleira a ferver. ~ Clarice Lispector,
72:E oiço o eco da tua voz, da tua voz que nunca mais poderei ouvir. A tua voz calada para sempre. E, como se adormecesses, vejo-te fechar as pálpebras sobre os olhos que nunca mais abrirás. Os teus olhos fechados para sempre. E, de uma vez, deixas de respirar. Para sempre. Para nunca mais. Pai. Tudo o que te sobreviveu me agride. Pai. Nunca esquecerei. ~ Jos Lu s Peixoto,
73:Ao retornar para a república de estudantes, onde morava, Marco Polo recolheu-se em seu interior. Seu pai, Rodolfo, sempre fora um admirador do italiano Marco Polo, um dos maiores aventureiros da história. O viajante veneziano tinha apenas 17 anos quando, em 1271, partiu da belíssima Veneza para a Ásia com seu pai e seu tio. A incrível odisséia durou 24 anos. ~ Anonymous,
74:Certa ocasião ouvi um cliente habitual da livraria de meu pai comentar que poucas coisas marcam tanto um leitor como o primeiro livro que realmente abre caminho ao seu coração. As primeiras imagens, o eco dessas palavras que pensamos ter deixado para trás, nos acompanham por toda a vida e esculpem um palácio em nossa memória [...] ao qual iremos retornar. ~ Carlos Ruiz Zaf n,
75:o Crisóstomo então levantou-se, atravessou o quarto, saiu, foi ver o Camilo deitado e beijá-lo para dormir e disse-lhe: nunca limites o amor, filho, nunca por preconceito algum limites o amor. O miúdo perguntou: porque dizes isso, pai. O pescador respondeu: porque é o único modo de também tu, um dia, te sentires o dobro do que és.

O Filho de Mil Homens ~ Valter Hugo M e,
76:Eu sei que provoquei tudo isso. Sei que mereço. Eu tento de tudo para não ser assim. Faço de tudo para agradar a todos. E não tenho de ver meu psiquiatra, que me explique sobre ser "agressivo-passivo". E não tenho de tomar o remédio que ele me passa, que é caro demais para meu pai. E não tenho de falar de minhas lembranças com ele. Ou ser nostálgico com coisas ruins. ~ Stephen Chbosky,
77:Here is a scene that happens in Brazil thousands of times each day: It’s early morning. Time for young Marcos to leave for school. As he gathers his books and heads for the door, he stops by his father’s chair. He looks into his father’s face. “Benção, Pai?” (Blessing, Father?) Marcos asks. The father raises his hand. “Deus te abençoe, meu filho” (God bless you, my son), he says. ~ Max Lucado,
78:Se dissemos acima que Freyre é o pai-fundador da concepção dominante de como o brasileiro se percebe no senso comum, então Sérgio Buarque é o pai-fundador das ciências sociais brasileiras do século XX e, consequentemente – e muito mais importante –, o autor da forma dominante como a “sociedade brasileira” contemporânea se compreende até hoje com a chancela e a autoridade “científica”. Sérgio Buarque ~ Jess Souza,
79:Este mundo já é muito sem graça. Tenho pais que não me deixam mentir. Meu pai, por exemplo. É engenheiro e vive viajando. São Paulo, Houston, Londres. Minha mãe é advogada. Burocracia correndo nas veias da família. É bom ser diferente por isso. Não ter horários. Ficar bêbada sem medo. Fazer merda, depois nem lembrar. Pintar as unhas, uma de cada cor. Experimentar a vida antes que seja tarde, entende? ~ Raphael Montes,
80:- Lembra-se do tempo em que eu passava tardes e tardes costurando?
- Lembro-me, mãe. Eram tantas filhas, tantas roupas!
- A maior parte das vezes, eu só fingia que costurava.
- Fingia? Fingia para quê?
Os homens não gostam que as mulheres pensem em silêncio. Nascem-lhes nervosas suspeitas.
- Enquanto ia costurando, o seu pai não imaginava que eu estava pensando. Minha cabeça viajava por todo o lado. ~ Mia Couto,
81:Quantos labirintos existem neste mundo. Os galhos das árvores, as filigranas das raízes, a matriz dos cristais, as ruas que o pai dela tinha recriado nas maquetes. Labirintos nas saliências de conchas de múrex, nas texturas da casca de plátanos e dentro dos ossos ocos das águias. Nada mais complicado do que o cérebro humano, diria Etienne, a coisa mais complexa que existe; um orgão, dentro do qual giram universos. ~ Anthony Doerr,
82:A ideia foi do senhor que queria tirar a prova, A prova de quê, Da minha fé, da minha obediência, E que senhor é esse que ordena a um pai que mate o seu próprio filho, É o senhor que temos, o senhor dos nossos antepassados, o senhor que já cá estava quando nascemos,E se esse senhor tivesse um filho, também o mandaria matar, perguntou isaac, O futuro o diá, Então o senhor é capaz de tudo, do bom, do mau e do pior, Assim é. ~ Jos Saramago,
83:O meu pai, sei disso hoje, resumia-se a uma palavra: medo. Toda a aversão ao estrangeiro, ao inusitado, à novidade, ao que está além, era apenas um pânico visceral do mundo, que ele disfarçava transformando esse medo trágico em ética conservadora, em solidez moral. Parecia seguro e inabalável, mas é assim que o medo se veste para sair à rua, para ir à missa, para comentar o tempo e as doeças das vides e o trabalho do lagar. ~ Afonso Cruz,
84:diferentemente de todos os outros, ela o preferia em seus humores mais silenciosos. Aurora adorava a verdade, e era difícil adorar a ambos, verdade e Niall Lynch, quando o segundo falava.
Ela era a única pessoa que ele não conseguia ofuscar, e ele a adorava por isso.
Foi só muitos anos depois que Ronan ficou sabendo que o rei havia sonhado a sua rainha. Mas, pensando bem, fazia sentido. Seu pai adorava sonhar com a luz também. ~ Maggie Stiefvater,
85:Não sei, mas sei que não é isto, não sou eu, nem o meu pai, nem o pai do meu pai, nem o pai do meu avô, nem o pai do meu bisavô, nem o pai do meu trisavô, nem o pai do meu tetravô, o destino é alguma coisa maior do que todos nós, ainda por realizar, alguma coisa de que nos fomos esquecendo, porque as gerações são tantas. Quanto estive nos ilhéus, aprendi que não somos apenas aquilo que somos, mas também as limitações que nos ensinaram a ser. ~ Jo o Tordo,
86:Desde a vinda de Jesus, não existe mais para seus discípulos a possibilidade de relações sem o Mediador, quer sejam naturais e históricas, quer sejam cotidianas. Entre filho e pai, entre homem e mulher, entre indivíduo e sociedade, está Cristo, o Mediador, mesmo que não se saiba reconhecê-lo. para nós, já não existe um caminho para o próximo que não seja Cristo, sua palavra e seu discipulado. A relação com o mundo sem o Mediador é pura ilusão. ~ Dietrich Bonhoeffer,
87:Ela começava a florescer numa encruzilhada de forças contrárias. Tinha muito pouco da mãe. Do pai tinha o corpo esquálido, a timidez irremissível, a pele lívida, os olhos de um azul merencório, e o cobre puro da cabeleira radiosa. Seu modo de ser era tão misterioso que parecia uma criatura invisível. Assustada com tão estranha condição, a mãe lhe pendurava uma campainha no pulso para não perder o seu rumo na penumbra da casa. ~ Gabriel Garc a M rquez,
88:Pensas que sabes o que é sofrer, mas não sabes. Tu sabes o que é perda. Tiveste quem te amasse e perdeste-os. Eu só tenho um pai que me quer matar desde o instante em que soube da minha existência e passou décadas a demonstrar-me o quanto o queria. Uma mãe cujo o único interesse era vangloriar-se sobre o fracasso dele em vez de o tentar evitar. E a única coisa comum aos dois, é que o passatempo preferido deles é a caça, e a cabeça a prémio é a minha! - Danton ~ L C Lavado,
89:Sempre que um branco lida com você", seu pai dizia à família, "por mais bem-intencionado que seja, ele sempre pressupõe que você é intelectualmente inferior. De um modo ou de outro, se não diretamente com palavras então com a expressão do rosto, o tom de voz, a impaciência, ou até mesmo o contrário — a tolerância, uma maravilhosa demonstração de *humanidade* —, ele vai sempre falar com você como se você fosse burro, e, se você não for, ele vai ficar espantado. ~ Philip Roth,
90:Quando sou realmente mau, tão perverso que não lhe resta senão erguer as mãos para o céu e perguntar a Deus o que fez para merecer um filho assim, nessas ocasiões o meu pai é convocado para fazer justiça; descobre-se então que a minha mãe é demasiado sensível, um ser demasiadamente delicado, para administrar castigos corporais. «Dói-me mais a mim», ouço-a a explicar à tia Clara, «do que lhe dói a ele. Eu sou assim feita. Não sou capaz, pronto.»
Oh, pobre mãe. ~ Philip Roth,
91:Morrerão milhares, Morrerão centenas de milhares, Morrerão centenas de milhares de homens e mulheres, a terra encher-se-á de gritos de dor, de uivos e roncos de agonia, o fumo dos queimados cobrirá o sol, a gordura deles rechinará sobre as brasas, o cheiro agoniará, e tudo isto será por minha culpa, Não por tua culpa, por tua causa, Pai, afasta de mim este cálice, Que tu o bebas é a condição do meu poder e da tua glória, Não quero esta glória, Mas eu quero esse poder. ~ Jos Saramago,
92:A Verdade! Aquela que nós procuramos durante toda a nossa vida, sem conseguirmos perceber que está aqui dentro…aqui, pai….aqui, para onde eu aponto, no meu peito, numa junção genética de histórias, nos tons violetas e dourados de um céu que não esconde nada mais do que a sua beleza. Enquanto a Deusa me acena, vejo a metade exata de cada um de nós, aquela que nós vamos procurar incansavelmente durante todos os anos da nossa vida, sem nos deixar perceber que o sonho é uma loucura. ~ Pat R,
93:Como vão esses amores, perguntou Marçal, Pobre Isaura, pobre pai, Por que dizes pobre Isaura, pobre pai, Porque está claro que ela o quer, mas não consegue passar por cima da barreira que ele levantou, E ele, Ele, ele é uma vez mais a história das duas metades, há uma que provavelmente não pensa senão nisso, E a outra, A outra tem sessenta e quatro anos, a outra tem medo, Realmente, as pessoas são muito complicadas, É verdade, mas se fôssemos simples não seríamos pessoas. ~ Jos Saramago,
94:A fé pertence, sobretudo, aos que trabalham e confiam. Tê-la no coração é estar sempre pronto para Deus. Não importam a saúde ou a enfermidade do corpo, não têm significação os infortúnios ou os sucessos felizes da vida material. A alma fiel trabalha confiante nos desígnios do Pai, que pode dar os bens, retirá-los e restituí-los em tempo oportuno, e caminha sempre com serenidade e amor, por todas as sendas pelas quais a mão generosa do Senhor a queira conduzir. ~ Francisco C ndido Xavier,
95:Aquele menino deu errado porque a mãe dele bebia, ou se drogava. Ela deixava o garoto solto na rua; ela não ensinou a ele o que é certo e o que é errado. Nunca estava em casa quando ele voltava da escola. Ninguém nunca diz que o pai era um bêbado, ou que o pai nunca estava em casa quando o garoto voltava da escola. E ninguém jamais diz que alguns desses garotos não prestam e pronto. Não vá você acreditar nessa balela. Não deixe que eles ponham nas suas costas essa matança toda. ~ Anonymous,
96:Estava eu a dizer ao António que o cão não passa este inverno - declarou meu pai
- para ele era uma sorte se morresse.
- Não morre! - disse eu, aflito.
Mas Tomás aproximara-se também:
Que é que tu esperas do cão? Viveu, tem de morrer.
Não havia ali, porém, uma acusação. Havia só o reconhecimento de uma evidência
serena. Mas justamente para mim o que era evidente não era a morte, era a vida.
Como podia o cão morrer? Como podia morrer a sua pessoa? ~ Verg lio Ferreira,
97:Até daqui a dez dias, Até daqui a dez dias, Cuide-me da Marta, pai, Cuidarei, sim, vai descansado, olha que não lhe queres mais do que eu, Se é mais ou se é menos não sei, quero-lhe da outra maneira, Marçal, Diga, Dá-me um abraço, por favor. Quando Marçal saiu da furgoneta levava os olhos húmidos. Cipriano Algor não deu nenhum murro na cabeça, só disse para si mesmo com um meio sorriso triste, A isto pode chegar um homem, ver-se a implorar um abraço como uma criança carecida de amor. ~ Jos Saramago,
98:Admiral Nelson won the great Battle of Trafalgar against the French during the Napoleonic Wars. The Viscount of Camperdown, who also won many battles during that period, was one of the admirals under Nelson. The Viscount of Canperdown's family crest had a ship with full sails on it and with two little Latin words: Disce pai—"Lean to suffer." That is precisely what Peter and Paul and Job and Moses and Jesus would say to you and me as believers in the fallen world. "Learn to suffer. ~ J Ligon Duncan III,
99:- Os "desejos de estrelas" podem ser falados?
- Sim. Sentes um?
- Mas não é fácil. Desejava um arco-íris mesmo, agora.
- Eu acho escuro ninguém consegue desenhar um arco-íris.
- Eu acho que os anjos que roubam vozes conseguem... Eu queria um arco-íris, de presença bem noturna, tipo uma ponte.
- Uma ponte?
- Para o outro mundo. E vice-versa. Para chamar-mos quem tivesse partido ainda em hora de cá estar. Assim o teu pai podia voltar. E também as crianças de todas as guerras. ~ Ondjaki,
100:um pai, poderia irritar-se ao ver o filho que volta inesperadamente e se joga em seus braços exclamando: “Eis-me de volta, meu pai, não vos zangueis se interrompo uma viagem que, segundo vossas ordens, eu devia agüentar mais tempo. O mundo é igual por toda parte e por toda parte vive de penas e trabalhos, recompensa e prazer. Mas que me importa tudo isso? Só estou bem onde tu estás, e quero sofrer e gozar na tua presença! E tu, Pai celeste e misericordioso, serias capaz de não dar ouvidos ao teu filho? ~ Johann Wolfgang von Goethe,
101:Seria estúpido tentar sobreviver-me. Sou um homem sensato. É de sangue. Meu avô correu mundo e veio morrer na cama onde nascera. Meu pai andou pelas guerras depois de me ter gerado, e lá morreu. Homens que fizeram uma tarefa e nela puseram o sentido da sua vida. E deram-se por cumpridos, e regressaram ou morreram. Sabedoria, não é? Não quero ser fútil. É o único pecado do espírito. Ponho a minha força toda nas razões da vida. Isto quer dizer que me preocupam a oportunidade e a qualidade da minha morte. Pareço... enfim, digamos, pareço... solene?... ~ Herberto Helder,
102:É sempre culpa da mãe, não é verdade?, disse ela. bem baixinho, pegando o casaco. Aquele menino deu errado porque a mãe dele bebia, ou se drogava. Ela deixava o garoto solto na rua; ela não ensinou a ele o que é certo e o que é errado. Nunca estava em casa quando ele voltava da escola. Ninguém nunca diz que o pai era um bêbado, ou que o pai nunca estava em casa quando o garoto voltava da escola. E ninguém jamais diz que alguns desses garotos não prestam e pronto. Não vá você acreditar nessa balela. Não deixe que eles ponham nas suas costas essa matança toda. ~ Lionel Shriver,
103:A chuva tamborilava na janela e o vento sacudia as molduras. Peguei o pedaço irregular de tecido, que estava úmido. Levantei-me, acordando a gatinha, que pulou do meu colo e desapareceu nas sombras. Fui até a lareira.
– Se eu queimar isso – perguntei a elas –, aquilo vai ter acontecido de verdade? Meu pai vai ter me segurado debaixo da água da banheira? Eu vou esquecer o que aconteceu?
Ginnie Hempstock já não sorria. Parecia preocupada agora.
– O que você quer? – perguntou ela.
– Eu quero me lembrar - falei. - Porque aconteceu comigo. E ainda sou a mesma pessoa. ~ Neil Gaiman,
104:Os homens nos fazem acreditar que precisamos desejar filhos ou morrer. Foi por isso que quando perdi meu primeiro filho eu quis a morte, porque não fora capaz de corresponder ao modelo esperado de mim pelos homens da minha vida, meu pai e meu marido, e agora tenho que incluir também meus filhos. Mas quem foi que escreveu a lei que nos proíbe de investir nossas esperanças em nossas filhas? Nós, mulheres, corroboramos essa lei mais que ninguém. Enquanto não mudarmos isso, este mundo continuará sendo um mundo de homens, mundo esse que as mulheres sempre ajudarão a construir. ~ Buchi Emecheta,
105:En gang forvandlet hun et gresskar til en kongelig karet, sa Dadda. (...) Det hjelper ingen å mote på ball og lukte som en pai. Og den affæren med glasskoen. Farlig etter min mening. Men det storste hun noen gang gjorde, sa Dadda og ignorerte avbrytelsen, var å få et helt slott til å sove i hundre år til... Hun nolte. Kan ikke huske det. Dreide det seg om rosebusker, eller var det spinnerokker med i det der? Jeg tror det var en prinsesse som måtte fingre på... nei, det var en prins. Sånn var det. Fingre på en prins? sa Magrotte ille til mote. Nei... han måtte kysse henne. ~ Terry Pratchett,
106:Religiões são, por definição, metáforas, apesar de tudo: Deus é um sonho, uma esperança, uma mulher, um escritor irônico, um pai, uma cidade, uma casa com muitos quartos, um relojoeiro que deixou seu cronômetro premiado no deserto, alguém que ama você – talvez até, contra todas as evidências, um ente celestial cujo único interesse é assegurar-se que o seu time de futebol, o seu exército, o seu negócio ou o seu casamento floresça, prospere e triunfe sobre qualquer oposição. Religiões são lugares para ficar, olhar e agir, pontos vantajosos a partir dos quais se observa o mundo. ~ Neil Gaiman,
107:No dia em que nasci, as pessoas da nossa aldeia tiveram pena de minha mãe, e ninguém deu os parabéns a meu pai."
"Nasci menina num lugar onde rifles são disparados em comemoração a um filho, ao passo que as filhas são escondidas atrás de cortinas, sendo seu papel na vida apenas fazer comida e procriar. Para a maioria dos pachtuns, o dia em que nasce uma menina é considerado sombrio."

Yousafzai, Malala. Eu sou Malala: A história da garota que defendeu o direito à educação e foi baleada pelo Talibã (Locais do Kindle 149-151). Companhia das Letras. Edição do Kindle. ~ Malala Yousafzai,
108:Apesar de as crianças francesas comerem hambúrguer e batata frita às vezes, nunca conheci uma que só comia um tipo de alimento e nem um pai que permitisse isso. Não é que as crianças francesas exijam mais legumes. E claro que gostam de algumas comidas mais do que de outras. E há muitas crianças francesas de 3 anos seletivas. Mas essas crianças não excluem categorias inteiras de texturas, cores e nutrientes só porque querem. A frescura extrema que se tornou normal nos Estados Unidos e na Inglaterra parece aos pais franceses um perigoso distúrbio alimentar, ou, no mínimo, um péssimo hábito. ~ Anonymous,
109:A hatvannyolcas események nagy hatással voltak rá, és amikor Kaliforniában kissé alábbhagyott a hippimozgalom heve, úgy érezte, talán lehetne valamit kezdeni az európai fiatalsággal. Jane is bátorította ebben az elhatározásában. A francia fiatalság a gaulleizmus paternalista kalodáját nyögte, de Janine szerint egy szikra is elég lett volna, hogy minden lángba boruljon. Jó pár éve már az volt Francesco legnagyobb öröme, hogy marihuánás cigarettát szívott egészen fiatal lányok társaságában, akiket a mozgalom szelleme vonzott a körébe, utána megdugta őket a mandalák között, a füstölők illatában ~ Anonymous,
110:Foram dizer-me que a plantavam. Havia de nascer outra vez, igual a uma semente atirada àquele bocado muito guarda de terra. A morte das crianças é assim, disse a minha mãe. O meu pai, revoltado, achava que teria sido melhor haverem-na deitado à boca de deus. Quando começou a chover, as nossas pessoas arredadas para cada lado, ainda vi como ficou ali sozinho. Pensei que ele escavaria tudo de novo com as próprias mãos e andaria montanha acima até ao fosso medonho, carregando o corpo desligado da minha irmã.
Éramos gémeas. Crianças espelho. Tudo em meu redor se dividiu por metade com a morte. ~ Valter Hugo M e,
111:A essência de todo o panteísmo, do evolucionismo e da moderna religião cósmica está, realmente, nesta afirmação: a Natureza como mãe. Infelizmente, se olharmos a Natureza como mãe, descobriremos que ela é uma madrasta. A questão principal do Cristianismo era esta: a Natureza não é nossa mãe; a Natureza é nossa irmã. Podemos orgulhar-nos da sua beleza, pois temos o mesmo pai; mas ela não tem nenhuma autoridade sobre nós; temos de admirá-la, mas não imitá-la. Para S. Francisco de Assis, a Natureza é uma irmã, uma irmã mais nova: pequena e que gosta de dançar, de quem rimos e a quem também amamos. ~ G K Chesterton,
112:na hora de pôr a mesa, éramos cinco:
o meu pai, a minha mãe, as minhas irmãs
e eu. depois, a minha irmã mais velha
casou-se. depois, a minha irmã mais nova
casou-se. depois, o meu pai morreu. hoje,
na hora de pôr a mesa, somos cinco,
menos a minha irmã mais velha que está
na casa dela, menos a minha irmã mais
nova que está na casa dela, menos o meu
pai, menos a minha mãe viúva. cada um
deles é um lugar vazio nesta mesa onde
como sozinho. mas irão estar sempre aqui.
na hora de pôr a mesa, seremos sempre cinco.
enquanto um de nós estiver vivo, seremos
sempre cinco ~ Jos Lu s Peixoto,
113:Aprendi desde pequeno a conciliar o sono conversando com minha mãe na penumbra do quarto sobre os acontecimentos do dia, o que fizera no colégio, o que tinha aprendido naquele dia. Não podia ouvir a sua voz ou sentir o seu tato, mas a sua luz e o seu calor inflamavam cada canto daquela casa e eu, com aquela fé dos que ainda podem contar os anos nos dedos das mãos, achava que, se fechasse os olhos e falasse com ela, ela poderia me escutar onde quer que estivesse. Às vezes meu pai escutava da sala de jantar e chorava baixinho.

Zafón, Carlos Ruiz. A sombra do vento (Locais do Kindle 41-43). Companhia das Letras. Edição do Kindle. ~ Carlos Ruiz Zaf n,
114:É bom para as crianças terem pai e mãe (e mais fácil para os pais também!), mas tudo que você já ouviu sobre como ficam prejudicadas as crianças quando são criadas por mães solteiras, bem, essa é uma das grandes mentiras de nossa cultura. Em seu livro The Culture of Fear, Barry Glassner afirma que "aquelas criadas somente por mães apresentavam taxas de renda e educação basicamente igual àquelas criadas por pai e mãe. As pesquisas mostram que, como grupo, as crianças filhas de mães solteiras tendem a se dar melhor emocional e socialmente do que filhos de casamentos com altas doses de conflito; ou daqueles nos quais o pai é emocionalmente ausente ou abusivo". ~ Michael Moore,
115:Naquele tempo, à noite, Luanda inteira cheirava a jinguba (amendoim), pois era com óleo extraído das sementes desta planta que se iluminavam as ruas. Fradique dizia que as cidades, como as mulheres, se podiam distinguir pelo odor. Os portos da África ocidental francesa, dizia ele, cheiram fortemente a cebola frita em manteiga, mistura que os jovens friccionavam no corpo como se fosse um perfume; o Rio de Janeiro cheira a goiabas maduras, e Lisboa a sardinha, manjerico e deputados. Arcénio de Carpo pai lembrou que no Sul de Angola, entre os cuamatos, as mulheres untam os cabelos com esterco de vaca, e que esse cheiro representa para elas a mais delicada fragrância. ~ Jos Eduardo Agualusa,
116:—¿Está seguro de que quiere que la mujer acabe muerta?—dijo Pai—.Las dudas son malas en negocios como este. Si existe la más mínima duda en su interior...
—No hay ninguna —señaló Estabrook—. Vine aquí para encontrar a un hombre que matara a mi esposa. Usted es ese hombre
—Aún la ama, ¿verdad?— preguntó Pai una vez que estuvieron fuera y de camino al coche.
—Por supuesto que la amo—confirmó Estabrook—. Por eso la quiero muerta.
-No existe la resurrección, señor Estabrook. Al menos, no para usted.
—No soy yo quien va a morir—respondió Charlie.
—Yo creo que sí—Fue la respuesta (...)—.Un hombre que mata aquello que ama muere también un poco. De eso no hay duda, ¿verdad? ~ Clive Barker,
117:Amar você é coisa de minutos
A morte é menos que teu beijo
Tão bom ser teu que sou
Eu a teus pés derramado
Pouco resta do que fui
De ti depende ser bom ou ruim
Serei o que achares conveniente
Serei para ti mais que um cão
Uma sombra que te aquece
Um deus que não esquece
Um servo que não diz não
Morto teu pai serei teu irmão
Direi os versos que quiseres
Esquecerei todas as mulheres
Serei tanto e tudo e todos
Vais ter nojo de eu ser isso
E estarei a teu serviço
Enquanto durar meu corpo
Enquanto me correr nas veias
O rio vermelho que se inflama
Ao ver teu rosto feito tocha
Serei teu pão tua coisa tua rocha
Sim, eu estarei aqui ~ Paulo Leminski,
118:— Nosso serviço é variado e rigoroso. O departamento de trabalho, afeto à nossa responsabilidade, aceita somente os cooperadores interessados na descoberta da felicidade de servir. Comprometemo-nos, mutuamente, a calar toda espécie de reclamação. Ninguém exige expressão nominal nas obras úteis realizadas, e todos respondem por qualquer erro cometido. Achamo-nos, aqui, num curso de extinção das velhas vaidades pessoais, trazidas do mundo carnal. Dentro do mecanismo hierárquico de nossas obrigações, interessamo-nos tão somente pelo bem divino. Consideramos que toda possibilidade construtiva vem de nosso Pai e esta convicção nos auxilia a esquecer as exigências descabidas de nossa personalidade inferior. ~ Francisco C ndido Xavier,
119:Se um pai disciplina o filho corretamente, é óbvio que está a interferir na liberdade do filho, particularmente no aqui-e-agora. O pai estabelece limites à expressão do Ser do filho, forçando-o a aceitar a sua posição no mundo socializado. Um pai assim exige que todo esse potencial infantil seja dirigido para um único caminho. Ao impor tais limitações ao filho, o pai pode ser considerado uma força destrutiva, agindo de maneira a substituir a milagrosa pluralidade da infância com uma única realidade limitada. Mas se o pai não agir, limita-se a deixar o filho ser como o Peter Pan, o eterno Menino, Rei dos Meninos Perdidos, Governante da inexistente Terra do Nunca. Essa não é uma alternativa moralmente aceitável. ~ Jordan Peterson,
120:Se um pai disciplina o filho corretamente, é óbvio que está a interferir na liberdade do filho, particularmente no aqui-e-agora. O pai estabelece limites à expressão do Ser do filho, forçando-o a aceitar a sua posição no mundo socializado. Um pai assim exige que todo esse potencial infantil seja dirigido para um único caminho. Ao impor tais limitações ao filho, o pai pode ser considerado uma força destrutiva, agindo de maneira a substituir a milagrosa pluralidade da infância com uma única realidade limitada. Mas se o pai não agir, limita-se a deixar o filho ser como o Peter Pan, o eterno Menino, Rei dos Meninos Perdidos, Governante da inexistente Terra do Nunca. Essa não é uma alternativa moralmente aceitável. ~ Jordan B Peterson,
121:A avó, já velhíssima então, proporcionava-lhe um assombro inquieto, pois, perdendo o equilíbrio das suas faculdades, parecia que se desumanizava. Falava muito, sempre coisas da sua juventude, e não compreendia que o marido tivesse morrido. “Quando o teu pai vier...” — dizia a Quina. Ou: “Prepara-lhe aí um bocado de vinho quente, para que o tome quando chegar.” E Quina respondia, invariavelmente e com modo cheio de doçura. “Sim, minha mãe. Já vou, senhora.” Nestes momentos, Germa cravava nas duas os olhos atemorizados e duvidosos; era como se o espaço extensíssimo duma época que não vivera se lhe colocasse diante, sem que ela deixasse de sentir-se expulsa, mais do que distante, desse tempo morto, porém inesgotável. ~ Agustina Bessa Lu s,
122:Todo ano, no dia 22 de agosto — o dia em que, em 1927, o estado de Massachusetts executou os dois anarquistas, os quais, segundo seus pais ensinaram a ela e a seus irmãos, não haviam cometido assassinato algum —, a loja era fechada e a família se recolhia no sobrado (um apartamento apertado e escuro, cuja desordem enlouquecida era maior ainda que a da loja) para observar um dia de jejum. Era um ritual que o pai de Iris, como se fosse líder de uma seita, havia inventado sozinho, inspirando-se no Yom Kippur judaico. Seu pai não tinha ideias de verdade a respeito do que ele julgava serem ideias — nas profundezas de sua mente só havia uma ignorância absoluta e o desespero amargo dos miseráveis, um ódio revolucionário impotente. ~ Philip Roth,
123:A CASA

Sei dos filhos
pelo modo como ocupam a casa:
uns buscam os recantos,
outros existem à janela.

A uns satisfaz uma sombra,
a outros nem o mundo basta.
Uns batem com a porta,
outros hesitam como se não houvesse saída.

Raras vezes, sou pai.
Sou sempre todos os meus filhos,
sou a mão indecisa no fecho,
sou a noite passada entre relógio e escuro.

Em mim ecoa a voz
que, à entrada, se anuncia: cheguei!
E eu sorrio, de resposta: chegou?
Mas se nunca ninguém partiu...

E tanto em mim
demoraram as esperas
que me fui trocando por soalho
e me converti em sonolenta janela.

Agora, eu mesmo sou a casa,
essa infatigável casa
a que meus filhos
eternamente regressam. ~ Mia Couto,
124:Um breve encontro de mãos. O corpo a ser-me cingido num abraço e depois largado. Os olhos envenenados de sonhos, como que inundados de água prateada, estrelada. E o teu pai à distância, a repelir-me, a fugir-me por entre os dedos. Areia a escapar-se-me da palma da mão. A boca dele era o Pacífico no seu ponto mais profundo, onde a Terra é um abismo de escuridão e de pressão indomável. Eu desejava-o, irracional e imoralmente, inconsciente do que era a ânsia física e do muito que me entorpecia cada movimento. Eu era jovem e inócua; o tempo revolteava como uma onda sobre esse desejo agora enterrado, que ainda pulsa. Lateja sete palmos abaixo da superfície. Somando todos os meus dias, vejo que tudo o que foi meu se agita sete palmos debaixo de terra. ~ C lia Correia Loureiro,
125:Durante vários anos tentara escrever sobre o meu pai, mas não chegara a lado nenhum, talvez porque o assunto era demasiado próximo da minha vida, e portanto nada fácil de transpor para outra forma, o que naturalmente é um requisito da literatura. É essa a sua única lei: tudo tem de se submeter à forma. Se alguns dos outros elementos for mais forte do que a forma, como o estilo, o enredo, o tema, se algum deles se apoderar da forma, o resultado será pobre. É por isso que escritores com um estilo forte escrevem muitas vezes livros fracos. E também é por isso que escritores com temas fortes escrevem muitas vezes livros fracos. A força do tema e do estilo deve ser destruída para que a literatura possa existir. É a essa destruição que se chama "escrever". ~ Karl Ove Knausg rd,
126:Havia breves e raros momentos em que a nossa casa sorria, quando de manhã a criada da Mealhada abria as janelas, para arejar a casa, e as cortinas esvoaçavam. Ou quando eu me reclinava nos acordes, como se fossem divãs, que a minha mãe tocava ao piano. Ouvia as notas ao longe, atravessando o longo corredor da casa. Imaginava que as composições que ouvia eram a banda sonora da minha vida e fazia tudo àquele ritmo, saltitava ao mesmo tempo que certas notas, movia-me à velocidade da música, à velocidade do som. O pai nutria pelos acordes o sentimento oposto, tenho a sensação de que a música o aleijava. Quando a minha mãe se alongava na prática, ele aproximava-se e dizia “um pouco de silêncio, por favor”, e a casa, de repente, ficava triste e as cortinas deixavam de esvoaçar. ~ Afonso Cruz,
127:Eis a sublime estupidez do mundo; quando nossa fortuna está abalada - muitas vezes pelos excessos de nossos próprios atos - culpamos o sol, a lua e as estrelas pelos nossos desastres; como se fôssemos canalhas por necessidade, idiotas por influência celeste; escroques, ladrões e traidores por comando do zodíaco; bêbados, mentirosos e adúlteros por forçada obediência a determinações dos planetas; como se toda a perversidade que há em nós fosse pura instigação divina. É a admirável desculpa do homem devasso - responsabiliza uma estrela por sua devassidão. Meu pai se entendeu com minha mãe sob a Cauda do Dragão e vim ao mundo sob a Ursa Maior; portanto devo ser lascivo e perverso. Bah! Eu seria o que eu sou, mesmo que a estrela mais virginal do mundo tivesse iluminado a minha bastardia. ~ William Shakespeare,
128:-Dentro de cem anos ninguém que você conhece estará vivo. Então o que vai importar se lutamos ou simplesmente passamos os dias dormindo ao sol?

Zhenjin piscou para ele, incapaz de entender o humor estranho do pai.

-Se não importa, então por que vamos lutar contra seu irmão?

-Talvez eu não tenha dito direito. Quero dizer que não importa se mudamos o mundo. O mundo vai em frente, e novas vidas chegam e partem. O próprio Gêngis disse que seria esquecido, e, acredite, ele deixou uma sombra longa. O modo como vivemos importa, Zhenjin! Importa que usemos o que recebemos, durante apenas o breve tempo que temos ao sol. - Ele sorriu ao ver o filho lutando com a ideia. -É só isso o que se pode alegar, quando o fim chegar: "Não desperdicei meu tempo." Acho que isso importa. Acho que talvez só isso importe. ~ Conn Iggulden,
129:Primeiro havia abalado um, depois outro e por fim os últimos dois, espalhando-se pelos vários cantos da Terra como se fossem inimigos, que não eram. Eles mesmos tinham vindo trazer para a casa comum do pai as jovens mulheres que deixavam, com suas arcas, crianças e fogões. Como nós três - éramos dois irmão - havíamos sido os últimos a chegar, tínhamos ocupado o quarto de abóbada, o que dava para trás, o mais sombrio. Mas havia quem dormisse nos corredores e sítios desvãos duma casa grande demais para se viver. E nesse ambiente de meninos e mulheres, exercendo o seu magistério de homem director, inválido, sentado numa cadeira de imóvel, desesperava o meu avô. A menos que mandasse chamar o filho mais novo, aquele que depois, para sua arrelia, havia de riscar a poeira das estradas, a correr, a correr na sua Instrumentalina. ~ L dia Jorge,
130:O senhor Henri disse: os meus pais não me adormeciam com histórias infantis.
… os meus pais adormeciam-me a ler contratos de arrendamento e outros.
… o meu pai trabalhava num notário que tinha um notário e três homens que ninguém notava.
… o meu pai era um deles.
… o meu pai não tinha tempo para estar comigo e não tinha tempo para reler os contratos que era obrigado a redigir.
… o meu pai aproveitava os momentos antes de eu dormir para me ler alto os contratos e assim verificar os erros, e eu cresci a pensar que as histórias tinham sempre dois lados, o lado da direita e o lado da esquerda, dois outorgantes, e que um só dava uma coisa em troca de outra.
… só mais tarde percebi que isto acontecia mesmo na vida real - o dá e recebe - e só nos livros infantis é que se dava algo sem querer receber nada em troca. ~ Gon alo M Tavares,
131:O Conde recusou com indignação.
Realmente a exigência era curiosa.
Virem aquele homem e aquela mulher de Penafiel, com os hábitos, os modos, as figuras, a fala de dois trabalhadores de Penafiel, viver numa casa onde se recebia a fidalguia de Lisboa, os representantes dos Reis estrangeiros, a flor da literatura, a Maioria!
Absurdo! Se o Conde, como ele dizia, não fosse um homem público, poderia sacrificar-se a essa companhia plebeia. Mas, como Estadista, a presença na sua casa daquele pai de feição reles, a comer o arroz com a faca, a escabichar os dentes com as unhas, a perguntar à s senhoras então como vai essa bizarria? com o seu catarro, cuja expectoração perpétua era repulsiva, só serviria para diminuair a autoridade moral do Conde e o prestígio do seu talento. Em nome dos superiores interesses do Estado, devia repelir aquela proposta. ~ E a de Queir s,
132:Pois não estavam vendo que ele era de carne e osso? Tinha obrigação de trabalhar para os outros, naturalmente, conhecia o seu lugar. Bem. Nascera com esse destino, ninguém tinha culpa de ele haver nascido com um destino ruim. Que fazer? Podia mudar a sorte? Se lhe dissessem que era possível melhorar de situação, espantar-se-ia. Tinha vindo ao mundo para amansar brabo, curar feridas com rezas, consertar cercas de inverno a verão. Era sina. O pai vivera assim, o avô também. E para trás não existia família. Cortar mandacaru, ensebar látegos — aquilo estava no sangue. Conformava-se, não pretendia mais nada. Se lhe dessem o que era dele, estava certo. Não davam. Era um desgraçado, era como um cachorro, só recebia ossos. Por que seria que os homens ricos ainda lhe tomavam uma parte dos ossos? Fazia até nojo pessoas importantes se ocuparem com semelhantes porcarias. ~ Graciliano Ramos,
133:A religião era uma forma de teimosia. As preces faziam-nos perseverar. E acreditar que deus se ocuparia também dos nossos destinos era uma casmurrice, talvez. Uma pretensão toda a dar-se importância. Tão pouca gente podia ser uma coisa grande no tamanho da alma. Mas eu não conseguia acreditar nisso. Achava-nos tristes. Ridículos. Deus certamente bocejaria se assistisse ao espetáculo pequenino das nossas vidas. Estaria indubitavelmente olhando para outro lado, para outro lugar. Mesmo quando Steindór cantava ou lia poemas que explicavam boa parte das coisas mais secretas do universo. Deus devia estar ocupado com mais gente. Lugares de mais gente. Onde alguém se revelasse excecional e admirável. O meu pai, que era poeta, ou o Steindór, que tinha coração de ouro, haviam de ser banais perante a grandeza dos de outras terras. Talvez fossem maravilhosos apenas porque não havia mais ninguém. ~ Valter Hugo M e,
134:Se tal vier a acontecer, a única conclusão lógica a extrair de tudo quanto se viu até agora, é que, afinal, a viagem não valeu a pena. O que, por outro lado, seria, ou será, uma maneira demasiado simplificada de encarar a questão, pois nenhuma viagem é ela só, cada viagem contém uma pluralidade de viagens, e se, aparentemente, uma delas parece apresentar tão pouco sentido que nos sentimos autorizados a sentenciar, Não valeu a pena, mandaria o senso comum, se por preconceito e preguiça o não obliterássemos tantas vezes, que verificássemos se as viagens de que aquela foi conteúdo ou continente não serão valiosas bastante para terem, afinal, valido a pena e as penas. Todas estas considerações reunidas nos aconselham a suspendermos os juízos definitivos e outras presunções. As viagens sucedem-se e acumulam-se como as gerações, entre o neto que foste e o avô que serás, que pai terás sido, Ora, ainda que ruim, necessário ~ Jos Saramago,
135:Hoje entendo bem meu pai. Um homem precisa viajar. Por sua conta, não por meio de histórias, imagens, livros ou TV. Precisa viajar por si, com seus olhos e pés, para entender o que é seu. Para um dia plantar as suas próprias árvores e dar-lhes valor. Conhecer o frio para desfrutar do calor. E o oposto. Sentir a distância e o desabrigo para estar bem sob o próprio teto. Um homem precisa viajar para lugares que não conhece para quebrar essa arrogância que nos faz ver o mundo como o imaginamos, e não simplesmente como é ou pode ser; que nos faz professores e doutores do que não vimos, quando deveríamos ser alunos, e simplesmente ir ver. Não há como não admirar um homem – Cousteau, ao comentar o sucesso do seu primeiro grande filme: “Não adianta, não serve para nada, é preciso ir ver.” Il faut aller voir. Pura verdade, o mundo na TV é lindo, mas serve para pouca coisa. É preciso questionar o que se aprendeu. É preciso ir tocá-lo. ~ Amyr Klink,
136:A tradição pode ser definida como uma extensão do direito de voto, pois não significa senão que concedemos o voto às mais obscuras de todas as classes, ou seja, a dos nossos antepassados. É a democracia dos mortos. A tradição recusa-se a submeter-se à pequena e arrogante oligarquia daqueles que parecem estar por aí meramente de passagem. Todos os democratas protestam contra
o fato de o nascimento estabelecer diferenças entre os homens, a tradição opõe-se a que tais diferenças sejam estabelecidas por razão de sua morte. A democracia nos diz que não devemos desprezar a opinião de um cavalheiro, mesmo que ele seja o nosso cavalariço: a tradição nos pede que não desprezemos a opinião de um cavalheiro, mesmo que ele seja o nosso pai. Não posso, de forma alguma, separar essas duas ideias de democracia e tradição, pois me parece evidente que ambas representam a mesma ideia. Os mortos têm de estar presentes nos nossos conselhos. ~ G K Chesterton,
137:(...)é um fato que a história do Estado liberal coincide, de um lado, com o fim dos Estados confessionais e com a formação do Estado neutro ou agnóstico quanto às crenças religiosas de seus cidadãos, e, de outro lado, com o fim dos privilégios e dos vínculos feudais e com a exigência de livre disposição dos bens e da liberdade de troca que assinala o nascimento e o desenvolvimento da sociedade mercantil burguesa.
Sob esse aspecto, a concepção liberal do Estado contrapôe-se às várias formas de paternalismo, segundo as quais o Estado deve tomar conta de seus súditos tal como o pai de seus filhos, posto que os súditos são considerados como perenemente menores de idade. Um dos fin a que se propõe Locke com seus 'Dois ensaios sobre o governo' é o de demonstrar que o poder civil, nascido para garantir a liberdade e a propriedade dos indivíduos que se associam com o propósito de se autogovernar é distinto do governo paterno e mais ainda do patronal. ~ Norberto Bobbio,
138:Foi novamente como se a Vida, com todos os seus segredos, estivesse próxima de mim, como se eu a pudesse tocar… E ali sentia-me imensamente segura e protegida. E pensei: «Como isto é est ranho. É guerra. Há campos de concentração. Pequenas crueldades amontoam-se por cima de pequenas crueldades. Quando caminho pelas ruas, sei que, em muitas das casas por onde passo, há ali um filho preso, e ali um pai refém, e ali têm de suportar a condenação à morte de um rapaz de dezoito anos.» E estas ruas e casas ficam perto da minha própria casa.
Sei do grande sofrimento humano que se vai acumulando, sei das perseguições e da opressão… Sei de tudo isso e continuo a enfrentar cada pedaço de realidade que se me impõe. E num momento inesperado, abandonada a mim própria — encontro-me de repente encostada ao pei to nu da Vida e os braços dela são muito macios e envolvem-me, e nem sequer consigo descrever o bater do seu coração: tão fiel como se nunca mais findasse… ~ Etty Hillesum,
139:Verchínin - Essa é boa! (Ri-se). Saber coisas a mais! Acho que não existe cidade, nem pode existir, por mais aborrecida e tristonha que seja , onde uma pessoa inteligente e culta não seja necessária. Suponhamos que entre os 100 mil habitantes desta cidade, sem dúvida tacanhos e grosseirões, só existem três pessoas como vocês. É evidente que serão incapazes de vencer a massa obscura que as circunda; com o correr da vida ireis cedendo pouco a pouco, perdidas na grande multidão dos cem mil, abafadas pela vida, mas não vão desaparecer, não deixarão de ter influência. Depois talvez apareçam mais seis pessoas como vocês, depois doze, e assim por diante, até que gente assim se torne a maioria. Daqui a duzentos ou trezentos anos a vida na terra será inimaginavelmente bela, admirável. O homem precisa de uma vida assim, e se ainda a não tem, precisa de a pressentir, esperar, sonhar, preparar-se para ela; para isso tem de ver e de saber mais do que viam e sabiam o pai e o avô. (Ri-se). E queixa-se esta gente de que sabe muita coisa a mais! ~ Anton Chekhov,
140:Este lugar é um mistério,Daniel,um santuário.Cada volume que vês,tem alma.A alma de quem o escreveu e a alma dos que o leram e viveram e sonharam com ele.Cada vez que um livro muda de mãos,cada vez que alguém desliza o olhar pelas suas páginas,o seu espírito cresce e torna-se mais forte.Há já muitos anos,quando o meu pai me trouxe pela primeira vez aqui,este lugar já era velho.Talvez tão velho como a própria cidade.Ninguém sabe de ciência certa desde quando existe,ou quem o criou. Dir-te-ei o que o meu pai me disse a mim.Quando uma biblioteca desaparece,quando uma livraria fecha as suas portas,quando um livro se perde no esquecimento,os que conhecemos este lugar,os guardiães, asseguramo-nos de que chegue aqui.Neste lugar,os livros de que já ninguém se lembra, os livros que se perderam no tempo,vivem para sempre,esperando chegar um dia ás mãos de um novo leitor,de um novo espírito.Na loja nós vendemo-los e compramo-los, mas na realidade os livros não têm dono.Cada livro que aqui vês foi o melhor amigo de alguém.Agora só nos têm a nós,Daniel. ~ Carlos Ruiz Zaf n,
141:Pelo visto, Mark Silk achava que ia ter o pai para odiar por todo o sempre. Para odiar, odiar, odiar, odiar, e então, talvez, quando ele achasse que era a hora, depois que as cenas de acusação tivessem se intensificado num crescendo até ele quase matar Coleman com seu flagelo de ressentimento filial, perdoar. Ele pensava que Coleman estaria presente até que toda a peça terminasse de ser representada, como se ele e Coleman estivessem não no meio da vida, e, sim, na escarpa sul da acrópole de Atenas, num teatro ao ar livre dedicado a Dioniso, onde, diante dos olhos de dez mil espectadores, as unidades dramáticas eram rigorosamente observadas e o grande ciclo catártico era encenado todos os anos. O desejo humano de começo, meio e fim — e de um fim apropriado em magnitude ao início e ao meio — se realiza à perfeição nas tragédias que Coleman ensinava na Faculdade Athena. Mas fora da tragédia clássica do século V a.C., a expectativa de que tudo se complete, quanto mais de que chegue a uma consumação justa e perfeita, é uma ilusão ingênua indigna de um adulto. ~ Philip Roth,
142:Todos estão envolvidos, até o mais santo dos santos. O crime começa com Deus. Terminará com o homem, quando ele encontrar Deus de novo. O crime está em toda parte, em todas as fibras e raízes de nosso ser. Cada minuto do dia acrescenta novos crimes ao calendário, tanto aqueles que são detectados e punidos como aqueles que não o são. O criminoso caça o criminoso. O juiz condena o julgador. O inocente tortura o inocente. Em toda parte, em toda família, toda tribo, toda grande comunidade, crimes, crimes, crimes. Em comparação a isso, a guerra é limpa; o enforcado é um delicado pombo; Atila, Timur, Gêngis Khan são desajeitados autômatos. Nosso pai, nossa mãe querida, nossa doce irmã: você sabe os crimes infames que abrigam no peito? Você é capaz de colocar um espelho diante da iniqüidade quando ela está logo à mão? Já olhou o labirinto de seu próprio coração desprezível? Alguma vez já invejou o matador por sua determinação? O estudo do crime começa com o conhecimento de si mesmo. Tudo o que você despreza, tudo o que abomina, tudo o que rejeita, tudo o que condena e procura transformar pelo castigo vêm de você. ~ Anonymous,
143:Hitler prometeu a supremacia do homem. As mulheres seriam relegadas para o plano da casa e da cozinha; ser-lhes-ia negada a possibilidade de independência econômica e seriam excluídas do processo de formação da vida social. As mulheres, cuja liberdade pessoal havia sido esmagada durante séculos, que haviam desenvolvido um medo especialmente forte de levar uma existência independente, foram as primeiras a aclamá-lo.

Hitler prometeu a destruição das organizações democráticas socialistas e burguesas. Milhões de pessoas, democratas, socialistas e burguesas, congregaram-se em torno dele porque, embora as suas organizações falassem muito a respeito de liberdade, nunca haviam sequer mencionado o difícil problema da ânsia humana de autoridade e do desamparo das massas na prática política. As massas populares haviam sido desapontadas pela atitude irresoluta das velhas instituições democráticas. O desapontamento por parte de milhões de pessoas quanto às organizações liberais mais a crise econômica mais um irresistível desejo de liberdade produzem a mentalidade fascista, i.e., o desejo de entregar-se a uma figura autoritária de pai. ~ Wilhelm Reich,
144:O jogo paralisa as pessoas. Isto não é uma forma literária de o dizer. O meu pai usava o I Ching cada vez que tinha de tomar uma decisão importante. Atirava os paus do milefólio e agia em conformidade com o oráculo. Aos poucos, foi juntando às decisões importantes outras mais frívolas, chegando ao ponto de não ser capaz de decidir absolutamente nada sem a ajuda do livro.
-E isso não diminuiu a qualidade das suas decisões?
Chun-Chi serviu dois whiskies.
-Nem por isso. As nossas decisões já são relativamente arbitrárias. Nem sabemos verdadeiramente de onde vêm. Decidi levantar um copo, mas o meu braço mexeu-se antes da minha consciência. Enfim, o problema não foi esse.
-Qual foi?
(...)
-Para dar um passo, tinha de usar o I Ching. Para pensar, também, e assim chegou àquele lugar sem saída em que tinha de lançar os paus de milefólio para saber se poderia atirá-los. Agora está imobilizado, na cama.
(...)
-Sabe a história do sapo e da centopeia?- perguntou Chun-Chi.
-Não.
-Um sapo perguntou, um dia, a uma centopeia qual era a pata que ela pousava primeiro ao andar. E a centopeia nunca mais conseguiu andar. ~ Afonso Cruz,
145:O jogo paralisa as pessoas. Isto não é uma forma literária de o dizer. O meu pai usava o I Ching cada vez que tinha de tomar uma decisão importante. Atirava os paus do milefólio e agia em conformidade com o oráculo. Aos poucos, foi juntando às decisões importantes outras mais frívolas, chegando ao ponto de não ser capaz de decidir absolutamente nada sem a ajuda do livro.
-E isso não diminuiu a qualidade das suas decisões?
Chun-Chi serviu dois whiskies.
-Nem por isso. As nossas decisões já s��o relativamente arbitrárias. Nem sabemos verdadeiramente de onde vêm. Decidi levantar um copo, mas o meu braço mexeu-se antes da minha consciência. Enfim, o problema não foi esse.
-Qual foi?
(...)
-Para dar um passo, tinha de usar o I Ching. Para pensar, também, e assim chegou àquele lugar sem saída em que tinha de lançar os paus de milefólio para saber se poderia atirá-los. Agora está imobilizado, na cama.
(...)
-Sabe a história do sapo e da centopeia?- perguntou Chun-Chi.
-Não.
-Um sapo perguntou, um dia, a uma centopeia qual era a pata que ela pousava primeiro ao andar. E a centopeia nunca mais conseguiu andar. ~ Afonso Cruz,
146:O jogo paralisa as pessoas. Isto não é uma forma literária de o dizer. O meu pai usava o I Ching cada vez que tinha de tomar uma decisão importante. Atirava os paus do milefólio e agia em conformidade com o oráculo. Aos poucos, foi juntando às decisões importantes outras mais frívolas, chegando ao ponto de não ser capaz de decidir absolutamente nada sem a ajuda do livro.
-E isso não diminuiu a qualidade das suas decisões?
Chun-Chi serviu dois whiskies.
-Nem por isso. As nossas decisões já são relativamente arbitrárias. Nem sabemos verdadeiramente de onde vêm. Decidi levantar um copo, mas o meu braço mexeu-se antenada minha consciência. Enfim, o problema não foi esse.
-Qual foi?
(...)
-Para dar um passo, tinha de usar o I Ching. Para pensar, também, e assim chegou àquele lugar sem saída em que tinha de lançar os paus de milefólio para saber se poderia atiraram-los. Agora está imobilizado, na cama.
(...)
Sabe a história do sapo e da centopeia?- perguntou Chun-Chi.
-Não.
-Um sapo perguntou, um dia, a uma centopeia qual era a pata que ela pousava primeiro ao andar. E a centopeia nunca mais conseguiu andar. ~ Afonso Cruz,
147:O amor era cheio de janelas abertas, correntes de ar, milhões de bactérias , fontes de medos, milhões de deimos, o amor podia destruir as paredes que erigíamos com tanto esmero, o amor podia até abraçar o estrangeiro, a distância, podia destruir toda a ética, deixar-nos à mercê do insólito, do inesperado, do horror da surpresa. A minha noção de amor, na juventude, era uma noção de propriedade. Se era algo que podia fazer parte da casa e da sua perpetuação, muito bem, poderia ser considerado. De outro modo, era uma fera, uma ferida, uma doença, tal como o meu pai me ensinara: o amor constrói-se, por isso a escolha deve ser racional e não passional, escolhemos uma pessoa adequada e depois vamos criando um edifício amoroso. O amor que nasce do ímpeto sentimental ou carnal é perigoso. É um ladrão de sobriedade e de objectividade. Barbarifica-nos. Temos de olhar para ele como quem olha para a porta e vê o que está do lado de fora. A passos, devagar e ponderadamente, vai arriscando, conquistando território selvagem e domesticando-o. A exaltação é para as galinhas. Os seres humanos decidem com ponderação, é tão simples quanto isso, não cacarejam nervosos. ~ Afonso Cruz,
148:Vannak, akik a kereszténységet nem értik. Vannak, akik elárulják. Vannak gyengék, ostobák, vannak kíváncsiak, vannak erőtlenek. Mondd meg nekem, te miért jöttél ide?
Szomjúságból –
A kereszténység forrásának vizét beszennyezték –
Nem felelek.
A gyűlölet, a harag, a viszály, az irigység, a kapzsiság, a hataloméhség és a mérhetetlen szellemi sötétség földje lett, minden európai, még a legjobb is, fertőzött –
Segíts rajtam –
Nem tudok –
Most közvetlen előttem szólt, arcomtól alig arasznyira, egyenesen számba és szemembe.
Ezt a válságot ki kell bírni. Aki kibírja, azé a dicsőség. Aki nem, az elmerül –
Segíts rajtam –
Ha tudnék, akkor se lenne szabad. Kétségbeesnél, mert csapások értek és mert szenvedsz. Láttad az emberek határtalan nyomorúságát és elvetemültségét. Segíteni akarnál –
Akarok –
Senkit sem lehet korábban megváltani, mint ahogy arra megérett. Ha mégis megkísérelném, igen magas eszközöket adnék kezébe, amelyekkel magát nem mentené meg, hanem elpusztítaná magát és másokat. Európa kezébe kapta a feltalálás magas eszközeit, mielőtt annak használatára megérett, és most a világot kiirtja ahelyett, hogy a földet paradicsommá tenné – ~ B la Hamvas,
149:CAPÍTULO XCIX   O FILHO É A CARA DO PAI   Minha mãe, quando eu regressei bacharel quase estalou de felicidade Ainda ouço a voz de José Dias, lembrando o evangelho de São João, e dizendo ao ver-nos abraçados: – Mulher, eis aí o teu filho! Filho, eis aí a tua mãe! Minha mãe, entre lágrimas: – Mano Cosme, é a cara do pai, não é? – Sim, tem alguma cousa, os olhos, a disposição do rosto. É o pai, um pouco mais moderno, concluiu por chalaça. E diga-me agora mana Glória, não foi melhor que ele não teimasse em ser padre? Veja se este peralta daria um padre capaz. – Como vai o meu substituto? – Vai indo, ordena-se para o ano, respondeu tio Cosme. Hás de ir ver a ordenação; eu também, se o meu senhor coração consentir. É bom que te sintas na alma do outro, como se recebesses em ti mesmo a sagração. – Justamente! – exclamou minha mãe. – Mas veja bem, mano Cosme, veja se não é a figura do meu defunto. Olha, Bentinho, olha bem para mim. Sempre achei que te parecias com ele, agora é muito mais. O bigode é que desfaz um pouco... – Sim, mana Glória, o bigode realmente... mas é muito parecido. E minha mãe beijava-me com uma ternura que não sei escrever. Tio Cosme, para alegrá-la, chamava-me doutor, José Dias também, e todos em casa, a prima, os escravos, as visitas, Pádua, a filha, e ela mesma repetiam-me o título. ~ Machado de Assis,
150:Nenhuma regra moral genérica pode indicar o que devemos fazer; não existem sinais outorgados no mundo. Os católicos replicarão: "Mas claro que há sinais". Admitamos, sou eu mesmo, em todo caso, que escolho o significado que eles têm. Quando eu estava preso, conheci um homem impressionante, que era jesuíta. Ele tinha entrado na ordem da seguinte forma: havia passado por uma série de infortúnios bastante dolorosos; ainda criança, seu pai foi morto, deixando-o pobre. Ele foi recebido como bolsista em uma instituição religiosa onde constantemente lhe repetiam que ele tinha sido aceito por caridade; consequentemente, ele não recebeu muitas das distinções honoríficas com que as crianças são gratificadas; depois, por volta dos dezoito anos, - coisa pueril, mas que foi a gota d'água que fez o vaso transbordar - ele foi reprovado em sua preparação militar. Portanto, esse rapaz podia achar que tudo tinha dado errado para ele; era um sinal, mas um sinal de quê? Ele podia refugiar-se na amargura ou no desespero, mas avaliou, muito habilmente para seu próprio bem, que esse era o sinal de que ele não fora feito para os triunfos seculares, e que só os êxitos da religião, da santidade e da fé é que estavam ao seu alcance. Assim, viu nisso uma mensagem divina e ingressou nas ordens. Quem não vê que a decisão do sentido do sinal foi tomada exclusivamente por ele? ~ Jean Paul Sartre,
151:Az újkor teljes egészében és külön minden egyes mozzanatában csak egy módon érthető. Európa a klerikális ámításnak nem volt hajlandó hinni tovább. A buddhizmushoz e több tekintetben igen hasonló szellem nem azért győzött, mert a brahman kasztnál, illetve a klérusnál magasabb rendű és erősebb volt, hanem, mert a brahman, vagyis a klérus volt korrupt és kimerült, elbizakodott és tudatlan. A klérus ezer évnél hosszabb ideig az Evangéliumot hirdette, hogy nevében a népeket kizsákmányolhassa és megtiporhassa, az értelmet börtöneivel és inkvizíciójával elhallgattatta, üldözte. Az újkorban egyetlen betűt sem írtak le és egyetlen elméletet se gondoltak el és egyetlen kísérletet se végeztek, amelyet nem e tűrhetetlen árulás ellen való tiltakozó szembefordulás sugallt. Buddha nem a brahmanizmussal fordult szembe, hanem a Véda-hagyománnyal és az európai újkor nem a klérussal fordult szembe, hanem az Egyházzal és a kereszténységgel. Szeretném, ha e szavak százmilliárd lumen fényerővel világítanának. Az első idők történeti hevében senki se volt, aki észrevette. Még érthető. De ötszáz év alatt sem akadt, aki a nagy felvilágosodásban az embert felvilágosította volna, hogy aki a kereszténységet támadja, hibát követ el. Mert a sötétség oka nem a kereszténység, hanem a magát a kereszténységbe rejtő klerikalizmus. Mi történt? Európában az ötszáz éves hadjárat következménye, hogy a kereszténység és az Egyház iránt való bizalmat megingatták és a klerikalizmus erősebb, mint valaha. ~ B la Hamvas,
152:Nessa altura, vários mitos eram criados pelos jovens das carrinhas de fumo e das florestas de cogumelos alucinogénios, os famintos pela sede do ácido lisérgico, que estavam demasiado cansados do sofrimento em que cresceram e que precisavam de se refugiar nos sonhos. No universo destas crianças, corriam histórias inacreditáveis sobre os locais nas montanhas que as mulheres procuravam para se refugiar, sítios onde as pessoas se uniam pela música e pelo amor, para um crescimento espiritual mútuo. Para a tia Jeanine, que já tinha crescido com a imagem do pai sem um pé devido à guerra, alimentar-se dessas histórias parecia um refúgio, que ela mais tarde tentaria transformar em casa. E uma dessas histórias, particularmente uma, ficou-lhe na memória até à última fase da sua vida, quando veio a falecer aos oitenta e um anos, queimada pelo fogo. (...) Naquela altura, miúdo, diziam que, se procurássemos bem, íamos encontrar um sítio onde o mundo não acabaria. Os homens nunca iriam saber que raio de sítio era aquele, totalmente indomável! Um sítio onde as mãos porcas dos homens não chegariam. Um sítio sobre o qual os homens nunca saberiam nada. Não achas que consegui? Ter o meu corpo a desaparecer na floresta, como vi acontecer aos miúdos no Japão, na floresta Aokighara que os engole para o seu âmago. A carne reduzida a pó, a minha essência a desaparecer no meio da vida. Eles diziam que, quando morres num sítio, ficas nesse sítio para sempre. Era por isso que toda a gente tinha medo de ir para a guerra. Não era de morrer que eles tinham medo, miúdo, era de morrer lá. ~ Pat R,
153:Don Quijote megjelenése nem új műfajt, hanem formát teremtett, az európai ember új formáját, vagyis új tudatot, ha ez a szó jobban tetszik, új életkoncepciót, a valóságnak új megfogalmazását. Mindezt együttvéve azóta regénynek hívják. A regény az úgynevezett reális történet mellé az ember személyes történetét helyezi. Néha azzal szemben. De mindenesetre külön kezdettel, az előbbit néha keresztezi, néha azon kívül marad, néha beléje hatol, néha feloldja, néha kineveti, néha elveti. Minden autoritás nélkül, szubjektíven, mindössze a szélmalomvalóságra támaszkodva, Hamlet-szerűen. De ez az autoritás nélküli, bizonyíthatatlan szubjektivitás, ez a realitásból kifityegő emberi sors, vagyis a regény azóta a világot elárasztotta, a realitást át- meg átjárta, megőrölte, regényesítette a társadalmat, az asszonyokat (senkit mélyebben és alaposabban, mint az asszonyokat), a tudományt, a politikát, a vallást, a filozófiát, annyira, hogy ha ma valaki az ember valódi sorsa felől kérdez, esze ágába se jut a hivatalos történethez fordulni, ahol csak az obligát fő- és államtörténet közhelyeivel találkozik, hanem a regényhez nyúl, mert arra a kérdésre, hogy mi történt Angliában a múlt század közepén, nem a szcientifikus történet válaszol, hanem Dickens és Thackeray és Meredith, és ma sem történetünket éljük, hanem regényünket, és mindenki kénytelen azt élni - selbst die Niedrigen, die Kleinen Schicksal haben, gleich so wie die Grössen: a kicsinyeknek éppen úgy van sorsuk, mint a nagyoknak. A régieknek csak egy történetük volt, nekünk kettő van. Egy reális és egy szélmalomtörténet. Két eszkatológiánk van. Dupla sorsunk, egy macbethi és egy hamleti. Egy Don Quijote-i és egy Sancho Panza-i. Az egyik hivatalos (nyilvános), a másik privát (illegális). ~ B la Hamvas,
154:Isto é pra quando você vier e sentir o temor de continuar procurando, mesmo já tendo ido longe demais. Ele deve ter lhe falado dos portos que visitou, do que viu pelo mundo, sempre um pouco mais além numa busca sem fim e circular; e do que trouxe para casa, não os objetos que passaram a assombrar a mãe depois da sua morte, mas o que lhe marcou os olhos para sempre, deixando-lhe aquela expressão que ele tentava disfarçar em vão e que eu apreendi quando chegou a Carolina na distração do seu cansaço, os olhos que traziam o que ele tinha visto pelo mundo, a morte de um ladrão a chibatadas numa cidade da Arábia, o terror de um menino operado pelo próprio pai, a entrega dos que lhe pediam que os levasse com ele, para onde quer que fosse, como se dele esperassem a salvação. Ele me disse que ninguém pode imaginar a tristeza e o horror de ser tomado como salvação por quem prefere se entregar sem defesas ao primeiro que aparece, quem sabe um predador, a ter que continuar onde está. E eu imaginei. Ao contrário de você, a única coisa que ainda me pergunto é sobre o momento em que ele entendeu que estava perdido, quando passou a sentir que alguém pudesse ver nele a salvação, o momento em que entendeu que tudo podia ser ainda muito pior e que havia gente abaixo dele na sua escala de aviltamento. Porque talvez tenha sido esse o instante em que ele decidiu que desceria também, sempre um pouco mais, nem que fosse para lhes dar a mão. E quando precisou que eu lhe estendesse a minha, já não estava ao meu alcance. Penso em como são formadas as personalidades peculiares. Se são como as outras, se são como nós. O que pode ter passado um homem na infância para trazer uma cicatriz daquelas na barriga? Que espécie de sofrimento o pôs em sintonia com um mundo pior que o seu? ~ Bernardo Carvalho,
155:Raciocinai assim com a vida: Se te perco, perco uma coisa que somente os loucos querem conservar. Não passas de um sopro, exposto a todas as influências do ar e que, hora após hora, deterioram esta habitação em que moras. És meramente o joquete da morte, pois procuras sempre evitá-la pela fuga e, apesar disto, corres sempre em direção a ela. Não és nobre, porque todas as voluptuosidades, que são teu patrimônio, são acalentadas pelas baixezas. Estás longe de ser valente, pois temes o aguilhão terno e brando de um verme. O que tens de melhor em ti é o sono e que tantas vezes provocas; entretanto, temes grosseiramente a morte que não passa de um sono. Tu não és tu mesmo, pois tua existência é o resultado de milhares de grãos que saem do pó. Não és feliz, porque o que tu não tens, tu te esforças para adquirir e o que possuis, tu esqueces. Não és constante, pois tua natureza, segundo as fases da Lua, sofre estranhas alterações. Se és rico, és pobre; pois, semelhante a um asno cujo lombo está vergado ao peso de lingotes, só carregas as tuas riquezas um único dia e a morte te livra delas. Não tens amigos, pois o fruto de tuas próprias entranhas que te chama de ''pai'', o mais puro de teu sangue saído de teus próprios rins, maldiz a gota, a lepra e o catarro, que não te acabam bem depressa. Não tens juventude nem velhice, e, por assim dizer, não passas de um sesta depois do jantar que sonha um pouco com as duas idades; pois toda tua feliz juventude é passada fazendo-se velha e solicitando esmolas da paralítica velhice. Quando, no fim, fores velho e rico, já não terás calor, sentimento, força, nem beleza, para tornares agradáveis tuas riquezas. Que te sobra ainda nisto que traz o nome de Vida? Outras mil formas de morte ainda estão ocultas nesta vida e, contudo tememos a morte que nivela todas estas misérias. ~ William Shakespeare,
156:Raciocinai assim com a vida: Se te perco, perco uma coisa que somente os loucos querem conservar. Não passas de um sopro, exposto a todas as influências do ar e que, hora após hora, deterioram esta habitação em que moras. És meramente o joquete da morte, pois procuras sempre evitá-la pela fuga e, apesar disto, corres sempre em direção a ela. Não és nobre, porque todas as voluptuosidades, que são teu patrimônio, são acalentadas pelas baixezas. Estás longe de ser valente, pois temes o aguilhão terno e brando de um verme. O que tens de melhor em ti é o sono e que tantas vezes provocas; entretanto, temes grosseiramente a morte que não passa de um sono. Tu não és tu mesmo, pois tua existência é o resultado de milhares de grãos que saem do pó. Não és feliz, porque o que tu não tens, tu te esforças para adquirir e o que possuis, tu esqueces. Não és constante, pois tua natureza, segundo as fases da Lua, sofre estranhas alterações. Se és rico, és pobre; pois, semelhante a um asno cujo lombo está vergado ao peso de lingotes, só carregas as tuas riquezas um único dia e a morte te livra delas. Não tens amigos, pois o fruto de tuas próprias entranhas que te chama de ''pai'', o mais puro de teu sangue saído de teus próprios rins, maldiz a gota, a lepra e o catarro, que não te acabam bem depressa. Não tens juventude nem velhice, e, por assim dizer, não passas de um sesta depois do jantar que sonha um pouco com as duas idades; pois toda tua feliz juventude é passada fazendo-se velha e solicitando esmolas da paralítica velhice. Quando, no fim, fores velho e rico, já não terás calor, sentimento, força, nem beleza, para tornares agradáveis tuas riquezas.Que te sobra ainda nisto que traz o nome de Vida? O outras mil formas de morte ainda estão ocultas nesta vida e, contudo tememos a morte que nivela todas estas misérias. ~ William Shakespeare,
157:(...) por que hão de ter compaixão de mim? É verdade, não há motivo! Crucifiquem-me, preguem-me em uma cruz e não me lastimem. Crucificai-me, juiz, mas, crucificando-me, tende piedade de mim. Então irei voluntariamente ao suplício, porque não tenho sede de alegria, mas sim de dores e de lágrimas!...Julgas tu, taberneiro, que tua meia garrafa me deu algum prazer? Procurei a tristeza, a tristeza e as lágrimas, no fundo dela; encontrei-as e saboreei-as; mas Aquele que teve piedade de todos os homens, Aquele que compreendeu tudo, Aquele que terá piedade de nós, é o Único Juiz. Virá no último dia e perguntará: 'Onde está a filha que se sacrificou por uma madrasta invejosa e tísica, por crianças que não eram seus irmãos? Onde está a filha que teve compaixão do seu pai terrestre e não se afastou desse devasso bêbado?' E Ele dirá: 'Vem! Eu já te perdoei uma vez...já te perdoei uma vez... Agora mesmo todos os seus pecados serão perdoados por que muito amaste... 'Senti-o há pouco, aqui, no coração, quando estava na casa dela! Todos serão julgados por Ele e Ele a todos os perdoará: os bons e aos maus, aos prudentes e aos humildes...E, quando tiver acabado com esses, chegará a nossa vez: 'Aproximai-vos vós também, nos dirá Ele; aproximem-se os bêbados, aproximem-se os covardes, aproximem-se os devassos...'E aproximar-nos-emos sem receio. E Ele nos dirá: 'Vós sois uns porcos, sois a imagem e a marca bestial! Mas não importa, vinde'. E os justos e os sensatos dirão: “Senhor, por que recebes esses?” E Ele responderá: 'Recebo-os, justos, recebo-os, sensatos, porque nenhum deles se julgou digno desse favor...' E Ele estender-nos-á os braços, onde nos lançaremos banhados em lágrimas... Compreenderemos tudo... Então todos compreenderão tudo...Ekatierina Ivánovna também compreenderá...Senhor, venha a nós o vosso reino (...) ~ Fyodor Dostoyevsky,
158:Gyönyörűek az alvók, a ruhátlanul heverők,
A ruhátlan heverők kéz a kézben ömölnek át a kerek földön, kelettől nyugatig,
Kéz a kézben az ázsiai és az afrikai, kéz a kézben az európai és az amerikai,
Meztelen karjával öleli át a lány szeretője mellét, gerjedelem nélkül tapadnak egymáshoz, a szerető kedvese nyakára tapasztja ajkát,
Az apa mérhetetlen szeretettel tartja karjában felnőtt vagy neveletlen fiát, és a fiú mérhetetlen szeretettel tartja karjában az apját,
Az anya fehér haja leánya fehér csuklóján ragyog,
A fiú egyszerre lélegzik a felnőtt emberrel, barát a barátba karol,
Az iskolás megcsókolja a tanítót és a tanító az iskolást, kiengesztelődik a megbántott,
A rabszolga szava egy a gazda szavával, rabszolgájának köszön a gazda,
Kilép a börtönből a bűnös, az elmebajos épelméjű lesz, megszabadulnak fájdalmuktól a betegek,
Megszűnik az izzadság és a láz, a beteg torok ismét egészséges, a tüdővészes tüdeje rendbe jön, a szegény gondterhelt lélek megszabadul a gondtól,
A reumabeteg ízületei oly lágyan mozognak, mint valamikor, könnyebben, mint valaha,
Görcsök és fájdalmak fölengednek, újra járnak a bénák,
És a vízkórosak, a görcsben fetrengők, a vértolulásosak magukhoz térnek jóerőben,
Elhagyják az üdítő éjszakát, a gyógyító éjt, és felébrednek.
Elhagyom én is az éjt,
Egy ideig távol leszek tőled, ó, éjszaka, de ismét visszatérek hozzád és szeretlek.

Miért féljek, hogy rád bízom magam?
Nem félek, te voltál, aki továbbvittél, és jól vittél,
Szeretem a gazdag, iramló nappalt, de nem hagyom el azt, akiben oly sokáig fekszem,
Nem tudom, hogyan jöttem el tőled és nem tudom, hova térek veled, de tudom azt, hogy jól jöttem el és jól távozom el.

Csak egyszer állok meg az éjben és jókor ébredek föl,
Pontosan hagyom el a nappalt, ó, anyám, és pontosan térek vissza hozzád. ~ Walt Whitman,
159:Bartók művei aránytalanok, a zene bennük lényegesen kevesebb, mint a korszak ellen tanúsított ellenállás. Ebben a tekintetben Bartók magatartása teljesen azonos a többi komoly európai komponistáéval, sőt azonos a lényeges festők és szobrászok és költők magatartásával, mintha a korszak ellen tanúsított ellenállás a művészetnél is fontosabb lenne, sőt, mintha művészet csak azért lenne, hogy ezt az ellenállást (mivel a társadalom egyéb vonatkozásaiban teljesen eltűnt, és a nagy többség a korszak korrupciójának behódolt) fenntartsa, és a humánum igazságát megvédje. A zenében valószínűleg Brahms volt az utolsó szerző, aki még teljesen a zene világában élt és élhetett. A műben ezután egyre több lett az ellenállás, és egyre kevesebb a zene. A mű jelentőségét kezdte kizárólag az a magatartás eldönteni, hogy a korrupció és az igazság növekvő feszültségében a szerző milyen álláspontot foglal el; az álláspont határozta meg nemcsak a zenei tartalmat, hanem a formát és a stílust, és az alapul vett összhangzattant. Lehet, igaza van annak, aki azt állítja, hogy körülbelül száz éve a zene a diszharmónia kérdése körül forog. A diszharmónia, ma már köztudomású, nem a szerző individuális önkénye (mindenáron való újat akarás), esetleg szándékos megbotránkoztatás (épater), bosszú a korrupttá vált társadalmon. A diszharmónia, sőt a kakofónia egyrészt nem egyéb, mint a társadalmi lét tükre, mivel az ember a társadalmi létben kizárólag diszharmóniát és kakofóniát észlel, de jele a szerző elutasító kritikájának is, amellyel kimondja, hogy ezt életnek nem fogadja el, és radikálisan elveti. Persze a diszharmónia elmélete mélyebb, mert az újabb zenei művekben nem csupán történeti kérdések merülnek fel, hanem eddig érintetlen létrétegek is megnyilatkoznak, mondjuk, a hármashangzat világa alatt levő lét feltörése, annyira, hogy a huszadik század közepén a modern zenében nincs kakofónabb akkord, mint a hármashangzat. ~ B la Hamvas,
160:Hogy Ady szellemisége nem vált nemzeti szellemiséggé, az nem csak Adyn és nem csak a nemzeten múlott. A bukás feltétele emberben és körülményben egyformán jelen van. A közönségnek nem volt egységes állásfoglalása. Egy része tiltakozott Ady ellen, sajátságosképpen ez volt a jobbik fele. Másik része istenítette, s ezzel ahelyett, hogy Ady szellemiségének erőt adott volna, lehetetlenné tette elterjedését. Azok, akik Ady mellett voltak, állásfoglalásukkal oly mélyen kompromittálták, hogy a közösség jobbik fele, még ha megértette volna is, hogy miről van itt szó, e pártolóktól visszariadt. De még ez az eset is csak szórványos volt. Valójában sem itt, sem ott nem vették komolyan. Nem akart akkor és ott senki igazságot; mindenki a maga igazságát akarta. S ez az igazság változott, aszerint, hogy ki milyen volt. A becsvágyó igazságát úgy hívták, hogy pénz; a hiú igazságát úgy hívták, hogy szereplés; a becsvágyó és hiú igazságát úgy hívták, hogy pénz és szereplés.
Ady maga pedig nem volt az a személyiség, aki bármiféle szellemiséget tartani tudott volna és végig tudott volna vinni. Egyéni élményvilága az európai nihilizmus, a feloldódás, süllyedés, szétbomlás. Életmenete pedig élményeihez alakul. Nem tudott megnemesedni annak a szellemnek magas tisztaságában, amelyet hordott. Valószínű, hogy azt a szellemet, amelyet költészetében megvalósított, ő maga éppoly kevéssé értette, mint más. Mert ha értette volna, lett volna annyi ereje, hogy ne semmisüljön meg terméketlen és hiábavaló önrombolásban. Adynak a szelleme nem az volt, aminek lenni kellett volna: fény, amely áthatja és személyes életét is fölemeli. A nihilizmus embere halálkereső. Ady saját szelleméből csak annyit értett, hogy ez alkalom az összetörésre, lehetőség arra, hogy itt megkínozza, szétzúzza, összevérezze magát. A veszélyt, amit e szellem jelentett, nem kitüntetésnek fogta fel és nem heroikus életet alkotott belőle, hanem átoknak érezte és felhasználta arra, hogy belepusztuljon. ~ B la Hamvas,
161:Hoje é o último dia do ano. Em todo o mundo que este calendário rege andam as pessoas entretidas a debates consigo mesmas as boas ações que tencionam praticar no ano que entra, jurando que vão ser retas, justas e equânimes, que da sua emendada boca não voltará a sair uma palavra má, uma mentira, uma insidia, ainda que as merecesse o inimigo, claro que é das pessoas vulgar que estamos falando, as outras, as de exceção, as incomuns, regulam-se por razões suas próprias para serem e fazerem o contrário sempre que lhes apetece ou aproveite, essas são as que não se deixam iludir, chegam a rir-se de nós e das boas intenções que mostramos, mas, enfim, vamos aprendendo com a experiencia, logo nos primeiros dias de Janeiro teremos esquecido metade do que havíamos prometido, e, tendo esquecido tanto, não há realmente motivo para cumprir o resto, é como um castelo de cartas, se já lhe faltam as obras superiores, melhor é que caia tudo e se confundam os naipes. Por isso é duvidoso ter-se despedido Cristo da vida com as palavras da escritura, as de Mateus e Marcos, Deus meu, Deus meu, por que me desamparaste, ou as de Lucas, Pai, nas tuas mãos entrego o meu espirito, ou as de João, Tudo está cumprido, o que Cristo disse foi, palavra de honra, qualquer pessoa popular sabe que esta é a verdade, Adeus mundo, cada vez a pior. Mas os deuses de Ricardo Reis são outros, silenciosas entidades que nos olham indiferentes, para quem o mal e o bem são menos que palavras, por as não dizerem eles nunca, e como as diriam, se mesmo entre o bem e o mal não sabem distinguir, indo como nós vamos no rio das coisas, só ditamos. Esta lição nos foi dada para que não nos afadiguemos a jurar novas e melhores intenções para o ano que tem, por elas não nos julgarão os deuses, pelas obras, também não, só juízes humanos ousam julgar, os deuses nunca, porque se supõe saberem tudo, salvo se tudo isto é falso, se justamente não é sua ocupação única esquecerem em cada momento o que do cada momento lhes vão ensinando os atos dos homens, os bons como os maus, iguais derradeiramente para os deuses, porque inúteis lhes são. Não digamos Amanhã farei, porque o mais certo é estarmos cansados amanhã, digamos antes, Depois de amanhã, sempre teremos um dia de intervalo para mudar de opinião e projeto, porém ainda mais prudente seria dizer, Um dia decidirei quando será o dia de dizer depois de amanhã, e talvez nem seja preciso, se a morte definidora vier antes desobrigar-me do compromisso, liberdade que a nós próprios negamos. ~ Jos Saramago,
162:Quando aquela senhora que me lembrava minha tia disse que me conhecia, ela não estava dizendo que conhecia minha história de vida e minha família, que sabia onde eu morava, que escolas frequentei, os romances que escrevi e as dificuldades políticas que enfrentei. Nem que conhecia minha vida particular, meus hábitos pessoais ou minha natureza essencial e minha visão de mundo, que eu tentara expressar relacionando-as com minha cidade natal em meu livro Istambul. A velha senhora não estava confundindo a minha história com as histórias de minhas personagens fictícias. Ela parecia falar de algo mais profundo, mais íntimo, mais secreto, e senti que a entendia. O que permitiu que a tia perspicaz me conhecesse tão bem foram minhas próprias experiências sensoriais, que inconscientemente eu colocara em todos os meus livros, em todas as minhas personagens. Eu projetara minhas experiências em minhas personagens: como me sinto quando aspiro o cheiro da terra molhada de chuva, quando me embriago num restaurante barulhento, quando toco a dentadura de meu pai depois de sua morte, quando lamento estar apaixonado, quando eu consigo me safar quando conto uma mentirinha, quando aguardo na fila de uma repartição pública segurando um documento molhado de suor, quando observo as crianças jogando futebol na rua, quando corto o cabelo, quando vejo retratos de paxás e frutas pendurados nas bancas de Istambul, quando sou reprovado na prova de direção, quando fico triste depois que todo mundo deixou a praia no fim do verão, quando sou incapaz de me levantar e ir embora no final de uma longa visita a alguém apesar do adiantado da hora, quando desligo o falatório da TV na sala de espera do médico, quando encontro um velho amigo do serviço militar, quando há um súbito silêncio no meio de uma conversa interessante. Nunca me senti embaraçado quando meus leitores pensavam que as aventuras de meus heróis também haviam ocorrido comigo, porque eu sabia que isso não era verdade. Ademais, eu tinha o suporte de três séculos de teoria do romance e da ficção, que podia usar para me proteger dessas afirmações. E estava bem ciente de que a teoria do romance existia para defender e manter essa independência da imaginação em relação à realidade. No entanto, quando uma leitora inteligente me disse que sentira, nos detalhes do romance, a experiência da vida real que "os tornavam meus", eu me senti embaraçado como alguém que confessou coisas íntimas a respeito da própria alma, como alguém cujas confissões escritas foram lidas por outra pessoa. ~ Orhan Pamuk,
163:Coleman passara quase toda a sua carreira acadêmica na Athena; homem extrovertido, arguto, urbano, terrivelmente sedutor, com um toque de guerreiro e charlatão, em nada se parecia com a figura pedante do professor de latim e grego (assim, por exemplo, quando ainda era um jovem instrutor, cometeu a heresia de criar um clube de conversação em grego e latim). Seu venerável curso introdutório de literatura grega clássica em tradução — conhecido pela sigla DHM, ou seja, deuses, heróis e mitos — era popular entre os alunos precisamente por tudo o que havia nele de direito, franco, enfático e pouco acadêmico. "Vocês sabem como começa a literatura europeia?", perguntava ele, após fazer a chamada na primeira aula. "Com uma briga. Toda a literatura europeia nasce de uma briga." Então pegava sua Ilíada e lia para os alunos os primeiros versos. "'Musa divina, canta a cólera desastrosa de Aquiles... Começa com o motivo do conflito entre os dois, Agamenon, rei dos homens, e o grande Aquiles', E por que é que eles estão brigando, esses dois grandes espíritos violentos e poderosos? Por um motivo tão simples quanto qualquer briga de botequim. Estão brigando por causa de uma mulher. Uma menina, na verdade. Uma menina roubada do pai. Capturada numa guerra. Ora, Agamenon gosta muito mais dessa menina do que de sua esposa, Clitemnestra. 'Clitemnestra não é tão boa quanto ela', diz ele, 'nem de rosto, nem de corpo'. É uma explicação bastante direta do motivo pelo qual ele não quer abrir mão da tal moça, não é? Quando Aquiles exige que Agamenon a devolva ao pai a fim de apaziguar Apolo, o deus cuja ira assassina foi despertada pelas circunstâncias em que a moça fora raptada, Agamenon se recusa: diz que só abre mão da namorada se Aquiles lhe der a dele em troca. Com isso, Aquiles fica ainda mais enfurecido. Aquiles, o adrenalina: o sujeito mais inflamável e explosivo de todos os que já foram imaginados pelos escritores; especialmente quando seu prestígio e seu apetite estão em jogo, ele é a máquina de matar mais hipersensível da história da guerra. Aquiles, o célebre: apartado e alijado por causa de uma ofensa à sua honra. Aquiles, o grande herói, tão enraivecido por um insulto — o insulto de não poder ficar com a garota — acaba se isolando e se excluindo, numa atitude desafiadora, da sociedade que precisa muitíssimo dele, pois ele é justamente seu glorioso protetor. Assim, uma briga, uma briga brutal por causa de uma menina, de seu corpo jovem e das delícias da rapacidade sexual: é assim, nessa ofensa ao direito fálico, à *dignidade* fálica, de um poderosíssimo príncipe guerreiro, que tem início, bem ou mal, a grande literatura de ficção europeia, e é por isso que, quase três mil anos depois, vamos começar nosso estudo aqui... ~ Philip Roth,
164:O Édipo não serve estritamente para nada, a não ser para apertar o inconsciente dos dois lados. Veremos em que sentido é que o Édipo é estritamente "indecidível», como dizem os matemáticos. Estamos fartos dessas histórias em que se está bem de saúde graças ao Édipo, doente do Édipo, e em que há várias doenças dentro do Édipo. Pode até acontecer que um analista se farte desse mito que é a gamela e a cova da psicanálise e que retorne às origens: «Freud nunca chegou a sair nemdo mundo do pai, nem da culpabilidade ... Mas foi o primeiro que, ao criar a possibilidade de construir uma lógica de relação com o pai, abriu o caminho para o homem se libertar do domínio do pai. A possibilidade de viver para!d da lei do pai, para lá de qualquer lei, talvez seja a possibilidade mais essencial que a psicanálise freudiana criou. Mas, paradoxalmente, e talvez por causa do próprio Freud, tudo leva a crer que essa libertação que a psicanálise permite se fará - se faz já - fora dela,>.Todavia, não podemos partilhar nem deste pessimismo nem deste optimismo. Porque é preciso muito optimismo para pensar que, psicanálise permite uma verdadeira solução do Édipo: o Édipo é como Deus; o pai é como Deus; só se resolve o problema quando se suprimir tanto o problema (orno a solução. A esquizo-análise não se propõe resolver o Édipo, não pretende resolvê-Io melhor que a psicanálise edipiana. Propõe-se desedipianizar o inconsciente para poder chegar aos verdadeiros problemas. Propóe-se atingir essas regiões do inconsciente órfão «(para lá de todas as leis», em que o problema deixa de poder ser posto. E por consequência, também não partilhamos do pessimismo de pensar que essa mudança, essa libertação só se pode fazer fora da psicanálise. Pensamos, pelo contrário, que é possível dar-se uma reversão interna que.transforme a máquina analítica numa peça indispensável do aparelho revolucionário. Mais: já há mesmo condições objectivas para isso.
Tudo se passa, pois, como se o Édipo tivesse dois pólos: um pólo de figuras Imaginárias de identificação e um pólo de funçóes simbólicas diferenciantes. Mas seja como for estamos edipianizados: se não temos o Édipo como crise, temo-lo como estrutura. Então transmitimos a crise a OUtrOS, e tudo volta a começar. E é esta a disjunção edipiana, o movimento de pêndulo, a razão inversa exclusiva. E é por isso que quando nos convidam a superar uma concepção simplista do Édipo fundada em imagens paternas, por uma concepção em que se definem funções simbólicas numa estrutura, e se substitui o papá-mamá tradicional por uma função-mãe e uma função-pai, não vemos o que é que se ganha com isso, a não ser o fundar a universalidade do Édipo para além da variabilidade das imagens, soldar ainda melhor o desejo à lei e ao interdito, e levar a cabo o processo de edipianização do inconsciente. Estes são os dois extremos do Édipo, o seu mínimo e o seu máximo, consoante o consideremos como tendente para o valor indiferenciado das suas imagens variáveis, ou para a capacidade de diferenciação das suas funções simbólicas. «Quando nos aproximamos da imaginação material, função diferencial
diminui e tende-se para equivalências; quando nos aproximamos dos elementos
formadores, a função diferencial aumenta e tende-se para valências distintivas ». Depois disto, não nos espantava nada ouvir dizer que o Édipo como estrutura é a trindade cristã, enquanto que o Édipo como crise é a trindade familiar, insuficientemente estruturada pela fé; sempre os dois pólos em razão inversa, Édipo for ever.' Quantas interpretações do lacanismo, oculta ou abertamente piedosas, invocaram um Édipo estrutural para formar e fechar o duplo impasse, para nos reconduzirem à questão do pai, para conseguirem edipianizar o esquizo, e mostrar que uma lacuna no simbólico nos remete para o imaginário e que, inversamente, as insuficiências ou confusões imaginárias nos remetem para a estrutura. Como um célebre precursor dizia aos seus animais: chega de lengalenga... ~ Gilles Deleuze,
165:was also renowned in Japan. Burton Watson says of ~ Bai Juyi



: "he worked to
develop a style that was simple and easy to understand, and posterity has
requited his efforts by making him one of the most well-loved and widely read of
all Chinese poets, both in his native land and in the other countries of the East
that participate in the appreciation of Chinese culture. He also, thanks to the
translations and biographical studies by Arthur Waley, one of the most accessible
to English readers". Today the fame of ~ Bai Juyi



is worldwide.
Name variants
Names
Pinyin: Bó Juyì or Bái Juyì
Wade-Giles: Po Chü-i or Pai Chü-i
Zì : Lètian
Hào : Xiangshan Jushì
Zuìyín Xiansheng
Shì Wén (hence referred
to as Bái Wéngong )
~ Bai Juyi



often referred to himself in life as Letian, the older English transcription
version being Lo-t'ien, meaning something like "happy-go-lucky". Later in life, he
referred to himself as the Hermit of Xiangshan.
Life
~ Bai Juyi



lived during the Middle Tang period. This was a period of rebuilding and
recovery for the Tang Empire, following the An Shi Rebellion, and following the
poetically flourishing era famous for Li Bo (701-762), Wang Wei (701-761), and
Du Fu (712-770). ~ Bai Juyi



lived through the reign of eight or nine emperors,
being born in the Dali regnal era (766-779) of Emperor Daizong of Tang. He had
a long and successful career both as a government official and a poet, although
these two facets of his career seemed to have come in conflict with each other at
certain points. ~ Bai Juyi



was also a devoted Chan Buddist.
Birth and childhood
~ Bai Juyi



was born in 772, in Taiyuan, Shanxi, which was then a few miles from
location of the modern city. Although he was in Zhengyang, Henan for most of
his childhood. His family was poor but scholarly, his father being an Assistant
Department Magistrate of the second-class. At the age of ten he was sent away
from his family to avoid a war that broke out in the north of China, and went to
live with relatives in the area known as Jiangnan, more specifically Xuzhou.
Early career
~ Bai Juyi



's official career was initially successful. He passed the jinshi
examinations in 800. ~ Bai Juyi



may have taken up residence in the western capital
city of Chang'an, in 801. Not long after this, ~ Bai Juyi



and formed a long
friendship with a scholar Yuan Zhen. ~ Bai Juyi



's father died in 804, and the young
Bai spent the traditional period of retirement mourning the death of his parent,
which he did along the Wei River, near to the capital. 806 was the first full year
of the reign of Emperor Xianzong of Tang. Also, 806 was the ~ Bai Juyi



was
appointed to a minor post as a government official, at Zhouzhi, which was not far
from the Chang'an (and also in Shaanxi province). He was made a member
(scholar) of the Hanlin Academy, in 807, and Reminder of the Left from 807 until
815, except in 811 when his mother died. He spent the traditional three year
mourning period again along the Wei River, and returned to court in the winter of
814, where he held the title of Assistant Secretary to the Prince's Tutor. It was
not a high ranking position, but nevertheless one which he was soon to lose.
Exile
While serving as a minor palace official, 814, Bei Juyi managed to get himself in
official trouble. He made a few enemies at court and with certain individuals in
other positions. It was partly his written works which lead him into trouble. He
wrote two long memorials, translated by Arthur Waley as "On Stopping the War",
regarding what he considered to be an overly lengthy campaign against a minor
group of Tatars; and he wrote a series of poems, in which he satirized the actions
of greedy officials and highlighting the sufferings of the common folk.
At this time, one of the post-An Lushan warlords (jiedushi), Wu Yuanji in Henan,
had seized control of Zhangyi Circuit (centered in Zhumadian), an act for which
he sought reconciliation with the imperial government, trying to get an imperial
pardon as a necessary prerequisite. Despite the intercession of influential friends,
Wu was denied, thus officially putting him in the position of rebellion. Still
seeking a pardon, Wu turned to assassination, blaming the Prime Minister
(another Wu, Wu Yuanheng) and other officials: the imperial court generally
began by dawn, requiring the ministers to rise early in order to attend in a timely
manner; and, on July 13, 815, before dawn, the Tang Prime Minister Wu
Yuanheng was set to go to the palace for a meeting with Emperor Xianzong. As
he left his house, arrows were fired at his retinue. His servants all fled, and the
assassins seized Wu Yuanheng and his horse, and then decapitated him, taking
his head with them. The assassins also attacked another official who favored the
campaign against the rebellious warlords, Pei Du, but was unable to kill him. The
people at the capital were shocked and there was turmoil, with officials refusing
to leave their personal residences until after dawn.
In this context, ~ Bai Juyi



overstepped his minor position by memorializing the
emperor. As Assistant Secretary to the Prince's Tutor, Bai's memorial was a
breach of protocol — he should have waited for those of censorial authority to
take the lead before offering his own criticism. This was not the only charge
which his opponents used against him. His mother had died, apparently caused
by falling into a well while looking at some flowers, and two poems written by Bai
Juyi — the titles of which Waley translates as "In Praise of Flowers" and "The
New Well" — were used against him as a sign of lack of Filial Piety, one of the
Confucian ideals. The result was exile: ~ Bai Juyi



was demoted to the rank of SubPrefect and banished from the court and the capital city to Jiujiang, then known
as Xun Yang on the southern shores of the Yangtze River in northwest Jiangxi
Province, China. After three years he was sent as Governor of a remote place in
Sichuan. At the time, the main travel route there was up the Yangzi River. This
trip allowed ~ Bai Juyi



a few days to visit his friend Yuan Zhen, who was also in
exile and with whom he explored the rock caves located at Yichang. ~ Bai Juyi



was
delighted by the flowers and trees for which his new location was noted. In 819,
he was recalled back to the capital, ending his exile.
Return to the capital and a new emperor
In 819, ~ Bai Juyi



was recalled to the capital and given the position of second-class
Assistant Secretary. In 821, China got a new emperor, Muzong. After succeeding
to the throne, Muzong spent his time feasting and heavily drinking, and
neglecting his duties as emperor. Meanwhile, the temporarily subdued regional
military governors (jiedushi) began to challenge the central Tang government,
leading to the new de facto independence of three circuits north of the Yellow
River, which had been previously subdued by Emperor Xianzong. Furthermore,
Muzong's administration was characterized by massive corruption. Again, ~ Bai Juyi,
166:I-Juca Pirama
No meio das tabas de amenos verdores,
Cercadas de troncos — cobertos de flores,
Alteiam-se os tetos d’altiva nação;
São muitos seus filhos, nos ânimos fortes,
Temíveis na guerra, que em densas coortes
Assombram das matas a imensa extensão.
São rudos, severos, sedentos de glória,
Já prélios incitam, já cantam vitória,
Já meigos atendem à voz do cantor:
São todos Timbiras, guerreiros valentes!
Seu nome lá voa na boca das gentes,
Condão de prodígios, de glória e terror!
As tribos vizinhas, sem forças, sem brio,
As armas quebrando, lançando-as ao rio,
O incenso aspiraram dos seus maracás:
Medrosos das guerras que os fortes acendem,
Custosos tributos ignavos lá rendem,
Aos duros guerreiros sujeitos na paz.
No centro da taba se estende um terreiro,
Onde ora se aduna o concílio guerreiro
Da tribo senhora, das tribos servis:
Os velhos sentados praticam d’outrora,
E os moços inquietos, que a festa enamora,
Derramam-se em torno dum índio infeliz.
Quem é? — ninguém sabe: seu nome é ignoto,
Sua tribo não diz: — de um povo remoto
Descende por certo — dum povo gentil;
Assim lá na Grécia ao escravo insulano
Tornavam distinto do vil muçulmano
As linhas corretas do nobre perfil.
Por casos de guerra caiu prisioneiro
Nas mãos dos Timbiras: — no extenso terreiro
Assola-se o teto, que o teve em prisão;
Convidam-se as tribos dos seus arredores,
Cuidosos se incumbem do vaso das cores,
Dos vários aprestos da honrosa função.
Acerva-se a lenha da vasta fogueira,
Entesa-se a corda de embira ligeira,
Adorna-se a maça com penas gentis:
A custo, entre as vagas do povo da aldeia
Caminha o Timbira, que a turba rodeia,
Garboso nas plumas de vário matiz.
Entanto as mulheres com leda trigança,
Afeitas ao rito da bárbara usança,
O índio já querem cativo acabar:
A coma lhe cortam, os membros lhe tingem,
Brilhante enduape no corpo lhe cingem,
Sombreia-lhe a fronte gentil canitar.
II
Em fundos vasos d’alvacenta argila ferve o cauim;
Enchem-se as copas, o prazer começa, reina o festim.
O prisioneiro, cuja morte anseiam, sentado está,
O prisioneiro, que outro sol no ocaso jamais verá!
A dura corda, que lhe enlaça o colo, mostra-lhe o fim
Da vida escura, que será mais breve do que o festim!
Contudo os olhos d’ignóbil pranto secos estão;
Mudos os lábios não descerram queixas do coração.
Mas um martírio, que encobrir não pode, em rugas faz
A mentirosa placidez do rosto na fronte audaz!
Que tens, guerreiro? Que temor te assalta no passo horrendo?
Honra das tabas que nascer te viram, folga morrendo.
Folga morrendo; porque além dos Andes revive o forte,
Que soube ufano contrastar os medos da fria morte.
Rasteira grama, exposta ao sol, à chuva, lá murcha e pende:
Somente ao tronco, que devassa os ares, o raio ofende!
Que foi? Tupã mandou que ele caísse, como viveu;
E o caçador que o avistou prostrado esmoreceu!
Que temes, ó guerreiro? Além dos Andes revive o forte,
Que soube ufano contrastar os medos da fria morte.
III
Em larga roda de novéis guerreiros
Ledo caminha o festival Timbira,
A quem do sacrifício cabe as honras.
Na fronte o canitar sacode em ondas,
O enduape na cinta se embalança,
Na destra mão sopesa a ivirapeme,
Orgulhoso e pujante. — Ao menor passo
Colar d’alvo marfim, insígnia d’honra,
Que lhe orna o colo e o peito, ruge e freme,
Como que por feitiço não sabido
Encantadas ali as almas grandes
Dos vencidos Tapuias, inda chorem
Serem glória e brasão d'imigos feros.
“Eis-me aqui, diz ao índio prisioneiro;
“Pois que fraco, e sem tribo, e sem família,
“As nossas matas devassaste ousado,
“Morrerás morte vil da mão de um forte.”
Vem a terreiro o mísero contrário;
Do colo à cinta a muçurana desce:
“Dize-nos quem és, teus feitos canta,
“Ou se mais te apraz, defende-te.” Começa
O índio, que ao redor derrama os olhos,
Com triste voz que os ânimos comove.
IV
Meu canto de morte,
Guerreiros, ouvi:
Sou filho das selvas,
Nas selvas cresci;
Guerreiros, descendo
Da tribo Tupi.
10
Da tribo pujante,
Que agora anda errante
Por fado inconstante,
Guerreiros, nasci;
Sou bravo, sou forte,
Sou filho do Norte;
Meu canto de morte,
Guerreiros, ouvi.
Já vi cruas brigas,
De tribos imigas,
E as duras fadigas
Da guerra provei;
Nas ondas mendaces
Senti pelas faces
Os silvos fugaces
Dos ventos que amei.
Andei longes terras,
Lidei cruas guerras,
Vaguei pelas serras
Dos vis Aimorés;
Vi lutas de bravos,
Vi fortes — escravos!
De estranhos ignavos
Calcados aos pés.
E os campos talados,
E os arcos quebrados,
E os piagas coitados
Já sem maracás;
E os meigos cantores,
Servindo a senhores,
Que vinham traidores,
Com mostras de paz
Aos golpes do imigo
Meu último amigo,
Sem lar, sem abrigo
Caiu junto a mi!
Com plácido rosto,
Sereno e composto,
11
O acerbo desgosto
Comigo sofri.
Meu pai a meu lado
Já cego e quebrado,
De penas ralado,
Firmava-se em mi:
Nós ambos, mesquinhos,
Por ínvios caminhos,
Cobertos d’espinhos
Chegamos aqui!
O velho no entanto
Sofrendo já tanto
De fome e quebranto,
Só qu’ria morrer!
Não mais me contenho,
Nas matas me embrenho,
Das frechas que tenho
Me quero valer.
Então, forasteiro,
Caí prisioneiro
De um troço guerreiro
Com que me encontrei:
O cru dessossego
Do pai fraco e cego,
Enquanto não chego,
Qual seja — dizei!
Eu era o seu guia
Na noite sombria,
A só alegria
Que Deus lhe deixou:
Em mim se apoiava,
Em mim se firmava,
Em mim descansava,
Que filho lhe sou.
Ao velho coitado
De penas ralado,
Já cego e quebrado,
12
Que resta? - Morrer.
Enquanto descreve
O giro tão breve
Da vida que teve,
Deixa-me viver!
Não vil, não ignavo,
Mas forte, mas bravo,
Serei vosso escravo:
Aqui virei ter.
Guerreiros, não coro
Do pranto que choro;
Se a vida deploro,
Também sei morrer.
Soltai-o! — diz o chefe. Pasma a turba;
Os guerreiros murmuram: mal ouviram,
Nem pode nunca um chefe dar tal ordem!
Brada segunda vez com voz mais alta,
Afrouxam-se as prisões, a embira cede,
A custo, sim; mas cede: o estranho é salvo,
— Timbira, diz o índio enternecido,
Solto apenas dos nós que o seguravam:
És um guerreiro ilustre, um grande chefe,
Tu que assim do meu mal te comoveste,
Nem sofres que, transposta a natureza,
Com olhos onde a luz já não cintila,
Chore a morte do filho o pai cansado,
Que somente por seu na voz conhece.
— És livre; parte.
— E voltarei.
— Debalde.
— Sim, voltarei, morto meu pai.
— Não voltes!
É bem feliz, se existe, em que não veja,
Que filho tem, qual chora: és livre; parte!
— Acaso tu supões que me acobardo,
13
Que receio morrer!
— És livre; parte!
— Ora não partirei; quero provar-te
Que um filho dos Tupis vive com honra,
E com honra maior, se acaso vencem,
Da morte o passo glorioso afronta.
— Mentiste, que um Tupi não chora nunca,
E tu choraste!... parte; não queremos
Com carne vil enfraquecer os fortes.
Sobresteve o Tupi: - arfando em ondas
O rebater do coração se ouvia
Precipite. - Do rosto afogueado
Gélidas bagas de suor corriam:
Talvez que o assaltava um pensamento...
Já não... que na enlutada fantasia,
Um pesar, um martírio ao mesmo tempo,
Do velho pai a moribunda imagem
Quase bradar-lhe ouvia: - Ingrato! ingrato!
Curvado o colo, taciturno e frio,
Espectro d’homem, penetrou no bosque!
VI
— Filho meu, onde estás?
— Ao vosso lado;
Aqui vos trago provisões: tomai-as,
As vossas forças restaurar perdidas,
E a caminho, e já!
— Tardaste muito!
Não era nado o sol, quando partiste,
E frouxo o seu calor já sinto agora!
— Sim, demorei-me a divagar sem rumo,
Perdi-me nestas matas intrincadas,
Reaviei-me e tornei; mas urge o tempo;
Convém partir, e já!
14
— Que novos males
Nos resta de sofrer? — que novas dores,
No outro fado pior Tupã nos guarda?
— As setas da aflição já se esgotaram,
Nem para novo golpe espaço intacto
Em nossos corpos resta.
— Mas tu tremes
— Talvez do afã da caça...
— Oh filho caro
Um quê misterioso aqui me fala,
Aqui no coração; piedosa fraude
Será por certo, que não mentes nunca!
Não conheces temor, e agora temes?
Vejo e sei: é Tupã que nos aflige,
E contra o seu querer não valem brios.
Partamos!... — E com mão trêmula, incerta
Procura o filho, tateando as trevas
Da sua noite lúgubre e medonha.
Sentindo o acre odor das frescas tintas,
Uma idéia fatal correu-lhe à mente...
Do filho os membros gélidos apalpa,
E a dolorosa maciez das plumas
Conhece estremecendo: — foge, volta,
encontra sob as mãos o duro crânio,
Despido então do natural ornato!...
Recua aflito e pávido, cobrindo
Às mãos ambas os olhos fulminados,
Como que teme ainda o triste velho
De ver, não mais cruel, porém mais clara,
Daquele exício grande a imagem viva
Ante os olhos do corpo afigurada.
Não era que a verdade conhecesse
Inteira e tão cruel qual tinha sido;
Mas que funesto azar correra o filho,
Ele o via; ele o tinha ali presente;
E era de repetir-se a cada instante.
A dor passada, a previsão futura
E o presente tão negro, ali os tinha;
Ali no coração se concentrava,
15
Era num ponto só, mas era a morte!
— Tu prisioneiro, tu?
— Vós o dissesses.
— Dos índios?
— Sim.
— De que nação?
— Timbiras
— E a muçurana funeral rompeste,
Dos falsos manitôs quebraste a maça...
— Nada fiz... aqui estou.
— Nada! —
Emudecem;
Curto instante depois prossegue o velho:
— Tu és valente, bem o sei; confesso,
Fizeste-o, certo, ou já não foras vivo!
— Nada fiz; mas souberam da existência
De um pobre velho, que em mim só vivia...
— E depois?...
—Eis-me aqui.
—Fica essa taba?
— Na direção do sol, quando transmonta.
— Longe?
— Não muito.
16
— Tens razão: partamos.
— E quereis ir?...
— Na direção do ocaso.
VII
“Por amor de um triste velho,
Que ao termo fatal já chega,
Vós, guerreiros, concedesses
A vida a um prisioneiro.
Ação tão nobre vos honra,
Nem tão alta cortesia
Vi eu jamais praticada
Entre os Tupis — e mas foram
Senhores em gentileza.
“Eu porém nunca vencido,
Nem os combates por armas
Nem por nobreza nos atos;
Aqui venho, e o filho trago.
Vós o dizeis prisioneiro,
Seja assim como dizeis;
Manda! vir a lenha, o fogo,
A maça do sacrifício
E a muçurana ligeira:
Em tudo o rito se cumpra!
E quando eu for só na terra,
Certo acharei entre os vossos,
Que tão gentis se revelam,
Alguém que meus passos guie;
Alguém, que vendo o meu peito
Coberto de cicatrizes,
Tomando a vez de meu filho,
De haver-me por pai se ufane!"
Mas o chefe dos Timbiras,
Os sobrolhos encrespando,
Ao velho Tupi guerreiro
Responde com torvo acento:
17
— Nada farei do que dizes:
É teu filho imbele e fraco!
Aviltaria o triunfo
Da mais guerreira das tribos
Derramar seu ignóbil sangue:
Ele chorou de cobarde;
Nós outros, fortes Timbiras,
Só de heróis fazemos pasto. —
Do velho Tupi guerreiro
A surda voz na garganta
Faz ouvir uns sons confusos,
Como os rugidos de um tigre,
Que pouco a pouco se assanha!
VIII
“Tu choraste em presença da morte?
Na presença de estranhos choraste?
Não descende o cobarde do forte;
Pois choraste, meu filho não és!
Possas tu, descendente maldito
De uma tribo de nobres guerreiros,
Implorando cruéis forasteiros,
Seres presa de vis Aimorés.
“Possas tu, isolado na terra,
Sem arrimo e sem pátria vagando,
Rejeitado da morte na guerra,
Rejeitado dos homens na paz,
Ser das gentes o espectro execrado;
Não encontres amor nas mulheres,
Teus amigos, se amigos tiveres,
Tenham alma inconstante e falaz!
“Não encontres doçura no dia,
Nem as cores da aurora te ameiguem,
E entre as larvas da noite sombria
Nunca possas descanso gozar:
Não encontres um tronco, uma pedra,
Posta ao sol, posta às chuvas e aos ventos,
Padecendo os maiores tormentos,
Onde possas a fronte pousar.
18
“Que a teus passos a relva se torre;
Murchem prados, a flor desfaleça,
E o regato que límpido corre,
Mais te acenda o vesano furor;
Suas águas depressa se tornem,
Ao contacto dos lábios sedentos,
Lago impuro de vermes nojentos,
Donde festas como asco e terror!
“Sempre o céu, como um teto incendido,
Creste e punja teus membros malditos
E o oceano de pó denegrido
Seja a terra ao ignavo tupi!
Miserável, faminto, sedento,
Manitôs lhe não falem nos sonhos,
E do horror os espectros medonhos
Traga sempre o cobarde após si.
“Um amigo não tenhas piedoso
Que o teu corpo na terra embalsame,
Pondo em vaso d’argila cuidoso
Arco e frecha e tacape a teus pés!
Sé maldito, e sozinho na terra;
Pois que a tanta vileza chegaste,
Que em presença da morte choraste,
Tu, cobarde, meu filho não és.”
IX
Isto dizendo, o meserando velho
A quem Tupã tamanha dor, tal fado
Já nos confins da vida reservara,
Vai com trêmulo pé, com as mãos já frias
Da sua noite escura as densas trevas
Palpando. - Alarma! alarma! - O velho para.
O grito que escutou é voz do filho,
Voz de guerra que ouviu já tantas vezes
Noutra quadra melhor. - Alarma! alarma!
— Esse momento só vale apagar-lhe
Os tão compridos transes, as angústias,
Que o frio coração lhe atormentaram
19
De guerreiro e de pai: - vale, e de sobra.
Ele que em tanta dor se contivera,
Tomado pelo súbito contraste,
Desfaz-se agora em pranto copioso,
Que o exaurido coração remoça.
A taba se alborota, os golpes descem,
Gritos, imprecações profundas soam,
Emaranhada a multidão braveja,
Revolve-se, enovela-se confusa,
E mais revolta em mor furor se acende.
E os sons dos golpes que incessantes fervem.
Vozes, gemidos, estertor de morte
Vão longe pelas ermas serranias
Da humana tempestade propagando
Quantas vagas de povo enfurecido
Contra um rochedo vivo se quebravam.
Era ele, o Tupi; nem fora justo
Que a fama dos Tupis - o nome, a glória,
Aturado labor de tantos anos,
Derradeiro brasão da raça extinta,
De um jacto e por um só se aniquilasse.
— Basta! clama o chefe dos Timbiras,
— Basta, guerreiro ilustre! assaz lutaste,
E para o sacrifício é mister forças. O guerreiro parou, caiu nos braços
Do velho pai, que o cinge contra o peito,
Com lágrimas de júbilo bradando:
“Este, sim, que é meu filho muito amado!
“E pois que o acho enfim, qual sempre o tive,
“Corram livres as lágrimas que choro,
“Estas lágrimas, sim, que não desonram.”
Um velho Timbira, coberto de glória,
guardou a memória
Do moço guerreiro, do velho Tupi!
20
E à noite, nas tabas, se alguém duvidava
do que ele contava,
Dizia prudente: - “Meninos, eu vi!
“Eu vi o brioso no largo terreiro
cantar prisioneiro
Seu canto de morte, que nunca esqueci:
Valente, como era, chorou sem ter pejo;
parece que o vejo,
Que o tenho nest’hora diante de mim.
“Eu disse comigo: Que infâmia d’escravo!
Pois não, era um bravo;
Valente e brioso, como ele, não vi!
E à fé que vos digo: parece-me encanto
Que quem chorou tanto,
Tivesse a coragem que tinha o Tupi!”
Assim o Timbira, coberto de glória,
guardava a memória
Do moço guerreiro, do velho Tupi.
E à noite nas tabas, se alguém duvidava
do que ele contava,
Tomava prudente: “Meninos, eu vi!”
~ Antônio Gonçalves Dias,

IN CHAPTERS [150/2413]



  880 Integral Yoga
  655 Poetry
  160 Occultism
  142 Philosophy
  137 Fiction
   94 Christianity
   87 Yoga
   82 Mysticism
   66 Psychology
   20 Philsophy
   19 Mythology
   18 Hinduism
   14 Science
   10 Theosophy
   10 Education
   9 Integral Theory
   7 Sufism
   5 Baha i Faith
   4 Cybernetics
   4 Buddhism
   1 Zen
   1 Thelema
   1 Alchemy


  486 The Mother
  458 Sri Aurobindo
  351 Satprem
  138 Nolini Kanta Gupta
  120 William Wordsworth
   75 H P Lovecraft
   70 Percy Bysshe Shelley
   65 Carl Jung
   55 Aleister Crowley
   51 James George Frazer
   50 John Keats
   49 Sri Ramakrishna
   46 William Butler Yeats
   45 Robert Browning
   37 Rabindranath Tagore
   31 Friedrich Nietzsche
   28 Saint Augustine of Hippo
   27 Walt Whitman
   27 Pierre Teilhard de Chardin
   26 Plotinus
   22 Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
   22 Friedrich Schiller
   21 Swami Krishnananda
   20 Ralph Waldo Emerson
   17 Aldous Huxley
   16 Saint Teresa of Avila
   15 Swami Vivekananda
   15 Rudolf Steiner
   14 Jorge Luis Borges
   14 A B Purani
   13 Ovid
   12 Vyasa
   12 Plato
   12 Nirodbaran
   11 Lucretius
   10 Saint John of Climacus
   10 Li Bai
   10 Jalaluddin Rumi
   10 George Van Vrekhem
   10 Anonymous
   9 Rainer Maria Rilke
   9 Edgar Allan Poe
   8 Franz Bardon
   6 Sri Ramana Maharshi
   6 Joseph Campbell
   6 Jordan Peterson
   6 Henry David Thoreau
   6 Baha u llah
   6 Aristotle
   5 Mirabai
   5 Hafiz
   4 Patanjali
   4 Norbert Wiener
   4 Kabir
   4 Bokar Rinpoche
   4 Al-Ghazali
   3 Thubten Chodron
   3 Swami Sivananda Saraswati
   3 Saint John of the Cross
   3 Lewis Carroll
   3 Ken Wilber
   3 Alice Bailey
   3 Abu-Said Abil-Kheir
   2 Ramprasad
   2 Peter J Carroll
   2 Paul Richard
   2 Mechthild of Magdeburg
   2 Mahendranath Gupta
   2 Kuan Han-Ching
   2 Jorge Luis Borges
   2 Jean Gebser
   2 Italo Calvino
   2 Ibn Arabi
   2 H. P. Lovecraft
   2 Genpo Roshi
   2 Farid ud-Din Attar


  120 Wordsworth - Poems
  113 Record of Yoga
   75 Lovecraft - Poems
   70 Shelley - Poems
   64 The Synthesis Of Yoga
   51 The Golden Bough
   50 Keats - Poems
   48 The Gospel of Sri Ramakrishna
   46 Yeats - Poems
   45 Browning - Poems
   39 Savitri
   38 Agenda Vol 04
   34 Tagore - Poems
   33 Agenda Vol 10
   32 The Life Divine
   31 Magick Without Tears
   29 Mysterium Coniunctionis
   28 On Thoughts And Aphorisms
   28 Agenda Vol 13
   28 Agenda Vol 03
   27 Whitman - Poems
   27 Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta - Vol 07
   27 Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta - Vol 03
   26 Collected Poems
   26 Agenda Vol 08
   26 Agenda Vol 02
   25 Letters On Yoga IV
   25 Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta - Vol 02
   24 Thus Spoke Zarathustra
   24 Agenda Vol 09
   24 Agenda Vol 01
   23 Agenda Vol 11
   22 Schiller - Poems
   22 Agenda Vol 06
   21 The Study and Practice of Yoga
   21 Questions And Answers 1957-1958
   21 Liber ABA
   21 City of God
   21 Agenda Vol 05
   20 The Divine Comedy
   20 Emerson - Poems
   19 Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta - Vol 05
   18 Questions And Answers 1950-1951
   18 Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta - Vol 04
   17 Words Of Long Ago
   17 The Perennial Philosophy
   17 Agenda Vol 12
   16 Letters On Yoga II
   16 Essays In Philosophy And Yoga
   16 Agenda Vol 07
   15 The Practice of Psycho therapy
   15 Questions And Answers 1953
   15 Essays On The Gita
   14 Questions And Answers 1956
   14 On the Way to Supermanhood
   14 Evening Talks With Sri Aurobindo
   13 The Bible
   13 Metamorphoses
   13 Faust
   13 Essays Divine And Human
   12 Vishnu Purana
   12 Twelve Years With Sri Aurobindo
   12 Prayers And Meditations
   11 The Human Cycle
   11 Sri Aurobindo or the Adventure of Consciousness
   11 Questions And Answers 1954
   11 Of The Nature Of Things
   11 Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta - Vol 01
   11 Aion
   10 The Ladder of Divine Ascent
   10 The Future of Man
   10 The Archetypes and the Collective Unconscious
   10 Talks
   10 Preparing for the Miraculous
   10 Li Bai - Poems
   10 Labyrinths
   9 Some Answers From The Mother
   9 Rilke - Poems
   9 Poe - Poems
   9 On Education
   9 Letters On Yoga I
   9 Goethe - Poems
   8 The Confessions of Saint Augustine
   8 Letters On Poetry And Art
   7 Vedic and Philological Studies
   7 Twilight of the Idols
   7 The Way of Perfection
   7 The Phenomenon of Man
   7 Theosophy
   7 Plotinus - Complete Works Vol 04
   7 Plotinus - Complete Works Vol 01
   7 5.1.01 - Ilion
   6 Walden
   6 The Interior Castle or The Mansions
   6 The Hero with a Thousand Faces
   6 Rumi - Poems
   6 Raja-Yoga
   6 Questions And Answers 1955
   6 Questions And Answers 1929-1931
   6 Poetics
   6 Plotinus - Complete Works Vol 03
   6 Plotinus - Complete Works Vol 02
   6 Maps of Meaning
   6 Knowledge of the Higher Worlds
   6 Isha Upanishad
   6 Hymn of the Universe
   6 Crowley - Poems
   6 Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta - Vol 08
   5 The Secret Doctrine
   5 The Problems of Philosophy
   5 The Mother With Letters On The Mother
   5 A Garden of Pomegranates - An Outline of the Qabalah
   4 Writings In Bengali and Sanskrit
   4 Words Of The Mother II
   4 The Practice of Magical Evocation
   4 The Alchemy of Happiness
   4 The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People
   4 Tara - The Feminine Divine
   4 Patanjali Yoga Sutras
   4 Let Me Explain
   4 Kena and Other Upanishads
   4 Initiation Into Hermetics
   4 Hafiz - Poems
   4 Cybernetics
   4 Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta - Vol 06
   4 Borges - Poems
   4 Bhakti-Yoga
   3 Words Of The Mother III
   3 The Secret Of The Veda
   3 The Lotus Sutra
   3 The Book of Certitude
   3 Sex Ecology Spirituality
   3 Letters On Yoga III
   3 How to Free Your Mind - Tara the Liberator
   3 Beating the Cloth Drum Letters of Zen Master Hakuin
   3 A Treatise on Cosmic Fire
   3 Anonymous - Poems
   3 Amrita Gita
   3 Alice in Wonderland
   2 Words Of The Mother I
   2 The Red Book Liber Novus
   2 The Ever-Present Origin
   2 The Essentials of Education
   2 The Castle of Crossed Destinies
   2 The Blue Cliff Records
   2 Symposium
   2 Songs of Kabir
   2 Selected Fictions
   2 Liber Null
   2 Hymns to the Mystic Fire
   2 Dark Night of the Soul
   2 Agenda Vol 1
   2 Advanced Dungeons and Dragons 2E


0 0.01 - Introduction, #Agenda Vol 1, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
  TRULY to the conquest of the new. The 'new' is painful, discouraging, it resembles nothing we know! We cannot hoist the flag of an unconquered country - but this is what is so marvelous: it does not yet exist. We must MAKE IT EXIST. The adventure has not been carved out: it is to be carved out. Truth is not entrapped and fossilized, 'spiritualized': it is to be discovered. We are in a nothing that we must force to become a something. We are in the adventure of the new species. A new species is obviously contradictory to the old species and to the little flags of the alreadyknown. It has nothing in common with the spiritual summits of the old world, nor even with its abysms - which might be delightfully tempting for those who have had enough of the summits, but everything is the same, in black or white, it is fraternal above and below. SOMETHING ELSE is needed.
  'Are you conscious of your ceils?' She asked us a short time after the little operation of spiritual demolition She had undergone. 'No? Well, become conscious of your cells, and you will see that it gives TERRESTRIAL results.' To become conscious of one's cells? ... It was a far more radical operation than crossing the Maroni with a machete in hand, for after all, trees and lianas can be cut, but what cannot be so easily uncovered are the grandfa ther and the grandmo ther and the whole atavistic pack, not to mention the animal and plant and mineral layers that form a teeming humus over this single pure little cell beneath its millennial genetic program. The grandfa thers and grandmo thers grow back again like crabgrass, along with all the old habits of being hungry, afraid, falling ill, fearing the worst, hoping for the best, which is still the best of an old mortal habit. All this is not uprooted nor entrapped as easily as celestial 'liberations,' which leave the teeming humus in peace and the body to its usual decomposition. She had come to hew a path through all that. She was the Ancient One of evolution who had come to make a new cleft in the old, tedious habit of being a man. She did not like tedious repetitions, She was the adventuress par excellence - the adventuress of the earth. She was wrenching out for man the great Possible that was already beating there, in his primeval clearing, which he believed he had momentarily trapped with a few machines.

00.01 - The Approach to Mysticism, #Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta - Vol 02, #Nolini Kanta Gupta, #Integral Yoga
   Ignorance, certainly, is not man's ideal conditionit leads to death and dissolution. But knowledge also can be equally disastrous if it is not of the right kind. The knowledge that is born of spiritual disobedience, inspired by the Dark ones, leads to the soul's fall and its calvary through pain and suffering on earth. The seeker of true enlightenment has got to make a distinction, learn to separate the true and the right from the false and the wrong, unmask the luring Mra say clearly and unfalteringly to the dark light of Luciferapage Satana, if he is to come out into the true light and comm and the right forces. The search for knowledge alone, knowledge for the sake of knowledge, the path of pure scientific inquiry and inquisitiveness, in relation to the mystic world, is a dangerous thing. For such a spirit serves only to encourage and enhance man's arrogance and in the end not only limits but warps and falsifies the knowledge itself. A knowledge based on and secured exclusively through the reason and mental light can go only so far as that faculty can be reasonably stretched and not infinitelyto stretch it to infinity means to snap it. This is the warning that Yajnavalkya gave to Gargi when the latter started renewing her question ad infinitum Yajnavalkya said, "If you do not stop, your head will fall off."
   The mystic truth has to be approached through the heart. "In the heart is established the Truth," says the Upanishad: it is there that is seated eternally the soul, the real being, who appears no bigger than the thumb. Even if the mind is utilised as an instrument of knowledge, the heart must be there behind as the guide and inspiration. It is precisely because, as I have just mentioned, Gargi sought to shoot uplike "vaulting ambition that o'erleaps itself" of which Shakespeare speaksthrough the mind alone to the highest truth that Yajnavalkya had to pull her up and give the warning that she risked losing her head if she persisted in her questioning endlessly.

0 0.02 - Topographical Note, #Agenda Vol 1, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
  From 1960, the Agenda took its final shape arid grew for thirteen years, until May 1973, filling thirteen volumes in all (some six thousand pages), with a change of setting in March 1962 at the time of the Great Turning in Mother's yoga when She permanently retired to her room upstairs, as had Sri Aurobindo in 1926. The interviews then took place high up in this large room carpeted in golden wool, like a ship's stateroom, amidst the rustling of the Copper Pod tree and the cawing of crows. Mother would sit in a low rosewood chair, her face turned towards Sri Aurobindo's tomb, as though She were wearing down the distance separating that world from our own. Her voice had become like that of a child, one could hear her laughter. She always laughed, this Mother. And then her long silences. Until the day the disciples closed her door on us. It was May 19, 1973. We did not want to believe it. She was alone, just as we were suddenly alone. Slowly, painfully, we had to discover the why of this rupture. We understood nothing of the jealousies of the old species, we did not yet realize that they were becoming the 'owners' of Mother - of the Ashram, of Auroville, of
  Sri Aurobindo, of everything - and that the new world was going to be denatured into a new

00.04 - The Beautiful in the Upanishads, #Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta - Vol 02, #Nolini Kanta Gupta, #Integral Yoga
   And what else is the true character, the soul of beauty than light and delight? "A thing of beauty is a joy for ever." And a thing of joy is a thing of light. Joy is the radiance rippling over a thing of beauty. Beauty is always radiant: the charm, the loveliness of an object is but the glow of light that it emanates. And it would not be a very incorrect mensuration to measure the degree of beauty by the degree of light radiated. The diamond is not only a thing of value, but a thing of beauty also, because of the concentrated and undimmed light that it enshrines within itself. A dark, dull and dismal thing, devoid of interest and attraction becomes aesthetically precious and significant as soon as the artist presents it in terms of the values of light. The entire art of painting is nothing but the expression of beauty, in and through the modalities of light.
   And where there is light, there is cheer and joy. Rasamaya and jyotirmayaare thus the two conjoint characteristics fundamental to the nature of the ultimate reality. Sometimes these two are named as the 'solar and the lunar aspect. The solar aspect refers obviously to the Light, that is to say, to the Truth; the lunar aspect refers to the rasa (Soma), to Immortality, to Beauty proper,

000 - Humans in Universe, #Synergetics - Explorations in the Geometry of Thinking, #R Buckminster Fuller, #Science
  - from When Earth's Last Picture Is painted

0.00 - INTRODUCTION, #The Gospel of Sri Ramakrishna, #Sri Ramakrishna, #Hinduism
   Gadadhar grew up into a healthy and restless boy, full of fun and sweet mischief. He was intelligent and precocious and endowed with a prodigious memory. On his father's lap he learnt by heart the names of his ancestors and the hymns to the gods and goddesses, and at the village school he was taught to read and write. But his greatest delight was to listen to recitations of stories from Hindu mythology and the epics. These he would afterwards recount from memory, to the great joy of the villagers. painting he enjoyed; the art of moulding images of the gods and goddesses he learnt from the potters. But arithmetic was his great aversion.
   At the age of six or seven Gadadhar had his first experience of spiritual ecstasy. One day in June or July, when he was walking along a narrow path between paddy-fields, eating the puffed rice that he carried in a basket, he looked up at the sky and saw a beautiful, dark thunder-cloud. As it spread, rapidly enveloping the whole sky, a flight of snow-white cranes passed in front of it. The beauty of the contrast overwhelmed the boy. He fell to the ground, unconscious, and the puffed rice went in all directions. Some villagers found him and carried him home in their arms. Gadadhar said later that in that state he had experienced an indescribable joy.
  --
   At the age of sixteen Gadadhar was summoned to Calcutta by his elder brother Ramkumar, who wished assistance in his priestly duties. Ramkumar had opened a Sanskrit academy to supplement his income, and it was his intention gradually to turn his younger brother's mind to education. Gadadhar applied himself heart and soul to his new duty as family priest to a number of Calcutta families. His worship was very different from that of the professional priests. He spent hours decorating the images and singing hymns and devotional songs; he performed with love the other duties of his office. People were impressed with his ardour. But to his studies he paid scant attention.
   Ramkumar did not at first oppose the ways of his temperamental brother. He wanted Gadadhar to become used to the conditions of city life. But one day he decided to warn the boy about his indifference to the world. After all, in the near future Gadadhar must, as a householder, earn his livelihood through the performance of his brahminical duties; and these required a thorough knowledge of Hindu law, astrology, and kindred subjects. He gently admonished Gadadhar and asked him to pay more attention to his studies. But the boy replied spiritedly: "Brother, what shall I do with a mere bread-winning education? I would rather acquire that wisdom which will illumine my heart and give me satisfaction for ever."
  --
   The main temple is dedicated to Kali, the Divine Mother, here worshipped as Bhavatarini, the Saviour of the Universe. The floor of this temple also is paved with marble. The basalt image of the Mother, dressed in gorgeous gold brocade, stands on a white marble image of the prostrate body of Her Divine Consort, Siva, the symbol of the Absolute. On the feet of the Goddess are, among other ornaments, anklets of gold. Her arms are decked with jewelled ornaments of gold. She wears necklaces of gold and pearls, a golden garland of human heads, and a girdle of human arms. She wears a golden crown, golden ear-rings, and a golden nose-ring with a pearl-drop. She has four arms. The lower left hand holds a severed human head and the upper grips a blood-stained sabre. One right hand offers boons to Her children; the other allays their fear. The majesty of Her posture can hardly be described. It combines the terror of destruction with the reassurance of motherly tenderness. For She is the Cosmic Power, the totality of the universe, a glorious harmony of the pairs of opposites. She deals out death, as She creates and preserves. She has three eyes, the third being the symbol of Divine Wisdom; they strike dismay into the wicked, yet pour out affection for Her devotees.
   The whole symbolic world is represented in the temple garden — the Trinity of the Nature Mother (Kali), the Absolute (Siva), and Love (Radhakanta), the Arch spanning heaven and earth. The terrific Goddess of the Tantra, the soul-enthralling Flute-Player of the Bhagavata, and the Self-absorbed Absolute of the Vedas live together, creating the greatest synthesis of religions. All aspects of Reality are represented there. But of this divine household, Kali is the pivot, the sovereign Mistress. She is Prakriti, the Procreatrix, Nature, the Destroyer, the Creator. Nay, She is something greater and deeper still for those who have eyes to see. She is the Universal Mother, "my Mother" as Ramakrishna would say, the All-powerful, who reveals Herself to Her children under different aspects and Divine Incarnations, the Visible God, who leads the elect to the Invisible Reality; and if it so pleases Her, She takes away the last trace of ego from created beings and merges it in the consciousness of the Absolute, the undifferentiated God. Through Her grace "the finite ego loses itself in the illimitable Ego — Atman — Brahman". (Romain Holland, Prophets of the New India, p. 11.)
  --
   One of the painful ailments from which Sri Ramakrishna suffered at this time was a burning sensation in his body, and he was cured by a strange vision. During worship in the temple, following the scriptural injunctions, he would imagine the presence of the "sinner" in himself and the destruction of this "sinner". One day he was meditating in the Panchavati, when he saw come out of him a red-eyed man of black complexion, reeling like a drunkard. Soon there emerged from him another person, of serene countenance, wearing the ochre cloth of a sannyasi and carrying in his hand a trident. The second person attacked the first and killed him with the trident. Thereafter Sri Ramakrishna was free of his pain.
   About this time he began to worship God by assuming the attitude of a servant toward his master. He imitated the mood of Hanuman, the monkey chieftain of the Ramayana, the ideal servant of Rama and traditional model for this self-effacing form of devotion. When he meditated on Hanuman his movements and his way of life began to resemble those of a monkey. His eyes became restless. He lived on fruits and roots. With his cloth tied around his waist, a portion of it hanging in the form of a tail, he jumped from place to place instead of walking. And after a short while he was blessed with a vision of Sita, the divine consort of Rama, who entered his body and disappeared there with the words, "I bequeath to you my smile."
  --
   There are three kinds of formal devotion: tamasic, rajasic, and sattvic. If a person, while showing devotion, to God, is actuated by malevolence, arrogance, jealousy, or anger, then his devotion is tamasic, since it is influenced by tamas, the quality of inertia. If he worships God from a desire for fame or wealth, or from any other worldly ambition, then his devotion is rajasic, since it is influenced by rajas, the quality of activity. But if a person loves God without any thought of material gain, if he performs his duties to please God alone and maintains toward all created beings the attitude of friendship, then his devotion is called sattvic, since it is influenced by sattva, the quality of harmony. But the highest devotion transcends the three gunas, or qualities, being a spontaneous, uninterrupted inclination of the mind toward God, the Inner Soul of all beings; and it wells up in the heart of a true devotee as soon as he hears the name of God or mention of God's attributes. A devotee possessed of this love would not accept the happiness of heaven if it were offered him. His one desire is to love God under all conditions — in pleasure and pain, life and death, honour and dishonour, prosperity and adversity.
   There are two stages of bhakti. The first is known as vaidhi-bhakti, or love of God qualified by scriptural injunctions. For the devotees of this stage are prescribed regular and methodical worship, hymns, prayers, the repetition of God's name, and the chanting of His glories. This lower bhakti in course of time matures into para-bhakti, or supreme devotion, known also as prema, the most intense form of divine love. Divine love is an end in itself. It exists potentially in all human hearts, but in the case of bound creatures it is misdirected to earthly objects.
  --
   Totapuri was the bearer of a philosophy new to Sri Ramakrishna, the non-dualistic Vedanta philosophy, whose conclusions Totapuri had experienced in his own life. This ancient Hindu system designates the Ultimate Reality as Brahman, also described as Satchidananda, Existence-Knowledge-Bliss Absolute. Brahman is the only Real Existence. In It there is no time, no space, no causality, no multiplicity. But through maya, Its inscrutable Power, time, space, and causality are created and the One appears to break into the many. The eternal Spirit appears as a manifold of individuals endowed with form and subject to the conditions of time. The Immortal becomes a victim of birth and death. The Changeless undergoes change. The sinless Pure Soul, hypnotized by Its own maya, experiences the joys of heaven and the pains of hell. But these experiences based on the duality of the subject-object relationship are unreal. Even the vision of a Personal God
   is, ultimately speaking, as illusory as the experience of any other object. Man attains his liberation, therefore, by piercing the veil of maya and rediscovering his total identity with Brahman. Knowing himself to be one with the Universal Spirit, he realizes ineffable Peace. Only then does he go beyond the fiction of birth and death; only then does he become immortal. 'And this is the ultimate goal of all religions — to dehypnotize the soul now hypnotized by its own ignorance.
   The path of the Vedantic discipline is the path of negation, "neti", in which, by stern determination, all that is unreal is both negated and renounced. It is the path of jnana, knowledge, the direct method of realizing the Absolute. After the negation of everything relative, including the discriminating ego itself, the aspirant merges in the One without a Second, in the bliss of nirvikalpa samadhi, where subject and object are alike dissolved. The soul goes beyond the realm of thought. The domain of duality is transcended. Maya is left behind with all its changes and modifications. The Real Man towers above the delusions of creation, preservation, and destruction. An avalanche of indescribable Bliss sweeps away all relative ideas of pain and pleasure, good and evil. There shines in the heart the glory of the Eternal Brahman, Existence-Knowledge-Bliss Absolute. Knower, knowledge, and known are dissolved in the Ocean of one eternal Consciousness; love, lover, and beloved merge in the unbounded Sea of supreme Felicity; birth, growth, and death vanish in infinite Existence. All doubts and misgivings are quelled for ever; the oscillations of the mind are stopped; the momentum of past actions is exhausted. Breaking down the ridge-pole of the tabernacle in which the soul has made its abode for untold ages, stilling the body, calming the mind, drowning the ego, the sweet joy of Brahman wells up in that superconscious state. Space disappears into nothingness, time is swallowed in eternity, and causation becomes a dream of the past. Only Existence is. Ah! Who can describe what the soul then feels in its communion with the Self?
   Even when man descends from this dizzy height, he is devoid of ideas of "I" and "mine"; he looks on the body as a mere shadow, an outer sheath encasing the soul. He does not dwell on the past, takes no thought for the future, and looks with indifference on the present. He surveys everything in the world with an eye of equality; he is no longer touched by the infinite variety of phenomena; he no longer reacts to pleasure and pain. He remains unmoved whether he — that is to say, his body — is worshipped by the good or tormented by the wicked; for he realizes that it is the one Brahman that manifests Itself through everything. The impact of such an experience devastates the body and mind. Consciousness becomes blasted, as it were, with an excess of Light. In the Vedanta books it is said that after the experience of nirvikalpa samadhi the body drops off like a dry leaf. Only those who are born with a special mission for the world can return
   from this height to the valleys of normal life. They live and move in the world for the welfare of mankind. They are invested with a supreme spiritual power. A divine glory shines through them.
  --
   About this time Totapuri was suddenly laid up with a severe attack of dysentery. On account of this miserable illness he found it impossible to meditate. One night the pain became excruciating. He could no longer concentrate on Brahman. The body stood in the way. He became incensed with its demands. A free soul, he did not at all care for the body. So he determined to drown it in the Ganges. Thereupon he walked into the river. But, lo! He walks to the other bank." (This version of the incident is taken from the biography of Sri Ramakrishna by Swami Saradananda, one of the Master's direct disciples.) Is there not enough water in the Ganges? Standing dumbfounded on the other bank he looks back across the water. The trees, the temples, the houses, are silhouetted against the sky. Suddenly, in one dazzling moment, he sees on all sides the presence of the Divine Mother. She is in everything; She is everything. She is in the water; She is on land. She is the body; She is the mind. She is pain; She is comfort. She is knowledge; She is ignorance. She is life; She is death. She is everything that one sees, hears, or imagines. She turns "yea" into "nay", and "nay" into "yea". Without Her grace no embodied being can go beyond Her realm. Man has no free will. He is not even free to die. Yet, again, beyond the body and mind She resides in Her Transcendental, Absolute aspect. She is the Brahman that Totapuri had been worshipping all his life.
   Totapuri returned to Dakshineswar and spent the remaining hours of the night meditating on the Divine Mother. In the morning he went to the Kali temple with Sri Ramakrishna and prostrated himself before the image of the Mother. He now realized why he had spent eleven months at Dakshineswar. Bidding farewell to the disciple, he continued on his way, enlightened.
  --
   His body would not have survived but for the kindly attention of a monk who happened to be at Dakshineswar at that time and who somehow realized that for the good of humanity Sri Ramakrishna's body must be preserved. He tried various means, even physical violence, to recall the fleeing soul to the prison-house of the body, and during the resultant fleeting moments of consciousness he would push a few morsels of food down Sri Ramakrishna's throat. Presently Sri Ramakrishna received the command of the Divine Mother to remain on the threshold of relative consciousness. Soon there-after after he was afflicted with a serious attack of dysentery. Day and night the pain tortured him, and his mind gradually came down to the physical plane.
   --- COMPANY OF HOLY MEN AND DEVOTEES
  --
   Sri Ramakrishna used to say that when the flower blooms the bees come to it for honey of their own accord. Now many souls began to visit Dakshineswar to satisfy their spiritual hunger. He, the devotee and aspirant, became the Master. Gauri, the great scholar who had been one of the first to proclaim Sri Ramakrishna an Incarnation of God, paid the Master a visit in 1870 and with the Master's blessings renounced the world. Narayan Shastri, another great pundit, who had mastered the six systems of Hindu philosophy and had been offered a lucrative post by the Maharaja of Jaipur, met the Master and recognized in him one who had realized in life those ideals which he himself had encountered merely in books. Sri Ramakrishna initiated Narayan Shastri, at his earnest request, into the life of sannyas. Pundit Padmalochan, the court pundit of the Maharaja of Burdwan, well known for his scholarship in both the Vedanta and the Nyaya systems of philosophy, accepted the Master as an Incarnation of God. Krishnakishore, a Vedantist scholar, became devoted to the Master. And there arrived Viswanath Upadhyaya, who was to become a favourite devotee; Sri Ramakrishna always addressed him as "Captain". He was a high officer of the King of Nepal and had received the title of Colonel in recognition of his merit. A scholar of the Gita, the Bhagavata, and the Vedanta philosophy, he daily performed the worship of his Chosen Deity with great devotion. "I have read the Vedas and the other scriptures", he said. "I have also met a good many monks and devotees in different places. But it is in Sri Ramakrishna's presence that my spiritual yearnings have been fulfilled. To me he seems to be the embodiment of the truths of the scriptures."
   The Knowledge of Brahman in nirvikalpa samadhi had convinced Sri Ramakrishna that the gods of the different religions are but so many readings of the Absolute, and that the Ultimate Reality could never be expressed by human tongue. He understood that all religions lead their devotees by differing paths to one and the same goal. Now he became eager to explore some of the alien religions; for with him understanding meant actual experience.
  --
   Eight years later, some time in November 1874, Sri Ramakrishna was seized with an irresistible desire to learn the truth of the Christian religion. He began to listen to readings from the Bible, by Sambhu Charan Mallick, a gentleman of Calcutta and a devotee of the Master. Sri Ramakrishna became fascinated by the life and teachings of Jesus. One day he was seated in the parlour of Jadu Mallick's garden house (This expression is used throughout to translate the Bengali word denoting a rich man's country house set in a garden.) at Dakshineswar, when his eyes became fixed on a painting of the Madonna and Child. Intently watching it, he became gradually overwhelmed with divine emotion. The figures in the picture took on life, and the rays of light emanating from them entered his soul. The effect of this experience was stronger than that of the vision of Mohammed. In dismay he cried out, "O Mother! What are You doing to me?" And, breaking through the barriers of creed and religion, he entered a new realm of ecstasy. Christ possessed his soul. For three days he did not set foot in the Kali temple. On the fourth day, in the afternoon, as he was walking in the Panchavati, he saw coming toward him a person with beautiful large eyes, serene countenance, and fair skin. As the two faced each other, a voice rang out in the depths of Sri Ramakrishna's soul: "Behold the Christ, who shed His heart's blood for the redemption of the world, who suffered a sea of anguish for love of men. It is He, the Master Yogi, who is in eternal union with God. It is Jesus, Love Incarnate." The Son of Man embraced the Son of the Divine Mother and merged in him. Sri Ramakrishna krishna realized his identity with Christ, as he had already realized his identity with Kali, Rama, Hanuman, Radha, Krishna, Brahman, and Mohammed. The Master went into samadhi and communed with the Brahman with attributes. Thus he experienced the truth that Christianity, too, was a path leading to God-Consciousness. Till the last moment of his life he believed that Christ was an Incarnation of God. But Christ, for him, was not the only Incarnation; there were others — Buddha, for instance, and Krishna.
   --- ATTITUDE TOWARD DIFFERENT RELIGIONS
  --
   The party entered holy Benares by boat along the Ganges. When Sri Ramakrishna's eyes fell on this city of Siva, where had accumulated for ages the devotion and piety of countless worshippers, he saw it to be made of gold, as the scriptures declare. He was visibly moved. During his stay in the city he treated every particle of its earth with utmost respect. At the Manikarnika Ghat, the great cremation ground of the city, he actually saw Siva, with ash-covered body and tawny matted hair, serenely approaching each funeral pyre and breathing into the ears of the corpses the mantra of liberation; and then the Divine Mother removing from the dead their bonds. Thus he realized the significance of the scriptural statement that anyone dying in Benares attains salvation through the grace of Siva. He paid a visit to Trailanga Swami, the celebrated monk, whom he later declared to be a real paramahamsa, a veritable image of Siva.
   Sri Ramakrishna visited Allahabad, at the confluence of the Ganges and the Jamuna, and then proceeded to Vrindavan and Mathura, hallowed by the legends, songs, and dramas about Krishna and the gopis. Here he had numerous visions and his heart overflowed with divine emotion. He wept and said: "O Krishna! Everything here is as it was in the olden days. You alone are absent." He visited the great woman saint, Gangamayi, regarded by Vaishnava devotees as the reincarnation of an intimate attendant of Radha. She was sixty years old and had frequent trances. She spoke of Sri Ramakrishna as an incarnation of Radha. With great difficulty he was persuaded to leave her.
  --
   In 1872 Sarada Devi paid her first visit to her husband at Dakshineswar. Four years earlier she had seen him at Kamarpukur and had tasted the bliss of his divine company. Since then she had become even more gentle, tender, introspective, serious, and unselfish. She had heard many rumours about her husband's insanity. People had shown her pity in her misfortune. The more she thought, the more she felt that her duty was to be with him, giving him, in whatever measure she could, a wife's devoted service. She was now eighteen years old. Accompanied by her father, she arrived at Dakshineswar, having come on foot the distance of eighty miles. She had had an attack of fever on the way. When she arrived at the temple garden the Master said sorrowfully: "Ah! You have come too late. My Mathur is no longer here to look after you." Mathur had passed away the previous year.
   The Master took up the duty of instructing his young wife, and this included everything from housekeeping to the Knowledge of Brahman. He taught her how to trim a lamp, how to behave toward people according to their differing temperaments, and how to conduct herself before visitors. He instructed her in the mysteries of spiritual life — prayer, meditation, japa, deep contemplation, and samadhi. The first lesson that Sarada Devi received was: "God is everybody's Beloved, just as the moon is dear to every child. Everyone has the same right to pray to Him. Out of His grace He reveals Himself to all who call upon Him. You too will see Him if you but pray to Him."
  --
   During this period Sri Ramakrishna suffered several bereavements. The first was the death of a nephew named Akshay. After the young man's death Sri Ramakrishna said: "Akshay died before my very eyes. But it did not affect me in the least. I stood by and watched a man die. It was like a sword being drawn from its scabbard. I enjoyed the scene, and laughed and sang and danced over it. They removed the body and cremated it. But the next day as I stood there (pointing to the southeast verandah of his room), I felt a racking pain for the loss of Akshay, as if somebody were squeezing my heart like a wet towel. I wondered at it and thought that the Mother was teaching me a lesson. I was not much concerned even with my own body — much less with a relative. But if such was my pain at the loss of a nephew, how much more must be the grief of the householders at the loss of their near and dear ones!" In 1871 Mathur died, and some five years later Sambhu Mallick — who, after Mathur's passing away, had taken care of the Master's comfort. In 1873 died his elder brother Rameswar, and in 1876, his beloved mother. These bereavements left their imprint on the tender human heart of Sri Ramakrishna, albeit he had realized the immortality of the soul and the illusoriness of birth and death.
   In March 1875, about a year before the death of his mother, the Master met Keshab Chandra Sen. The meeting was a momentous event for both Sri Ramakrishna and Keshab. Here the Master for the first time came into actual, contact with a worthy representative of modern India.
  --
   Sri Ramakrishna never taught his disciples to hate any woman, or womankind in general. This can be seen clearly by going through all his teachings under this head and judging them collectively. The Master looked on all women as so many images of the Divine Mother of the Universe. He paid the highest homage to womankind by accepting a woman as his guide while practising the very profound spiritual disciplines of Tantra. His wife, known and revered as the Holy Mother, was his constant companion and first disciple. At the end of his spiritual practice he literally worshipped his wife as the embodiment of the Goddess Kali, the Divine Mother. After his passing away the Holy Mother became the spiritual guide not only of a large number of householders, but also of many monastic members of the Ramakrishna Order.
   --- THE MASTER'S YEARNING FOR HIS OWN DEVOTEES
  --
   But it was in the company of his younger devotees, pure souls yet unstained by the touch of worldliness, that Sri Ramakrishna took greatest joy. Among the young men who later embraced the householder's life were Narayan, paitu, the younger Naren, Tejchandra, and Purna. These visited the Master sometimes against strong opposition from home.
   --- PURNA
  --
   In 1881 Hriday was dismissed from service in the Kali temple, for an act of indiscretion, and was ordered by the authorities never again to enter the garden. In a way the hand of the Divine Mother may be seen even in this. Having taken care of Sri Ramakrishna during the stormy days of his spiritual discipline, Hriday had come naturally to consider himself the sole guardian of his uncle. None could approach the Master without his knowledge. And he would be extremely jealous if Sri Ramakrishna paid attention to anyone else. Hriday's removal made it possible for the real devotees of the Master to approach him freely and live with him in the temple garden.
   During the week-ends the householders, enjoying a respite from their office duties, visited the Master. The meetings on Sunday afternoons were of the nature of little festivals. Refreshments were often served. Professional musicians now and then sang devotional songs. The Master and the devotees sang and danced, Sri Ramakrishna frequently going into ecstatic moods. The happy memory of such a Sunday would linger long in the minds of the devotees. Those whom the Master wanted for special instruction he would ask to visit him on Tuesdays and Saturdays. These days were particularly auspicious for the worship of Kali.
  --
   One day, in January 1884, the Master was going toward the pine-grove when he went into a trance. He was alone. There was no one to support him or guide his footsteps. He fell to the ground and dislocated a bone in his left arm. This accident had a significant influence on his mind, the natural inclination of which was to soar above the consciousness of the body. The acute pain in the arm forced his mind to dwell on the body and on the world outside. But he saw even in this a divine purpose; for, with his mind compelled to dwell on the physical plane, he realized more than ever that he was an instrument in the hand of the Divine Mother, who had a mission to fulfil through his human body and mind. He also distinctly found that in the phenomenal world God manifests Himself, in an inscrutable way, through diverse human beings, both good and evil. Thus he would speak of God in the guise of the wicked, God in the guise of the pious. God in the guise of the hypocrite, God in the guise of the lewd. He began to take a special delight in watching the divine play in the relative world. Sometimes the sweet human relationship with God would appear to him more appealing than the all-effacing Knowledge of Brahman. Many a time he would pray: "Mother, don't make me unconscious through the Knowledge of Brahman. Don't give me Brahmajnana, Mother. Am I not Your child, and naturally timid? I must have my Mother. A million salutations to the Knowledge of Brahman! Give it to those who want it." Again he prayed: "O Mother let me remain in contact with men! Don't make me a dried-up ascetic. I want to enjoy Your sport in the world." He was able to taste this very rich divine experience and enjoy the love of God and the company of His devotees because his mind, on account of the injury to his arm, was forced to come down to the consciousness of the body. Again, he would make fun of people who proclaimed him as a Divine Incarnation, by pointing to his broken arm. He would say, "Have you ever heard of God breaking His arm?" It took the arm about five months to heal.
   --- BEGINNING OF HIS ILLNESS
   In April 1885 the Master's throat became inflamed. Prolonged conversation or absorption in samadhi, making the blood flow into the throat, would aggravate the pain. Yet when the annual Vaishnava festival was celebrated at Panihati, Sri Ramakrishna attended it against the doctor's advice. With a group of disciples he spent himself in music, dance, and ecstasy. The illness took a turn for the worse and was diagnosed as "clergyman's sore throat". The patient was cautioned against conversation and ecstasies. Though he followed the physician's directions regarding medicine and diet, he could neither control his trances nor withhold from seekers the solace of his advice. Sometimes, like a sulky child, he would complain to the Mother about the crowds, who gave him no rest day or night. He was overheard to say to Her; "Why do You bring here all these worthless people, who are like milk diluted with five times its own quantity of water? My eyes are almost destroyed with blowing the fire to dry up the water. My health is gone. It is beyond my strength. Do it Yourself, if You want it done. This (pointing to his own body) is but a perforated drum, and if you go on beating it day in and day out, how long will it last?"
   But his large heart never turned anyone away. He said, "Let me be condemned to be born over and over again, even in the form of a dog, if I can be of help to a single soul." And he bore the pain, singing cheerfully, "Let the body be preoccupied with illness, but, O mind, dwell for ever in God's Bliss!"
   One night he had a hemorrhage of the throat. The doctor now diagnosed the illness as cancer. Narendra was the first to break this heart-rending news to the disciples. Within three days the Master was removed to Calcutta for better treatment. At Balaram's house he remained a week until a suitable place could be found at Syampukur, in the northern section of Calcutta. During this week he dedicated himself practically without respite to the instruction of those beloved devotees who had been unable to visit him oftener at Dakshineswar. Discourses incessantly flowed from his tongue, and he often went into samadhi. Dr. Mahendra Sarkar, the celebrated homeopath of Calcutta, was invited to undertake his treatment.
  --
   In spite of the physician's efforts and the prayers and nursing of the devotees, the illness rapidly progressed. The pain sometimes appeared to be unbearable. The Master lived only on liquid food, and his frail body was becoming a mere skeleton. Yet his face always radiated joy, and he continued to welcome the visitors pouring in to receive his blessing. When certain zealous devotees tried to keep the visitors away, they were told by Girish, "You cannot succeed in it; he has been born for this very purpose — to sacrifice himself for the redemption of others."
   The more the body was devastated by illness, the more it became the habitation of the Divine Spirit. Through its transparency the gods and goddesses began to shine with ever increasing luminosity. On the day of the Kali Puja the devotees clearly saw in him the manifestation of the Divine Mother.
  --
   A few hours later the Master said to Narendra: "I said to Her: 'Mother, I cannot swallow food because of my pain. Make it possible for me to eat a little.' She pointed you all out to me and said: 'What? You are eating enough through all these mouths. Isn't that so?' I was ashamed and could not utter another word." This dashed all the hopes of the devotees for the Master's recovery.
   "I shall make the whole thing public before I go", the Master had said some time before. On January 1, 1886, he felt better and came down to the garden for a little stroll. It was about three o'clock in the afternoon. Some thirty lay disciples were in the hall or sitting about under the trees. Sri Ramakrishna said to Girish, "Well, Girish, what have you seen in me, that you proclaim me before everybody as an Incarnation of God?" Girish was not the man to be taken by surprise. He knelt before the Master and said, with folded hands, "What can an insignificant person like myself say about the One whose glory even sages like Vyasa and Valmiki could not adequately measure?" The Master was profoundly moved. He said: "What more shall I say? I bless you all. Be illumined!" He fell into a spiritual mood. Hearing these words the devotees, one and all, became overwhelmed with emotion. They rushed to him and fell at his feet. He touched them all, and each received an appropriate benediction. Each of them, at the touch of the Master, experienced ineffable bliss. Some laughed, some wept, some sat down to meditate, some began to pray. Some saw light, some had visions of their Chosen Ideals, and some felt within their bodies the rush of spiritual power.
  --
   Sri Ramakrishna was sinking day by day. His diet was reduced to a minimum and he found it almost impossible to swallow. He whispered to M.: "I am bearing all this cheerfully, for otherwise you would be weeping. If you all say that it is better that the body should go rather than suffer this torture, I am willing." The next morning he said to his depressed disciples seated near the bed: "Do you know what I see? I see that God alone has become everything. Men and animals are only frameworks covered with skin, and it is He who is moving through their heads and limbs. I see that it is God Himself who has become the block, the executioner, and the victim for the sacrifice.' He fainted with emotion. Regaining partial consciousness, he said: "Now I have no pain. I am very well." Looking at Latu he said: "There sits Latu resting his head on the palm of his hand. To me it is the Lord who is seated in that posture."
   The words were tender and touching. Like a mother he caressed Narendra and Rakhal, gently stroking their faces. He said in a half whisper to M., "Had this body been allowed to last a little longer, many more souls would have been illumined." He paused a moment and then said: "But Mother has ordained otherwise. She will take me away lest, finding me guileless and foolish, people should take advantage of me and persuade me to bestow on them the rare gifts of spirituality." A few minutes later he touched his chest and said: "Here are two beings. One is She and the other is Her devotee. It is the latter who broke his arm, and it is he again who is now ill. Do you understand me?" After a pause he added: "Alas! To whom shall I tell all this? Who will understand me?" " pain", he consoled them again, 'is unavoidable as long as there is a body. The Lord takes on the body for the sake of His devotees."
   Yet one is not sure whether the Master's soul actually was tortured by this agonizing disease. At least during his moments of spiritual exaltation — which became almost constant during the closing days of his life on earth — he lost all consciousness of the body, of illness and suffering. One of his attendants (Latu, later known as Swami Adbhutananda.) said later on: "While Sri Ramakrishna lay sick he never actually suffered pain. He would often say: 'O mind! Forget the body, forget the sickness, and remain merged in Bliss.' No, he did not really suffer. At times he would be in a state when the thrill of joy was clearly manifested in his body. Even when he could not speak he would let us know in some way that there was no suffering, and this fact was clearly evident to all who watched him. People who did not understand him thought that his suffering was very great. What spiritual joy he transmitted to us at that time! Could such a thing have been possible if he had 'been suffering physically? It was during this period that he taught us again these truths: 'Brahman is always unattached. The three gunas are in It, but It is unaffected by them, just as the wind carries odour yet remains odourless.' 'Brahman is Infinite Being, Infinite Wisdom, Infinite Bliss. In It there exist no delusion, no misery, no disease, no death, no growth, no decay.' 'The Transcendental Being and the being within are one and the same. There is one indivisible Absolute Existence.'"
   The Holy Mother secretly went to a Siva temple across the Ganges to intercede with the Deity for the Master's recovery. In a revelation she was told to prepare herself for the inevitable end.
  --
   Doubt, however, dies hard. After one or two days Narendra said to himself, "If in the midst of this racking physical pain he declares his Godhead, then only shall I accept him as an Incarnation of God." He was alone by the bedside of the Master. It was a passing thought, but the Master smiled. Gathering his remaining strength, he distinctly said, "He who was Rama and Krishna is now, in this body, Ramakrishna — but not in your Vedantic sense." Narendra was stricken with shame.
   --- MAHASAMADHI

0.00 - The Book of Lies Text, #The Book of Lies, #Aleister Crowley, #Philosophy
     centre, and raise thy voice in the paian, with these
     words {Iota-Omicron Pi-Alpha-Nu} with the signs of N.O.X.
  --
     love, and the pain of love is but love.
    Love taketh no heed of that which is not and of that
  --
     The number 51 means failure and pain, and its
    subject is appropriately doubt.
  --
      The pain of consciousness, the curse of thought?
       Even were I THAT, there still were one sore
  --
    and myself would hardly have been at the pains to
    write one. It was in response to the impassioned appeals
  --
     and find naught but pain and shame.
    These then proclaim "The Good Law" unto mankind.

0.00 - THE GOSPEL PREFACE, #The Gospel of Sri Ramakrishna, #Sri Ramakrishna, #Hinduism
  Even as a boy of about thirteen, while he was a student in the 3rd class of the Hare School, he was in the habit of keeping a diary. "Today on rising," he wrote in his diary, "I greeted my father and mother, prostrating on the ground before them" (Swami Nityatmananda's 'M The Apostle and the Evangelist' Part I. P 29.) At another place he wrote, "Today, while on my way to school, I visited, as usual, the temples of Kli, the Mother at Tharitharia, and of Mother Sitala, and paid my obeisance to them." About twenty-five years after, when he met the Great Master in the spring of 1882, it was the same instinct of a born diary-writer that made him begin his book, 'unique in the literature of hagiography', with the memorable words: "When hearing the name of Hari or Rma once, you shed tears and your hair stands on end, then you may know for certain that you do not have to perform devotions such as Sandhya any more."
  In addition to this instinct for diary-keeping, M. had great endowments contri buting to success in this line. Writes Swami Nityatmananda who lived in close association with M., in his book entitled M - The Apostle and Evangelist: "M.'s prodigious memory combined with his extraordinary power of imagination completely annihilated the distance of time and place for him. Even after the lapse of half a century he could always visualise vividly, scenes from the life of Sri Ramakrishna. Superb too was his power to portray pictures by words."
  --
  had sent his devotees who used to keep company with him, to attend the special worship at Belur Math at night. After attending the service at the home shrine, he went through the proof of the Kathmrita for an hour. Suddenly he got a severe attack of neuralgic pain, from which he had been suffering now and then, of late. Before 6 a.m. in the early hours of 4th June 1932 he passed away, fully conscious and chanting: 'Gurudeva-Ma, Kole tule na-o (Take me in your arms! O Master! O Mother!!)'
  SWMI TAPASYNANDA

0.01 - Letters from the Mother to Her Son, #Some Answers From The Mother, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
  of paid workers of the Ashram (labourers and servants) has
  reached sixty or sixty-five, and the number of Ashram members

0.02 - Letters to a Sadhak, #Some Answers From The Mother, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
  grey paint) A stool used by the Mother has been painted
  with "gris entretien". I had informed the stores not to
  --
  But who is responsible for having given the paint? Was not the
  fact that the "gris entretien" must be kept for the doors and windows in Sri Aurobindo's room only, told to those in charge?(!)
  Why was my stool at all painted with gris entretien? I did
  not ask for the grey paint as far as I remember.
  In this case the paint slipped out because it was asked
  for Mother's stool.
  --
  By the way, I have seen the painter sand-papering the salon table
  and was horrified! He was rubbing violently and in any direction
  --
  cause of the pain in his fingers.
  The wrong attitude can be in the body consciousness itself (lack
  --
  get married again. He wants Rs. 40 advance, to be paid
  back at the rate of Rs. 8 per month. I have already told
  --
  I have had a pain in the right side of my chest and in
  the left side of my back for the past three or four days.
  --
  the evening are paid double, and this seems reasonable.
  4 May 1934
  --
  (masons, carpenters, painters, coolies, etc.) whom you positively
  want to keep and tell them that the notice which is going to be
  --
  All the pain I have felt till tonight comes from my
  reservations with regard to Sweet Mother. Is my diagnosis correct? If so, how can I do away with these
  --
  me that he didn't want it painted I was surprised, and
  I revealed that Z had asserted that it was he, Y, who

0.02 - The Three Steps of Nature, #The Synthesis Of Yoga, #Sri Aurobindo, #Integral Yoga
  The only approximate terms in the English language have other associations and their use may lead to many and even serious inaccuracies. The terminology of Yoga recognises besides the status of our physical and vital being, termed the gross body and doubly composed of the food sheath and the vital vehicle, besides the status of our mental being, termed the subtle body and singly composed of the mind sheath or mental vehicle,5 a third, supreme and divine status of supra-mental being, termed the causal body and composed of a fourth and a fifth vehicle6 which are described as those of knowledge and bliss. But this knowledge is not a systematised result of mental questionings and reasonings, not a temporary arrangement of conclusions and opinions in the terms of the highest probability, but rather a pure self-existent and self-luminous Truth. And this bliss is not a supreme pleasure of the heart and sensations with the experience of pain and sorrow as its background, but a delight also selfexistent and independent of objects and particular experiences, a self-delight which is the very nature, the very stuff, as it were, of a transcendent and infinite existence.
   antah.karan.a.

0.03 - Letters to My little smile, #Some Answers From The Mother, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
  Since this morning I have some pain in the pupil of
  my left eye.
  --
  have pain, close your eyes for a few minutes and cover them
  with the palms of your hands (without pressing). You will find
  --
  You are very hardworking and painstaking, and if you have
  nothing to tell me except news of your work, I have to tell you

0.04 - Letters to a Sadhak, #Some Answers From The Mother, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
  are painted in red and blue colour, no work is given and
  so on. I am not submitting all this to have permission
  --
  Yes, the necklace is nice, you can put it on; but no painting of
  the horns; it is so ugly! And I think you must be careful not to

0.05 - Letters to a Child, #Some Answers From The Mother, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
  music, painting and poetry, he later became a teacher of music
  in the Sri Aurobindo International Centre of Education. He
  --
  Yesterday I told you that "we" had painted an envelope. By "we" I mean that there is me and you. I feel
  that it is not I who am working, so I say "we". I am
  --
  deal of progress? I like the envelopes that both of us are painting
  together very much, and that is one more proof that we are doing
  --
  The paintings are fine, they are like Japanese ones. As for
  the "plane" from which they come, it is surely the subtle physical, where the memory of all the conceptions and works of art
  --
  I have a pain in my head. I am very tired.
  My child, all my love is always with you; do not push it away.
  --
  tell you how it pains me to know that you are displeased
  with me on any account.
  There is no real cause because there is no discontent. Your pain
  is quite gratuitous, so you would [do] better [to] get rid of it

0.06 - INTRODUCTION, #Dark Night of the Soul, #Saint John of the Cross, #Christianity
  Night of the Spirit, which is at once more afflictive and more painful than those
  which have preceded it. This, nevertheless, is the Dark Night par excellence, of
  --
  the first stanza of his poem and the varieties of pain and affliction caused by it,
  whether in the soul or in its faculties (Chapters iv-viii). These chapters are brilliant

0.06 - Letters to a Young Sadhak, #Some Answers From The Mother, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
  and this gives it pain. It must become calm and develop the habit
  of remaining quiet.
  --
  For several days there has been pain in the nape of the
  neck; I am tired of the remedies our dispensary gives me.

01.01 - The Symbol Dawn, #Savitri, #Sri Aurobindo, #Integral Yoga
  It meets the sons of God with death and pain.
  2.13
  --
  Too great to impart the peril and the pain,
  In her torn depths she kept the grief to come.
  --
  A stone-still figure of high and godlike pain
  Stared into Space with fixed regardless eyes

01.02 - Natures Own Yoga, #Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta - Vol 03, #Nolini Kanta Gupta, #Integral Yoga
   It is also to be noted that as mind is not the last limit of the march of evolution, even so the progress of evolution will not stop with the manifestation and embodiment of the Supermind. There are other still higher principles beyond and they too presumably await manifestation and embodiment on earth. Creation has no beginning in time (andi) nor has it an end (ananta). It is an eternal process of the unravelling of the mysteries of the Infinite. Only, it may be said that with the Supermind the creation here enters into a different order of existence. Before it there was the domain of Ignorance, after it will come the reign of Light and Knowledge. Mortality has been the governing principle of life on earth till now; it will be replaced by the consciousness of immortality. Evolution has proceeded through struggle and pain; hereafter it will be a spontaneous, harmonious and happy flowering.
   Now, with regard to the time that the present stage of evolution is likely to take for its fulfilment, one can presume that since or if the specific urge and stress has manifested and come up to the front, this very fact would show that the problem has become a problem of actuality, and even that it can be dealt with as if it had to be solved now or never. We have said that in man, with man's self-consciousness or the consciousness of the psychic being as the instrument, evolution has attained the capacity of a swift and concentrated process, which is the process of Yoga; the process will become swifter and more concentrated, the more that instrument grows and gathers power and is infused with the divine afflatus. In fact, evolution has been such a process of gradual acceleration in tempo from the very beginning. The earliest stage, for example, the stage of dead Matter, of the play of the mere chemical forces was a very, very long one; it took millions and millions of years to come to the point when the manifestation of life became possible. But the period of elementary life, as manifested in the plant world that followed, although it too lasted a good many millions of years, was much briefer than the preceding periodit ended with the advent of the first animal form. The age of animal life, again, has been very much shorter than that of the plant life before man came upon earth. And man is already more than a million or two years oldit is fully time that a higher order of being should be created out of him.

01.02 - Sri Aurobindo - Ahana and Other Poems, #Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta - Vol 02, #Nolini Kanta Gupta, #Integral Yoga
   He stung Himself with bliss and called it pain.7
   To humanise the Divine, that is what we all wish to do; for the Divine is too lofty for us and we cannot look full into his face. We cry and supplicate to Rudra, "O dire Lord, show us that other form of thine that is benign and humane". All earthly imageries we lavish upon the Divine so that he may appear to us not as something far and distant and foreign, but, quite near, among us, as one of us. We take recourse to human symbolism often, because we wish to palliate or hide the rigours of a supreme experience, not because we have no adequate terms for it. The same human or earthly terms could be used differently if we had a different consciousness. Thus the Vedic Rishis sought not to humanise the Divine, their purpose was rather to divinise the human. And their allegorical language, although rich in terrestrial figures, does not carry the impress and atmosphere of mere humanity and earthliness. For in reality the symbol is not merely the symbol. It is mere symbol in regard to the truth so long as we take our stand on the lower plane when we have to look at the truth through the symbol; but if we view it from the higher plane, from truth itself, it is no longer mere symbol but the very truth bodied forth. Whatever there is of symbolism on earth and its beauties, in sense and its enjoyments, is then transfigured into the expression of the truth, of the divinity itself. We then no longer speak in human language but in the language of the gods.

01.02 - The Issue, #Savitri, #Sri Aurobindo, #Integral Yoga
  And the deep need of universal pain
  And hard sacrifice and tragic consequence.
  --
  The dubious godhead with his torch of pain
  Lit up the chasm of the unfinished world
  --
  Asked not from mortal frailty pain's relief,
  Patched not with failure bargain or compromise.

01.03 - The Yoga of the King - The Yoga of the Souls Release, #Savitri, #Sri Aurobindo, #Integral Yoga
  The sob of its passion and unending pain.
  The murmur and whisper of the unheard sounds
  --
  The oestrus which creates with fire of pain,
  The fate that punishes virtue with defeat,
  --
  Earth's pains were the ransom of its prisoned delight.
  A glad communion tinged the passing hours;

01.04 - The Poetry in the Making, #Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta - Vol 02, #Nolini Kanta Gupta, #Integral Yoga
   Is the artist the supreme artist, when he is a genius, that is to sayconscious in his creation or is he unconscious? Two quite opposite views have been taken of the problem by the best of intelligences. On the one hand, it is said that genius is genius precisely because it acts unconsciously, and on the other it is asserted with equal emphasis that genius is the capacity of taking infinite pains, which means it is absolutely a self conscious activity.
   We take a third view of the matter and say that genius is neither unconscious or conscious but superconscious. And when one is superconscious, one can be in appearance either conscious or unconscious. Let us at the outset try to explain a little this psychological riddle.
  --
   Whether the original and true source of the poet's inspiration lies deep within or high above, all depends upon the mediating instrument the mind (in its most general sense) and speech for a successful transcription. Man's ever-growing consciousness demanded also a conscious development and remoulding of these two factors. A growth, a heightening and deepening of the consciousness meant inevitably a movement towards the spiritual element in things. And that means, we have said, a twofold change in the future poet's make-up. First as regards the substance. The revolutionary shift that we notice in modern poets towards a completely new domain of subject-matter is a signpost that more is meant than what is expressed. The superficialities and futilities that are dealt with do not in their outward form give the real trend of things. In and through all these major and constant preoccupation of our poets is "the pain of the present and the passion for the future": they are, as already stated, more prophets than poets, but prophets for the moment crying in the wildernessalthough some have chosen the path of denial and revolt. They are all looking ahead or beyond or deep down, always yearning for another truth and reality which will explain, justify and transmute the present calvary of human living. Such an acute tension of consciousness has necessitated an overhauling of the vehicle of expression too, the creation of a mode of expressing the inexpressible. For that is indeed what human consciousness and craft are aiming at in the present stage of man's evolution. For everything, almost everything that can be normally expressed has been expressed and in a variety of ways as much as is possible: that is the history of man's aesthetic creativity. Now the eye probes into the unexpressed world; for the artist too the Upanishadic problem has cropped up:
   By whom impelled does the mind fall to its target, what is the agent that is behind the eye and sees through the eyes, what is the hearing and what the speech that their respective sense organs do not and cannot convey and record adequately or at all?

01.04 - The Secret Knowledge, #Savitri, #Sri Aurobindo, #Integral Yoga
  She seeks through the soul's war and quivering pain
  The pure perfection her marred nature needs,
  --
  Remote from the Force that cries out in its pain,
  In his inalienable bliss they live.
  --
  Careless of the pain that rends its body and life;
  Above joy and sorrow is that grandeur's walk:
  --
  Our pleasure and pain are their wrestle and embrace,
  Our deeds, our hopes are intimate to their tale;
  --
  And her sport of death and pain and Nescience,
  His changed and struggling immortality.
  --
  Her whim the dispenser of his pleasure and pain;
  He has sold himself into her regal power
  --
  Incarnate in a world of strife and pain,
  He puts on joy and sorrow like a robe

01.05 - The Yoga of the King - The Yoga of the Spirits Freedom and Greatness, #Savitri, #Sri Aurobindo, #Integral Yoga
  Exploiting for creation's joy and pain
  Infinity's sanction to the birth of form,
  --
  It lifted from an underground of pain
  The inarticulate murmur of our lives

01.08 - Walter Hilton: The Scale of Perfection, #Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta - Vol 02, #Nolini Kanta Gupta, #Integral Yoga
   Here is the Augustinian mantra taken as the motto of The Scale of Perfection: We ascend the ascending grades in our heart and we sing the song of ascension1. The journey's end is heavenly Jerusalem, the House of the Lord. The steps of this inner ascension are easily visible, not surely to the outer eye of the sense-burdened man, but to the "ghostly seeing" of the aspirant which is hazy in the beginning but slowly clears as he advances. The first step is the withdrawal from the outer senses and looking and seeing within. "Turn home again in thyself, and hold thee within and beg no more without." The immediate result is a darkness and a restless darknessit is a painful night. The outer objects of attraction and interest have been discarded, but the inner attachments and passions surge there still. If, however, one continues and persists, refuses to be drawn out, the turmoil settles down and the darkness begins to thin and wear away. One must not lose heart, one must have patience and perseverance. So when the outward world is no more-there and its call also no longer awakes any echo in us, then comes the stage of "restful darkness" or "light-some darkness". But it is still the dark Night of the soul. The outer light is gone and the inner light is not yet visible: the night, the desert, the great Nought, stretches between these two lights. But the true seeker goes through and comes out of the tunnel. And there is happiness at the end. "The seeking is travaillous, but the finding is blissful." When one steps out of the Night, enters into the deepest layer of the being, one stands face to face to one's soul, the very image of God, the perfect God-man, the Christ within. That is the third degree of our inner ascension, the entry into the deepest, purest and happiest statein which one becomes what he truly is; one finds the Christ there and dwells in love and union with him. But there is still a further step to take, and that is real ascension. For till now it has been a going within, from the outward to the inner and the inmost; now one has to go upward, transcend. Within the body, in life, however deep you may go, even if you find your soul and your union with Jesus whose tabernacle is your soul, still there is bound to remain a shadow of the sinful prison-house; the perfect bliss and purity without any earthly taint, the completeness and the crowning of the purgation and transfiguration can come only when you go beyond, leaving altogether the earthly form and worldly vesture and soar into Heaven itself and be in the company of the Trinity. "Into myself, and after... above myself by overpassing only into Him." At the same time it is pointed out, this mediaeval mystic has the common sense to see that the going in and going above of which one speaks must not be understood in a literal way, it is a figure of speech. The movement of the mystic is psychological"ghostly", it is saidnot physical or carnal.
   This spiritual march or progress can also be described as a growing into the likeness of the Lord. His true self, his own image is implanted within us; he is there in the profoundest depth of our being as Jesus, our beloved and our soul rests in him in utmost bliss. We are aware neither of Jesus nor of his spouse, our soul, because of the obsession of the flesh, the turmoil raised by the senses, the blindness of pride and egoism. All that constitutes the first or old Adam, the image of Nought, the body of death which means at bottom the "false misruled love in to thyself." This self-love is the mother of sin, is sin itself. What it has to be replaced by is charity that is the true meaning of Christian charity, forgetfulness of self. "What is sin but a wanting and a forbearing of God." And the whole task, the discipline consists in "the shaping of Christ in you, the casting of sin through Christ." Who then is Christ, what is he? This knowledge you get as you advance from your sense-bound perception towards the inner and inmost seeing. As your outer nature gets purified, you approach gradually your soul, the scales fall off from your eyes too and you have the knowledge and "ghostly vision." Here too there are three degrees; first, you start with faith the senses can do nothing better than have faith; next, you rise to imagination which gives a sort of indirect touch or inkling of the truth; finally, you have the "understanding", the direct vision. "If he first trow it, he shall afterwards through grace feel it, and finally understand it."
  --
   The conception of original sin is a cardinal factor in Christian discipline. The conception, of sinfulness is the very motive-power that drives the aspirant. "Seek tensely," it is said, "sorrow and sigh deep, mourn still, and stoop low till thine eye water for anguish and for pain." Remorse and grief are necessary attendants; the way of the cross is naturally the calvary strewn with pain and sorrow. It is the very opposite of what is termed the "sunlit path" in spiritual ascension. Christian mystics have made a glorious spectacle of the process of "dying to the world." Evidently, all do not go the whole length. There are less gloomy and happier temperaments, like the present one, for example, who show an unusual balance, a sturdy common sense even in the midst of their darkest nights, who have chalked out as much of the sunlit path as is possible in this line. Thus this old-world mystic says: it is true one must see and admit one's sinfulness, the grosser and apparent and more violent ones as well as all the subtle varieties of it that are in you or rise up in you or come from the Enemy. They pursue you till the very end of your journey. Still you need not feel overwhelmed or completely desperate. Once you recognise the sin in you, even the bare fact of recognition means for you half the victory. The mystic says, "It is no sin as thou feelest them." The day Jesus gave himself away on the Cross, since that very day you are free, potentially free from the bondage of sin. Once you give your adherence to Him, the Enemies are rendered powerless. "They tease the soul, but they harm not the soul". Or again, as the mystic graphically phrases it: "This soul is not borne in this image of sin as a sick man, though he feel it; but he beareth it." The best way of dealing with one's enemies is not to struggle and "strive with them." The aspirant, the lover of Jesus, must remember: "He is through grace reformed to the likeness of God ('in the privy substance of his soul within') though he neither feel it nor see it."
   If you are told you are still full of sins and you are not worthy to follow the path, that you must go and work out your sins first, here is your answer: "Go shrive thee better: trow not this saying, for it is false, for thou art shriven. Trust securely that thou art on the way, and thee needeth no ransacking of shrift for that that is passed, hold forth thy way and think on Jerusalem." That is to say, do not be too busy with the difficulties of the moment, but look ahead, as far as possible, fix your attention upon the goal, the intermediate steps will become easy. Jerusalem is another name of the Love of Jesus or the Bliss in Heaven. Grow in this love, your sins will fade away of themselves. "Though thou be thrust in an house with thy body, nevertheless in thine heart, where the stead of love is, thou shouldst be able to have part of that love... " What exquisite utterance, what a deep truth!

0.10 - Letters to a Young Captain, #Some Answers From The Mother, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
  immediately to dispel my psychological pain. For something tells me: "All that happens is done for your own
  good and is done by the Divine Grace." Is it good, is it
  --
  that in order not to feel pain one must, so to speak, cut
  the nerve that conveys this sensation to the brain. How
  --
  debt that must be paid to Rudra?
  Here is the whole quotation which I had prepared in advance for
  --
  the law of Vishnu cannot prevail till the debt to Rudra is paid.
  To turn aside then and preach to a still unevolved mankind

01.10 - Nicholas Berdyaev: God Made Human, #Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta - Vol 02, #Nolini Kanta Gupta, #Integral Yoga
   Eastern spirituality does not view sorrow and sufferingevilas an integral part of the Divine Consciousness. It is born out of the Divine, no doubt, as nothing can be outside the Divine, but it is a local and temporal formation; it is a disposition consequent upon certain conditions and with the absence or elimination of those conditions, this disposition too disappears. God and the Divine Consciousness can only be purity, light, immortality and delight. The compassion that a Buddha feels for the suffering humanity is not at all a feeling of suffering; pain or any such normal human reaction does not enter into its composition; it is the movement of a transcendent consciousness which is beyond and purified of the normal reactions, yet overarching them and entering into them as a soothing and illumining and vivifying presence. The healer knows and understands the pain and suffering of his patient but is not touched by them; he need not contract the illness of his patient in order to be in sympathy with him. The Divine the Soulcan be in flesh and yet not smirched with its mire; the flesh is not essentially or irrevocably the ooze it is under certain given conditions. The divine physical body is composed of radiant matter and one can speak of it even as of the soul that weapons cannot pierce it nor can fire burn it.
   ***

01.11 - Aldous Huxley: The Perennial Philosophy, #Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta - Vol 02, #Nolini Kanta Gupta, #Integral Yoga
   "To its heights we can always come. For those of us who are still splashing about in the lower ooze, the phrase has a rather ironical ring. Nevertheless, in the light of even the most distant acquaintance with the heights and the fullness, it is possible to understand what its author means. To discover the Kingdom of God exclusively within oneself is easier than to discover it, not only there, but also in the outer worlds of minds and things and living creatures. It is easier because the heights within reveal themselves to those who are ready to exclude from their purview all that lies without. And though this exclusion may be a painful and mortificatory process, the fact remains that it is less arduous than the process of inclusion, by which we come to know the fullness as well as the heights of spiritual life. Where there is exclusive concentration on the heights within, temptations and distractions are avoided and there is a general denial and suppression. But when the hope is to know God inclusivelyto realise the divine Ground in the world as well as in the soul, temptations and distractions must not be avoided, but submitted to and used as opportunities for advance; there must be no suppression of outward-turning activities, but a transformation of them so that they become sacramental."
   The neatness of the commentary cannot be improved upon. Only with regard to the "ironical ring" of which Huxley speaks, it has just to be pointed out, as he himself seems to understand, that the "we" referred to in the phrase does not mean humanity in general that 'splashes about in the lower ooze' but those who have a sufficiently developed inner spiritual life.

01.14 - Nicholas Roerich, #Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta - Vol 02, #Nolini Kanta Gupta, #Integral Yoga
   Indeed, Roerich considers the Himalayas as the very abode, the tabernacle itself thesanctum sanctorumof the Spirit, the Light Divine. Many of Roerich's paintings have mountain ranges, especially snow-bound mountain ranges, as their theme. There is a strange kinship between this yearning artistic soul, which seems solitary in spite of its ardent humanism, and the silent heights, rising white tier upon tier reflecting prism like the fiery glowing colours, the vast horizons, the wide vistas vanishing beyond.
   Roerich is one of the prophets and seers who have ever been acclaiming and preparing the Golden Age, the dream that humanity has been dreaming continuously since its very childhood, that is to say, when there will be peace and harmony on earth, when racial, cultural or ideological egoism will no longer divide man and mana thing that seems today a chimera and a hallucinationwhen there will be one culture, one civilisation, one spiritual life welding all humanity into a single unit of life luminous and beautiful. Roerich believes that such a consummation can arrive only or chiefly through the growth of the sense of beauty, of the aesthetic temperament, of creative labour leading to a wider and higher consciousness. Beauty, Harmony, Light, Knowledge, Culture, Love, Delight are cardinal terms in his vision of the deeper and higher life of the future.
   The stress of the inner urge to the heights and depths of spiritual values and realities found special and significant expression in his paintings. It is a difficult problem, a problem which artists and poets are tackling today with all their skill and talent. Man's consciousness is no longer satisfied with the customary and the ordinary actions and reactions of life (or thought), with the old-world and time-worn modes and manners. It is no more turned to the apparent and the obvious, to the surface forms and movements of things. It yearns to look behind and beyond, for the secret mechanism, the hidden agency that really drives things. Poets and artists are the vanguards of the age to come, prophets and pioneers preparing the way for the Lord.
   Roerich discovered and elaborated his own technique to reveal that which is secret, express that which is not expressed or expressible. First of all, he is symbolical and allegorical: secondly, the choice of his symbols and allegories is hieratic, that is to say, the subject-matter refers to objects and events connected with saints and legends, shrines and enchanted places, hidden treasures, spirits and angels, etc. etc.; thirdly, the manner or style of execution is what we may term pantomimic, in other words, concrete, graphic, dramatic, even melodramatic. He has a special predilection for geometrical patterns the artistic effect of whichbalance, regularity, fixity, soliditywas greatly utilised by the French painter Czanne and poet Mallarm who seem to have influenced Roerich to a considerable degree. But this Northerner had not the reticence, the suavity, the tonic unity of the classicist, nor the normality and clarity of the Latin temperament. The prophet, the priest in him was the stronger element and made use of the artist as the rites andceremoniesmudras and chakrasof his vocation demanded. Indeed, he stands as the hierophant of a new cultural religion and his paintings and utterances are, as it were, gestures that accompany a holy ceremonial.
   A Russian artist (Monsieur Benois) has stressed upon the primitivealmost aboriginalelement in Roerich and was not happy over it. Well, as has been pointed out by other prophets and thinkers, man today happens to be so sophisticated, artificial, material, cerebral that a [all-back seems to be necessary for him to take a new leap forward on to a higher ground. The pure aesthete is a closed system, with a consciousness immured in an ivory tower; but man is something more. A curious paradox. Man can reach the highest, realise the integral truth when he takes his leap, not from the relatively higher levels of his consciousness his intellectual and aesthetic and even moral status but when he can do so from his lower levels, when the physico-vital element in him serves as the springing-board. The decent and the beautiful the classic grace and aristocracyform one aspect of man, the aspect of "light"; but the aspect of energy and power lies precisely in him where the aboriginal and the barbarian find also a lodging. Man as a mental being is naturally sattwic, but prone to passivity and weakness; his physico-vital reactions, on the other hand, are obscure and crude, simple and vehement, but they have life and energy and creative power, they are there to be trained and transfigured, made effective instruments of a higher illumination.

0.11 - Letters to a Sadhak, #Some Answers From The Mother, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
  The hands of painters, sculptors, musicians (especially pianists) are usually very conscious and always are skilful. It is a
  question of training.

0.14 - Letters to a Sadhak, #Some Answers From The Mother, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
  All the rest is painful illusion.
  7 February 1972

0 1958-07-06, #Agenda Vol 01, #unset, #Integral Yoga
   When I was young, I was as poor as a turkey, as poor as could be! As an artist, I sometimes had to go out in society (as artists are forced to do). I had lacquered boots that were cracked and I painted them so it wouldnt show! This is to tell you the state I was inpoor as a turkey. So one day, in a shop window, I saw a very pretty petticoat much in fashion then, with lace, ribbons, etc. (It was the fashion in those days to have long skirts which trailed on the floor, and I didnt have a petticoat which could go with such things I didnt care, it didnt matter to me in the least, but since Nature had told me I would always have everything I needed, I wanted to make an experiment.) So I said, Well, I would very much like to have a petticoat to go with those skirts. I got five of them! They came from every direction!
   And it is always like that. I never ask for anything, but if by chance I say to myself, Hmm, wouldnt it be nice to have that, mountains of them pour in! So last year, I made an experiment, I told Nature, Listen, my little one, you say that you will collaborate, you told me I would never lack anything. Well then, to put it on a level of feelings, it would really be fun, it would give me joy (in the style of Krishnas joy), to have A LOT of money to do everything I feel like doing. Its not that I want to increase things for myself, no; you give me more than I need. But to have some fun, to be able to give freely, to do things freely, to spend freely I am asking you to give me a crore of rupees1 for my birthday!

0 1958-11-08, #Agenda Vol 01, #unset, #Integral Yoga
   And I followed all this without objectifying it in the least; I was not aware of what it was nor of what was happening, nor of any explanation at all, nothing: it was like that. I was living it, thats all. The experience was absolutely spontaneous. And after this rather painful descent, phew!there was a kind of super-comfort. I cant explain it otherwise, an ease,4 but an ease to the utmost. A perfect immobility in a sense of eternity but with an extraordinary INTENSITY of movement and life! An inner intensity, unmanifested; it was within, self-contained. And motionless (had there been an outside, it would have been motionless in relation to that) and it was in a life so immeasurable that it can only be expressed metaphorically as infinite. And with an intensity, a POWER, a force and a peace the peace of eternity. A silence, a calm. A POWER capable of of EVERYTHING. Everything.
   And I was not imagining nor objectifying it; I was living it with easewith a great ease. And it lasted until the end of the meditation. When it gradually began fading, I stopped the meditation and left.

0 1958-11-22, #Agenda Vol 01, #unset, #Integral Yoga
   Only, and this is what I wrote to you the other day which you did not understand: it is precisely at the most painful point, at the time when the suggestions are strongest, that one must hold on. Otherwise, it has always to be done all over again, always to be reconfronted. There comes a day, a moment, when it has to be done. And now, there is truly an opportunity on earth that is offered only once in thousands of years, a conscious help, with the necessary Power
   But thats about all I know.

0 1958-11-26, #Agenda Vol 01, #unset, #Integral Yoga
   That is why the journey is so long, so difficult. For if one would truly consent no longer to be, everything would become so easy, so swift, so luminous, so joyousthough perhaps not in the way men conceive of joy and ease. At heart, there are very few beings who are not enamored of struggle. There are very few who would consent to having no darkness or who can conceive of light as anything other than the opposite of obscurity: Without shadow, there would be no painting. Without struggle, there would be no victory. Without suffering, there would be no joy. That is what they think, and as long as they think like that, they are not yet born to the spirit.
   ***

0 1958-12-15 - tantric mantra - 125,000, #Agenda Vol 01, #unset, #Integral Yoga
   Mother, things are far from being what they were the first time in Rameswaram, and I am living through certain moments that are hell the enemy seems to have been unleashed with an extraordinary violence. It comes in waves, and after it recedes, I am literally SHATTEREDphysically, mentally and vitally drained. This morning, while going to the temple, I lived through one of these moments. All this suffering that suddenly sweeps down upon me is horrible. Yes, I had the feeling of being BACKED UP AGAINST A WALL, exactly as in your vision I was up against a wall. I was walking among these immense arcades of sculptured granite and I could see myself walking, very small, all alone, alone, ravaged with pain, filled with a nameless des pair, for nowhere was there a way out. The sea was nearby and I could have thrown myself into it; otherwise, there was only the sanctuary of Parvati but there was no more Africa to flee to, everything closed in all around me, and I kept repeating, Why? Why? This much suffering was truly inhuman, as if my last twenty years of nightmare were crashing down upon me. I gritted my teeth and went to the sanctuary to say my mantra. The pain in me was so strong that I broke into a cold sweat and almost fainted. Then it subsided. Yet even now I feel completely battered.
   I clearly see that the hour has come: either I will perish right here, or else I will emerge from this COMPLETELY changed. But something has to change. Mother, you are with me, I know, and you are protecting me, you love me I have only you, only you, you are my Mother. If these moments of utter darkness return and they are bound to return for everything to be exorcised and conqueredprotect me in spite of myself. Mother, may your Grace not abandon me. I want to be done with all these old phantoms, I want to be born anew in your Light; it has to beotherwise I can no longer go on.
  --
   Forgive me, Mother, for all the pain I may have thrown on you, but I am confident that with your Grace I will emerge from this victorious, your child unobscured, in all the fibers of my being. Oh Mother, how alone you are to bear all our suffering if only I could remember this in my moments of darkness.
   I am at your feet. You are my Mother, my only support.

0 1959-01-06, #Agenda Vol 01, #unset, #Integral Yoga
   And it happened just as I was des pairing of ever getting out of it. I seemed to be touching a kind of fundamental bedrock, so painful, so suffering, and full of revolt because of too much suffering. And I saw that all my efforts, all the meditations, aspirations, mantras, were only covering up this suffering bedrock without touching it. I saw this fundamental thing in me very clearly, a poignant knot, ever ready for an absolute negation. I saw it and I said to you, Mother, only your grace can remove this. I said this to you in the temple that morning, in total des pair. And then, the knot was undone. Xs action contri buted a lot, with your grace acting through him. But truly, I have traversed a veritable hell this last while.
   X continues his work on me daily; it is to last 41 days in all. He told me that he wants to undo the things of several births. When it is over, he will explain it all to me. I do not know how to tell you how luminous and good this man is, he is a very great soul. He is also giving me Sanskrit lessons, and little by little, each evening, speaks to me of the Tantra.
  --
   The pain on the left side has not entirely gone and there have been some complications which have delayed things. But I feel much better. In fact, I am rebuilding my health, and I am in no hurry to resume the exhausting days as before. It is quiet upstairs for working, and I am going to take advantage of this to prepare the Bulletin1 at leisure. As I had not read over the pages on the message that we had prepared for the 31st, I have revised and transformed them into an article. It will be the first one in the February issue. I am now going to choose the others. I will tell you which ones I have chosen and in what order I will put them.
   Satprem, my child, I am truly with you and I love you.

0 1959-01-14, #Agenda Vol 01, #unset, #Integral Yoga
   As for myself, a step has definitely been taken, and I am no longer swept away by this painful torrent. Depressions and attacks still come, but no longer with the same violence as before. X told me that 2/3 of the work has been done and that everything would be purged in twelve days or so, then the thing will be enclosed in a jar and buried somewhere or thrown into the sea, and he will explain it all to me. I will write and tell you about it.
   As for the true tantric initiation, this is what X told me: I will give you initiation. You are fit. You belong to that line. It will come soon, some months or some years. Shortly you shall reach the junction. When the time has come, you yourself will come and open a door in me and I shall give you initiation.1 And he made me understand that an important divine work was reserved for me in the future, a work for the Mother. The important practical point is that I have rapidly to develop my knowledge of Sanskrit. The mantra given to me seems to grow in power as I repeat it.

0 1959-05-28, #Agenda Vol 01, #unset, #Integral Yoga
   So there. I can find no solution. X will not understand, and I will not say anything to him. But I obey you because everything is futile and there is too much pain in this world, and also someone in me needs you, someone who loves you in his own way.
   Signed: Satprem

0 1959-06-07, #Agenda Vol 01, #unset, #Integral Yoga
   I have no other details to give you, except that I am not happy. The fact is that these last three years I have been tied down by my penury, otherwise I would be travelling along other roads, far from herewith no greater hope in my heart, but with space before me, at least. I am only here to render you service, but I do not know if I shall be able to repress my need for space much longerit has already been going on too long. This is the undisguised truth. But what can I do?I am tied down. If I truly loved, things would be different, but it seems I love no one, not even myself, and the only love of which I am capable, human love, is forbidden to me. So I can do nothing, not on any plane, and I have no hope in anything. Forgive me, I do not wish to pain you, but neither can I pretend any longer to be happy with my lot.
   Signed: Satprem

0 1959-07-10, #Agenda Vol 01, #unset, #Integral Yoga
   A moment ago I barely found the strength not to kill myself. Destiny has repeated itself once again, but this time it was not I who rejected her, as in past existences, it is she who rejected me: Too late. For a moment, I thought I was going to go crazy too, so much pain did I have then finally I said, May Thy Will be done, (that of the Supreme Lord) and I kept repeating, Thy Grace is there, even in the greatest suffering. But I am broken, rather like a living dead man. So be happy, for I will never wear the white robe that Guruji gave me.
   You will understand that I do not have the strength to come to see you. My only strength is not to rebel, my only strength is to believe in the Grace in the face of everything. I believe I have too much grief in my heart to rebel against anything at all. I seem to have a kind of great pity for this world.

0 1959-10-15, #Agenda Vol 01, #unset, #Integral Yoga
   I would wish to be like Sujata, completely transparent, your child with her at your feet. Mother, help me. I need you. Sujata is healing something that was very painful in me, as though it were flayed or wounded, and which threw me into revolt. With this calming influence, I would like to begin a new life of self-giving. This change of residence is for me like the symbol of another change. Oh, Mother! may the painful road be over, and may all be achieved in the joy of your Will.
   Your child,

0 1960-04-20, #Agenda Vol 01, #unset, #Integral Yoga
   I was pained and shocked upon reaching Xs place to see him in such a horrible housea train station in miniature (and not as nice) with little pastries in garish yellow cement. Cement everywhere they even cemented the patio and uprooted the beautiful tree that was there. O Mother, its vandalism, its barbaric! You cannot imagine! Really, M has committed a terrible sin.
   To compensate for that, however, I had the joy of finding your two letters. Yes, for some time I have been feeling your physical Presence more clearly. But then, why am I so blocked, where is the flaw? It constantly feels as though I am living at the outskirts of myself, or more precisely in a miniscule region of myself, and Im unable to be conscious of the resta perpetual amnesic. It is unpleasant and quite stupid. What is it that will explode this shell?

0 1960-05-28 - death of K - the death process- the subtle physical, #Agenda Vol 01, #unset, #Integral Yoga
   It was at Tlemcen, in Algeria. While Mother was in trance, Theon caused the thread which linked Mother to her body to break through a movement of anger. He was angry because Mother, who was in a region where she saw the 'mantra of life,' refused to tell him the mantra. Faced with the enormity of the result of his anger Theon got hold of himself, and it took all Mother's force and all Theon's occult science to get Mother back into her bodywhich created a kind of very painful friction at the moment of re-entry, perhaps the type of friction that makes new born children cry out.
   ***

0 1960-06-04, #Agenda Vol 01, #unset, #Integral Yoga
   This is the main reason for my japa. Theres a power in the sound itself, and by forcing the body to repeat the sound, you force it to receive the vibration at the same time. But Ive noticed that if something in the bodys working gets disturbed (a pain or disorder, the onset of some illness) and I repeat my mantra in a certain waystill the same words, the same mantra, but said with a certain purpose and above all in a movement of surrender, surrender of the pain, the disorder, and a call, like an openingit has a marvelous effect. The mantra acts in just the right way, in this way and in no other. And after a while everything is put back in order. And simultaneously, of course, the precise knowledge of what lies behind the disorder and what I must do to set it right comes to me. But quite apart from this, the mantra acts directly upon the pain itself.
   I also use my mantra to go into trance. After relaxing on the bed and making as total a self-offering as possible of everything, from top to bottom, and after removing as fully as possible all resistance of the ego, I start repeating the mantra.1 After repeating it two or three times, I am in trance (at the beginning it took longer). And from this trance I pass into sleep; the trance lasts as long as necessary and, quite naturally, spontaneously, I pass into sleep. And when I come back, I remember everything. The sleep was like a continuation of the trance. And essentially, the only reason for sleep is to allow the body to assimilate the results of the trance, then to allow these results to be accepted throughout and to let the body do its natural nights work of eliminating toxins. My periods of sleep practically dont exist sometimes they are as short as half an hour or 15 minutes. But in the beginning, I had long periods of sleep, one or even two hours in succession. And when I woke up, I did not feel this residue of heaviness which comes from sleep the effects of the trance continued.
  --
   To make use of your nights is an excellent thing, for it has a double effect: a negative effect, in that it keeps you from falling backwards, from losing what youve gained (that is really painful); and a positive effect, in that you progress, you continue progressing. You make use of your nights, so theres no more residue of fatigue.
   There are two things to avoid: falling into a stupor of unconsciousness, with all those things coming up from the subconscious and the unconscious that invade and penetrate you, and a vital and mental hyperactivity in which you pass your time literally fightingterrible battles. People come out of that black and blue, as if they had been beaten and they have been, it is not as if! And I see only one way outto change the nature of sleep.

0 1960-07-23 - The Flood and the race - turning back to guide and save amongst the torrents - sadhana vs tamas and destruction - power of giving and offering - Japa, 7 lakhs, 140000 per day, 1 crore takes 20 years, #Agenda Vol 01, #unset, #Integral Yoga
   I remember wandering about one night some time ago. Its no longer very clear, but one thing has remained I had gone out of India, and then when I returned to India, I found huge elephants installed EVERYWHEREenormous elephants. At that time I was not at all aware that the Communists in India had adopted the elephant as their symbol; I only learned that later. What does this mean, I said to myself. Does it signify the Indian army? But they did not resemble war elephants. These elephants were like immense mammoths, and they looked like they were settling down with all the power of a tremendous inertia. That was the impression something heavy in an inert and very tamasic way, forever immovable. I did not like this occupation. When I came back, I had a rather painful feeling, and for several days I wondered if it did not mean war. Then by chance, in a conversation, I learned that the Communists had selected the elephant as their symbol whereas the Congress had chosen the bullock In my vision, I was moving (as I always do), I was moving among them, and nothing moved. And if I needed room, some of them even tried to stir a little.
   But when human beings are involved, I believe that visions take on a special formits a special image. Not an inundation like this. That was very, very impersonal. They were forces. A feeling of floodgates bursting open, of something being held back, retained or prevented, then suddenly
  --
   And sometimes things stagnate, they seem so absolutely obscure and stupid. And then, if you simply go like this (gesture of offering), simply, trulydo it, not think itits instantly like a shower of bliss A tiny point, something very small which looks stubbornly stupid and obstinate, if only you do this (and if you want, you can): Take, take! Give it to Him, simply, like this, truly give it to Him: Its You, its Yours, take it, do with it what You want. And instantly, instead of this shrinking and this painful feelingWhat in the world can I do with all this?a shower, it comes like a shower. Truly Ananda. Of course, if you are stupid enough to call back the difficulty, it returns. But if you remain quiet, if you keep your head quiet, it goesfinished, cured. But there are thousands and thousands and thousands of such points
   With my japa, Ive reached about seven lakhs2. I repeat it 1,400 times a day. But you must be much further than I!3

0 1960-09-20, #Agenda Vol 01, #unset, #Integral Yoga
   When I got there, I felt a moment of anguish; my feeling was that nothing could be done. Not for him in particular, but universally, for all those in his categoryit seemed hopeless.6 If that was perfection, then nothing more could be done. This lasted only a second, but it was painful. And then I tried that is, I wanted to bring my consciousness down into the highest cubethis eternal, universal and infinite consciousness which is the first and foremost expression of the manifestation but nothing doing. It was impossible. I tried for several minutes and saw that it was absolutely impossible. So I had to make a curious movement (I couldnt get through it, it was impassable), I had to come back down into the so-called lower consciousness (not lower, actuallyit was vast and impersonal), and from there I came out and regained my equilibrium. This is what gave me that splitting headache I told you about. I came out of there as if I were carrying the weight the weight of an irreducible absoluteit was dreadful. Unfortunately, I was unable to rest afterwards, and as people were waiting to see me, I had to talkwhich is very tiring for me. And this produced a bubbling in my head, like a this dark blue light of power in matter was there, shot through with streaks of white and gold, and all this was flashing back and forth in my head, this way and that way I thought I was going to have a stroke! (Mother laughs)
   This lasted a good half hour before I could calm it down, make it quiet, quiet. And I saw that this came from the fact that he wanted to bring the Power down, to transmit the Power into the physical mind! But as soon as Im put in contact with the Power, you understand, it makes everything explode! (Mother laughs) It felt exactly like my head was going to explode!
   I felt better that night because I was concentrated, but my head was still hurting a little. Then the following day I said to myself, or rather I told him inwardly, Whether you like it or not, I am bringing down whats up above; it is the only way I can feel comfortable! And I told you what happenedas soon as I sat down I was so surprised, for he didnt start doing what he had done the day before; I myself did the same thing, I participated, so to speak, in his will (so as to find out), but with the resolve to remain consciously in contact with the highest consciousness, as always, and to bring it down. And it came in a marvelous flood. He was quite happy, he did not protest! All the pain was gone, there was nothing left, it was perfect. Only towards the end of the meditation did he again want to start doing his little trick of enclosing my physical mind in this construction, but it didnt last I watched all this from above.
   And he isnt aware of this, actually, he isnt aware at all. If he were told, he would absolutely deny it for him, its an opening onto Infinity! But in fact, its always like that, we are always shut in, each of useach one is enclosed inside certain limits which he doesnt feel, for should he feel it, he would get out! Oh, I know this feeling very well, for when I was with Sri Aurobindo I was open in this way (gesture towards the heights), and I always had this feeling of Yes, my child He tolerated me the way I was and waited for it to change. Thats truly how things are, you know. And now I feel my limits, which are the limits of the world as it is at present, but beyond that theres an unmanifested immensity, eternity and infinityto which we are closed. It merely seeps init is not the great opening. What I am trying to bring about is the great opening. Only when it has opened wide will there really be the (how should I put it?) the irreducible thing, and all the worlds resistance, all its inertia, even its obscurity will be unable to swallow it up the determining and transforming thing I dont know when it will come.
  --
   The most recent incident took place a few days ago, for there was a general excitement in the factory due to the expected visit of a government minister during the day. That afternoon, exactly at half past three, I felt that I had to make a little concentration. So I paid attention and saw poor L11 praying to me. He was praying, praying, calling mesuch a strong call that it pulled me. I was having my bath (you know what happens when Im very strongly pulled Im stopped right in the very midst of a gesture, then the consciousness goes wandering off! And I cant do anything, it stops me dead. Thats exactly what happened to me in the bathroom). When I saw what was happening, I straightened things out. Then they must have had their ceremony, for suddenly I felt, Ah, now it has calmed down, its all right. And I went on to something else.
   The next day, L came to see me. He told me that shortly before 3:30, the machine had stopped once again, but this time it was quickly set right; they found out right away what had to be done. And then he told me that at 3:45 he had started praying to me that all should go well. Oh, I know! I said.

0 1960-10-22, #Agenda Vol 01, #unset, #Integral Yoga
   She was a small woman, fat, almost flabbyshe gave you the feeling that if you leaned against her, it would melt! Once, I remember I was there in Tlemcen with Andres father, who had come to join usa painter, an artist. Theon was wearing a dark purple robe. Theon said to him, This robe is purple. No, its not purple, the other answered, its violet. Theon went rigid: When I say purple, its purple! And they started arguing over this foolishness. Suddenly there flashed from my head, No, this is too ridiculous!I didnt say a word, but it went out from my head (I even saw the flash), and then Madame Theon got up and came over to me, stood behind me (neither of us uttered a word the other two were staring at each other like two angry cocks), then she laid my head against her breastabsolutely the feeling of sinking into eiderdown!
   And never in my life, never, had I felt such peaceit was absolutely luminous and soft a peace, such a soft, tender, luminous peace. After a moment, she bent down and whispered in my ear, One must never question ones master! It wasnt I who was questioning!

0 1960-10-25, #Agenda Vol 01, #unset, #Integral Yoga
   I found out the details: this boy had to go to the station, but on his way, he went into a shoe store just next to the station to buy a pair of sandals. As he entered, he saw a man there choosing a pair of womens shoes for himself! This seemed strange to him: Whats this man doing buying and he WATCHEDsuddenly, nothing more. He lost consciousness and no longer knew what happened to him. And thats how the story begana man selecting womens shoes in a shop! He must do strange thingsprobably intentionallyto attract peoples attention. Naturally, out of curiosity, the boy started watching, and that was thatall of a sudden, blank, nothing more! And long afterwards he found himself far away in a train with this man. Hes here now with his mother they came to thank me. Its he who gave me the details. Hes a nice boy, but all this has left him with some anxiety, especially when he speaks of it. Hes trying to forget. He told me hed like to join the army and asked my permission. The boy feels a need for force and he has the idea that to be part of such a force would be good for him. (Of course, he didnt tell me all this, hes not that conscious. But thats what he feels the need to be supported by an organization of force.) So I encouraged him. I told him it was a good idea. His mother wasnt very happy! She feared he was leaping from the frying pan into the fire!
   Another curious detail is that after having taken away all his appetite and having put him in the caf as a waiter, they told him, Now you must eat, so he tried to eat, and for four days he vomited up everything he put init was completely black! After that, he was able to start eating a little. Its a fantastic story!

0 1960-11-05, #Agenda Vol 01, #unset, #Integral Yoga
   To change it, you have to descend into itwhich is what Im in the midst of doing. But you know, it makes for painful moments. Anyway, once its done, it will be something. When that is done, Ill explain it to you. And then Ill have the power to restore you to health.
   ***

0 1960-11-08, #Agenda Vol 01, #unset, #Integral Yoga
   These things are like landmarks along the ascending path: you go forward step by step, and sometimes its painful, sometimes joyful, or with a certain amount of toil that bears witness still to the presence of the personality or the individuality and its limitations (the Questions and Answers are full of this)but the other thing is different, completely different: the other thing is an overflowing joy, and not only the joy of knowing but the joy of BEING. An overflowing joy.2
   There, my child.
  --
   That is horrible. Its painful, exhausting.
   And the more you try, the more fidgety it gets.

0 1960-11-12, #Agenda Vol 01, #unset, #Integral Yoga
   Certainly, we CAN be heard. So far I never said anything. It even surprised me, for I had never paid it any attention, I was quite away from all that: its raining?so what, its raining, it happens. Its not raining?so what, its not raining, its the same thing. And then gradually people started mentioning that should it continue, they wouldnt be able to do their exercises, and they wouldnt be ready for December 2.1 Then I started receiving desperate lettersone person even told me he was doing his puja underwater! So I answered by saying, Take it as the Lords blessing but Im not sure he appreciated it! And then I learned that 200 houses [in the Ashram]200!are leaking. Naturally, each one is in a great hurryits terribly urgent! So perhaps I shall file a complaint and ask them what they mean by this!
   Actually, if communications are interrupted, it can be troublesome Let us see.

0 1960-11-26, #Agenda Vol 01, #unset, #Integral Yoga
   Your force cured me in one hour in a spectacular way. I would understand if you had merely cured my flu, for thats something more general, and with a good general vibration it can be removed; but the force acted with an astonishing precision and accuracy: first it wiped out my flu, then it touched a toothache thats been hurting for the last three days, and in five minutes that was gone. Finally, I had a pulled ligament which for three or four years now has periodically given me pain (a thigh ligament where it joins the pelvis, to be precise) and this last week it was hurting so much that I found it difficult to sit cross-legged for meditation. And then I felt the force come and touch just there, exactly at this point, and the pain vanished. And yet the problem was of an organic nature, not some general illness!
   (Mother remains silent a moment, then says:)

0 1960-12-17, #Agenda Vol 01, #unset, #Integral Yoga
   (Soon afterwards, concerning the conversation of November 5 on the subconscious roots in the cells that can make everything fall apart in a second: To change it, you have to descend into it it makes for painful moments Once its done, Ill have the power )
   When was this? November 5? And now its December 17 Well, its still continuing!

0 1960-12-31, #Agenda Vol 01, #unset, #Integral Yoga
   Oh, but you know, night after night, night after night, I SEE how things which in their truth are so simple become complicated here in the human atmosphere. Really, its so interesting; I have visions you see, the thing in its truth is so simple its stupefying, and then here it becomes so complicated, painful, exhausting, upsetting.
   But its enough to take one step behind to come out of it all.

0 1961-01-27, #Agenda Vol 02, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   Since the last experience [January 24] I see it daily. The following day, probably for reasons connected with the bodys development and adaptation, I was rather seriously illwhat is usually called painfully ill: the body was suffering a lot, or WOULD HAVE suffered a lot had it been in its former normal consciousness. Thats where I saw the differencea fantastic difference!
   I was perfectly conscious (now when I say I, it refers to my body, I am not speaking of the whole higher consciousness), the body was perfectly conscious of its suffering, the reason for its suffering, the cause of its suffering, everything and it did not suffer. You understand, the two perceptions were there together: the body saw the disorder, saw the suffering just as it would have felt it a few weeks earlier, it saw all that (saw, knew I dont know how to express itit was conscious, it was aware) and it did not suffer. The two awarenesses were absolutely simultaneous.

0 1961-02-04, #Agenda Vol 02, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   And do you know how he received me when I arrived there? It was the first time in my life I had traveled alone and the first time I had crossed the Mediterranean. Then there was a fairly long train ride between Oran and Tlemcenanyway, I managed rather well: I got there. He met me at the station and we set off for his place by car (it was rather far away). Finally we reached his estatea wonder! It spread across the hillside overlooking the whole valley of Tlemcen. We arrived from below and had to climb up some wide pathways. I said nothingit was truly an experience from a material standpoint. When we came in sight of the house, he stopped: Thats my house. It was red! painted red! And he added, When Barley came here, he asked me, Why did you paint your house red? (Barley was a French occultist who put Theon in touch with France and was his first disciple.) There was a mischievous gleam in Theons eyes and he smiled sardonically: I told Barley, Because red goes well with green! With that, I began to understand the gentleman. We continued on our way uphill when suddenly, without warning, he spun around, planted himself in front of me, and said, Now you are at my mercy. Arent you afraid? Just like that. So I looked at him, smiled and replied, Im never afraid. I have the Divine here. (Mother touches her heart.)
   Well, he really went pale.

0 1961-02-07, #Agenda Vol 02, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   So, my child, if your body has some trouble, just tell yourself they are sympathy pains (Mother laughs), then you wont be troubled. Thats all.
   ***

0 1961-02-18, #Agenda Vol 02, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   Oh, the other day I had some zinnias (Endurance)literally works of art, as though each petal had been painted, and all together so harmonious and so varied at the same time. Oh, Nature is wonderful! In the end, we are just copycats, and clumsy ones at that.
   (after a moment of silence)

0 1961-02-25, #Agenda Vol 02, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   Almost (I say almost because the body hasnt had every experience), but almost all pains can be reduced to something absolutely negligible. (Of course, some pains it hasnt had, but it has had a sufficient number!) Its this anxiety resulting from a semi-mental vibration (the first stirrings of Mind) that complicates everything, everything! For example, take this difficulty I mentioned of climbing the stairs: in the doctors consciousness or anyone elses, pain causes it. According to their ordinary reasoning, pain is what tenses the nerves and muscles so one can no longer walk but this is absolutely FALSE. pain does not prevent my body from doing anything at all. pain isnt a factor, or rather its a factor that can be easily dealt with. Its not that: it is Matter; Matter (probably cellular matter, or) losing its capacity to respond to the will, to will-power. But why? I dont know! It depends upon the particular disorganization; but why is it like that? I dont know. Now each time I climb the stairs, I am trying to find the means of infusing Will in such a way that this lack of response doesnt last but I still havent found it. Although theres all this accumulated force and power and will (a tremendous accumulation, I am BATHED in it, the whole body is bathed in it!), yet for some reason it doesnt respond. Here and there, groups of cells fail to respond, and the Force cannot act. So what must be found is.
   (silence)

0 1961-03-11, #Agenda Vol 02, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   Things began to go wrong only a LONG time afterwards, long after (but this is a personal impression), probably because certain mental crystallizations were necessary, inevitable, for the general evolution, so that the mind might prepare itself to move on to something else. That was when oh, it seems like a fall into a pitinto ugliness, darkness! Everything became so dark, so ugly, so difficult, so painful. Really really the sense of a fall.
   (silence)

0 1961-03-14, #Agenda Vol 02, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   Yet the cells sense so perfectly that. All the experiences in the subconscient at night are quite clear proofs that a a WORLD of things and vibrations is being cleaned outall the vibrations opposed to the cellular transformation. But how can one poor little body do all that work! The body is quite aware of being a sort of accumulation and concentration of things (yet there is inevitably a selectionMo ther laughsbecause if everything had to be worked out in one center like this [her body] it would be it would be impossible!). Oh, if you knew how deeply and perfectly convinced these cells are, in all their groups and sub-groups, each one individually and within the whole, that everything is not only decreed but executed by the Divine, everything! They have a kind of constant awareness so filled with a conscious faith in His infinite wisdom, even when there is what the ordinary consciousness calls suffering or pain. Thats not what it is for the cellsits something else! And the result is a state of yes, a state of peaceful combat. There is a sense of Peace, the vibration of Peace, and simultaneously an impression of being (how to put it?) on the alert, in constant combat. Taken all together it creates a rather odd situation.
   And within oh! Its like waves, constantly, the equivalent of those nuances of color I was speaking about, waves of this joy of life, the joy of life rippling past, touching; but instead of being. At times, you see, the body is in a sort of equilibrium (what we, in our ordinary outer consciousness, call equilibrium that is, good health), and then this joy is constant, like swells on the sea (Mother shapes great waves): it seems to flow on behind everything; it comes and shows its face for a moment, then vanishes. In the very tiny things of lifeyes, physical life the joy of these things, the joy life contains, this luminous, special kind of vibration, rises up as if to remind us that its here; it is here, it mustnt be forgotten, its here but its kept down by this tension.

0 1961-03-21, #Agenda Vol 02, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   Then I woke up (I always wake up three or four times during the night) and when I went back to bed I had an attack of what the doctor and I have taken to be filariasis but a strange type of filariasis, for as soon as I master it in one spot it appears in another, and when I master it there it reappears somewhere else. Last night it was in the arms (it lasted quite a while, between 2:30 and 4 a.m.); but I was fully conscious, and each time the attack came, I went like this (gestures over the arms, to drive away the attack) and my arms were not affected at all. When it was over, I consciously entered the most material subtle physical, just beyond the body. I was sitting in my room there (an immense, cubic room) reading or writing something, when I heard the door open and close, but I was busy and didnt pay attention, presuming it was one of the people usually around me. Then suddenly I had such an unpleasant sensation in my body that I raised my head and looked, and I saw someone there. Do you know how the magicians in Europe dress, in short satin breeches and a shirt? He was wearing something like that. He was Indian, tall and rather dark, with slicked-down hairwhat you would normally call a handsome young man. He seemed to have been drawn1 there becausehe was standing in front of me staring into space, not looking at me. And the moment I saw him, there was the same sensation in all my cells as I have with what Ive been calling filariasis (its a special, minute kind of pain) and simultaneously all the cells felt disgusta tremendous will of rejection. Then I sat up straight (I didnt stand up) and said to him as forcefully as possible, How do you dare to come in here! I said it so loudly that the noise woke me up! I dont know what happened then, but things went much better afterwards.
   The moment I saw this person I knew he was only an instrument, but a well- paid instrumentsomeone paid a great deal to have him do that! I would recognize him again among hundreds I can still see him I see him more clearly than with physical eyes. He is an unintelligent man with no personal animosity, merely a very well- paid instrumentsomeone is hiding behind him, using him as a screen.
   Before that experience, as part of the attack, I also got a sore throat. I didnt believe it would manifest, but around 9:30 this morning when I came downstairs for meditation with X,2 it did. Its nothing at all, though. The whole time I was with X (and even before, when I was waiting for him), it was halted completelyeverything in that room came to a halt. It started up again only after he left and I came here. But its nothing.
  --
   Who can do it, then? There is no one here. Thats why I wish greater attention would be paid in publishing translations of Sri Aurobindo.
   Yes, its a problem. Thats why I dont categorically tell you not to do it, because after all, he shouldnt be massacred!

0 1961-03-27, #Agenda Vol 02, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   Why? Probably because I was ready to face it. But it has been posed so intensely. It was so intense that it was painful.
   It reinforces what the old Schools have always taught but Sri Aurobindo rejected it! Sri Aurobindo told us precisely that the Truth could be lived IN material life. Of course, there must be a change of consciousness, but I thought.
  --
   Yes, its as if I were living, as if the BODY were living (despite all the illnesses and attacks, all the ill will besetting it), living in a bath of the divine vibrationbathing in something immenseimmense, immense limitless, and so stable! The body lives in it like this (gesture as if Mother were floating). So even when there is what we call physical pain, even when there are blows to morale (like having a cashier ask you for money and you have none to give him5), well, despite it all, despite all the possible complications (coming all at the same time), EVERYTHING, everything that happens now, even things which seem extremely unpleasant to our mental conceptions or our mental reactions, everything is a bath, a bath of the vibration of divine Love. So much so that if I didnt control my body, I would be smiling at everything all the time like an idiot. A beatific smile for everything (I dont show it because I control myself).
   (silence, the clock strikes the hour)
  --
   Its one thing to have the spiritual experience of the illusion of material life (some find this painful, but I found it so wonderfully beautiful and happy that it was one of the loveliest experiences of my life); but now the whole spiritual construction as one has lived it is becoming a total illusion! Not the same illusion, a far more serious illusion.
   If That was not there. Obviously, That [divine Love] is here, like a mattress placed so you wont break your neck when you fall. Thats precisely the feeling: this experience of the vibration of divine Love is the mattress so you dont break your neck!

0 1961-04-25, #Agenda Vol 02, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   Only one thing would actually be true, one single thing: to DO it. All this talking and talking and promising and painting things in glowing colorsjust DO it.
   (silence)

0 1961-04-29, #Agenda Vol 02, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   Someone made a large painting of Sri Aurobindo and myself, and they brought it here to show me. I said, Oh, its dreadful! It was to the physical eye it was really dreadful. Its dreadful, I said, we cant keep it. Then immediately someone asked me for it, saying, Im going to put it up in my house and do my puja before it. Ah! I couldnt help saying, But how could you put up a thing like that! (It wasnt so much ugly as frightfully banal.) How can you do puja before something so commonplace and empty! This person replied, Oh, to me its not empty! It contains all the presence and all the force, and I shall worship it as that: the Presence and the Force.
   All this is based on the old idea that whatever the imagewhich we disdainfully call an idolwhatever the external form of the deity may be, the presence of the thing represented is always there. And there is always someonewhe ther priest or initiate, sadhu or sannyasisomeone who has the power and (usually this is the priests work) who draws the Force and the Presence down into it. And its true, its quite real the Force and the Presence are THERE; and this (not the form in wood or stone or metal) is what is worshipped: this Presence.
  --
   But I have rarely had an experience in churches. Rather the opposite: I have very often had the painful experience of the human effort to find solace, a divine compassion falling into very bad hands.
   One of my most terrible experiences took place in Venice (the cathedrals there are so beautifulmagnificent!). I remember I was painting they had let me settle down in a corner to paintand nearby there was a (what do they call it?) a confessional. And a poor woman was kneeling there in distresswith such a dreadful sense of sin! So piteous! She wept and wept. Then I saw the priest coming, oh, like a monster, a hard-hearted monster! He went inside; he was like an iron bar. And there was this poor woman sobbing, sobbing; and the voice of the other one, hard, curt. I could barely contain myself.
   I dont know why, but I have had this kind of experience so very often: either a hostile force lurking behind and swallowing up everything, or else manruthless man abusing the Power.
  --
   I remember a good-hearted priest in Pau [Southern France] who was an artist and wanted to have his church decorateda tiny cathedral. He consulted a local anarchist (a great artist) about it. The anarchist was acquainted with Andrs father and me. He told the priest, I recommend these people to do the paintings they are true artists. He was doing the mural decorationsome eight panels in all, I believe. So I set to work on one of the panels. (The church was dedicated to San Juan de Compostello, a hero of Spanish history; he had appeared in a battle between the Christians and the Moors and his apparition vanquished the Moors. And he was magnificent! He appeared in golden light on a white horse, almost like Kalki.6) All the slaughtered and struggling Moors were depicted at the bottom of the painting, and it was I who painted them; it was too hard for me to climb high up on a ladder to paint, so I did the things at the bottom! But anyway, it all went quite well. Then, naturally, the priest received us and invited us to dinner with the anarchist. And he was so nicereally a kind-hearted man! I was already a vegetarian and didnt drink, so he scolded me very gently, saying, But its Our Lord who gives us all this, so why shouldnt you take it? I found him charming. And when he looked at the paintings, he tapped Morisset on the shoulder (Morisset was an unbeliever), and said, with the accent of Southern France, Say what you like, but you know Our Lord; otherwise you could never have painted like that!
   Well.

0 1961-06-02, #Agenda Vol 02, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   I once fell down and dented my head (for a long time it was even painful); and since then the dent has become deeper and deeper and the bump has become larger and larger. I told the doctor about it (he had been called in at the time because it was bleeding profusely and people were upsetit healed in a day) and he told me there had been an accumulation of blood causing the bone to increase in size. But this is a doctors reason.
   It is quite interesting.

0 1961-06-06, #Agenda Vol 02, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   No. I had finished reading the Veda and wanted to take up The Life Divine, but as I had never read On Himself,1 I chose it instead. I read the first chapter dealing with his life in England and to me it all seemed. Oh, why speak of all these things in connection with Sri Aurobindo? Why? I know quite well that he himself has repliedor rather rectified inexact things people had said about him but it made such a painful impression on me! Such a painful impression.
   Something must definitely be done which is free of that whole useless jumble about who his father was and so forthpah! I dont like that sort of thing.
  --
   Its so subtle! It could almost be. Its almost like being on the border between two worlds. Its the same world and itsis it two aspects of this world? I cant even say that. Yet its the SAME world; all is the Lord, He and nothing but He, only its. And so subtle, so subtle: if you go like this (Mother tilts her hand slightly to the right), its perfectly harmonious; if you go like that (Mother tilts her hand slightly to the left), oof! Its its at once absurd, meaningless, and laborious, painful. But its the SAME thing! Its all the same thing.
   What is it?
  --
   And when the body makes this movement (gesture of stepping back from physical appearances)what to call it? This movement of fusion (is it fusion?), of no longer being a separate body, of being the Divine there is something which. There is a sort of abstraction of something (and even that is putting it too concretely). And sometimes it succeeds, the body floats in the Light; sometimes its only partial. Sometimes all the inner consciousness is there, full and total but HERE things remain as they are, stupid, stupid, utterly stupid! Blind, in shifting sands, painful (and its not a thought, its not even a sensation; I dont know what it is).
   And THERE the conscious will can do nothing. Nothing. All it could do it has done, and it continues to do all it can at each minute, and its nothing, it is not THATwhat is it??

0 1961-06-27, #Agenda Vol 02, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   The CONTENT is different, mon petit. I see I see, but. The state of consciousness of the person Im looking at, for instance, changes his physical appearance for my PHYSICAL eyes. And this has nothing to do with the banalities of ordinary psychology, where your physiognomy is said to be changed by the feelings you experience. The CONTENT of what I see is different. And then the eyes of the person I am looking at are not the sameit is rather. I couldnt sketch it, but perhaps if I made a painting it would give some idea (I would need to use a somewhat blurred technique, not too precise). The eyes are not quite the same, and the rest of the face too, even the color and the shape thats what sometimes makes me hesitate. I see people (I see my people every morning) and I recognize them, and yet they are different, they are not the same every day (some are always, always the same, like a rock, but others are not). And I even I hesitate sometimes: Is it really he? But he is very. It is indeed he, but I dont quite know him. This generally coincides with changes in the persons consciousness.
   In conclusion: we know nothing.

0 1961-07-07, #Agenda Vol 02, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   65Because God is invincibly great, He can afford to be weak; because He is immutably pure, He can indulge with impunity in sin; He knows eternally all delight, therefore He tastes also the delight of pain; He is inalienably wise, therefore He has not debarred Himself from folly.
   Can God truly be said to be weak or to fail? Does this actually happen, or is it simply the Lords play?

0 1961-07-15, #Agenda Vol 02, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   To be in a condition in which all is the Supreme, all is wonderful, all is marvelous, all is marvelous love, all is all is profound Joyan unchanging, immutable, ever-present condition. To live in That, and then to have this bodily substance contradict it through every possible stupiditylosing sight, losing strength, pains here, pains there, disorders, weaknesses, incapacities of every type. And at the SAME TIME, the response within this body, no matter what happens to it, is, O Lord, Your Grace is infinite. The contradiction is VERY disconcerting.
   From experience, I know perfectly well that when one is satisfied with being a saint or a sage and constantly maintains the right attitude, all goes well the body doesnt get sick, and even if there are attacks it recovers very easily; all goes very well AS LONG AS THERE IS NOT THIS WILL TO TRANSFORM. All the difficulties arise in protest against the will to transform; while if one says, Very well, its all right, let things be as they are, I dont care, I am perfectly happy, in a blissful state, then the body begins to feel content!

0 1961-07-18, #Agenda Vol 02, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   Exactly what came to me I receive all the questions people ask. The question arises immediately: if one kills out of cruelty, for instance, or inflicts pain out of cruelty, did that ever have a place? For even though deformed in appearance, it is nevertheless (we always come back to the same thing) an expression of the Divine.
   What lies behind, tell me?
  --
   But its so lovely when this Harmony comes. You know, puttering about, arranging papers, setting a drawer in order. It all sings, its lovely, so joyous and luminous so delightful! And all, all, all. All material things, all activities, eating, dressing, everything becomes delightful when this harmony is there, delightful. Everything works out smoothly, its so harmonious, theres no friction. You see you see a joyous, luminous Grace manifesting in all things, ALL things, even those we normally regard as utterly unimportant. But then, if this Harmony withdraws, everythingexactly the SAME conditions, the SAME things, the SAME circumstancesbecomes painful, tiresome, drawn out, difficult, laborious, oh! Its like this, and like that (Mother tilts her hand from side to side as on a narrow frontier) like this, like that.
   It makes you sense so clearly that things in themselves dont count. What we call things in themselves are of no true importance! What really counts is the relationship of consciousness to these things. And theres a formidable power in this, since in one instance you touch something and drop or mishandle it, while in the other its so lovely, it works so smoothly. Even the most difficult movements are made without difficulty. Its an unheard-of power! We dont give it importance because it has no grandiose effects, its not spectacular. Yes, there are indeed states of grace when one is in the presence of a great difficulty and suddenly has all the power needed to face ityes, but thats something else. I am speaking of a power active in ordinary life.

0 1961-08-05, #Agenda Vol 02, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   When I re-entered, it hurt terribly, terriblyan excruciating pain, like plunging into a hell.
   Into a?

0 1961-09-10, #Agenda Vol 02, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   Besides, as a means of expression. writing is hard labor, you know. Its not pleasant, its not like composing music or painting.
   No indeed!

0 1961-09-16, #Agenda Vol 02, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   I have to face a similar difficulty, mind you, although its on another level. There is such a tremendous accumulation of people to see, things to do, questions to be resolvedeverything. The accumulation is So TIGHTLY packedso compact! Too compact for the life for the hours, the time, the forcesof an ordinary body. Yet behind it all, there is a sort of constant active immobility, in the sense that the consciousness has the impression of being immobile, of being borne along on the stream of progress and evolution. But this immobility. If I should try to do what I have to do, you know, everything I have to do, well it becomes impossible, things clog up, it gets painful. And here his answer is the same: Be simple, be simple.
   This morning when I was walking, the program of the day and the work ahead of me was so formidable that I felt it to be impossible. And yet simultaneously there was this immobile inner POSITION in me; as soon as I stop my movement of formation and action, it becomes like a dance of joy: all the cells vibrating (there is a sort of vivacity, and an extraordinary music), all the cells vibrant with the joy of the Presence the divine Presence. But when I see the outside world entering and attacking, well this joy doesnt exactly disappear, but it retreats. And the result is that I always feel like sitting down and keeping stillwhen I can do that it is marvelous. But of course, all the suggestions from outside come in: suggestions of helplessness and old age, of wear and tear, of diminishing power, all thatand I know positively that its false. But calm in the body is indispensable. Well, for me also Sri Aurobindos answer is always the same: Be simple, be simple, very simple.

0 1961-09-30, #Agenda Vol 02, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   I had a clear vision of the two kinds of opposites in nature (not only in nature but in life) which almost everyone carries within himself: one is the possibility of realization, the other is the path chosen to attain it. There is always (its probably inevitable) the stormy path of struggle, and then there is the sunlit path. After much study and observation, I have had a sort of spiritual ambition (if it can be called that) to bring to the world a sunlit path, to eliminate the necessity for struggle and suffering: something that aspires to replace this present phase of universal evolution with a less painful phase.
   It greatly interested me when I read your letter. I was looking at why you have so many difficulties; twice in your note you wrote that it [writing] is a suffering. You have very often written this word, very often spoken it, and it seems dominant in one aspect of your beingwhile in the other is the glory of a supreme joy, the very stuff of the future realization.

0 1961-10-02, #Agenda Vol 02, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   Then there is a doctor, V., who comes here twice a year to give a check-up to all who take part in the physical education program and all the children. He is an extremely honest and sincere man who believes in the mission of medical science. Each time he comes, I write something in his diary on the day of his departure (his whole diary is full of things Ive written they usually appear in the Bulletin or somewhere). On that very same day I learned that V. was leaving, and it suddenly came to meso clearly! Falsehood in the body that sort of juxtaposition of contraries, the inversion of the Vibration (only it doesnt really invertits a curious phenomenon: the vibration remains what it is but its received inverted)this falsehood in the body is a falsehood in the CONSCIOUSNESS. The falsity of the consciousness naturally has material consequences and thats what illness is! I immediately made an experiment on my body to see if this held, if it actually works that way. And I realized that its true! When you are open and in contact with the Divine, the Vibration gives you strength, energy; and if you are quiet enough, it fills you with great joyand all of this in the cells of the body. You fall back into the ordinary consciousness and straightaway, without anything changing, the SAME thing, the SAME vibration coming from the SAME source turns into a pain, a malaise, a feeling of uncertainty, instability and decrepitude. To be sure of this, I repeated the experiment three or four times, and it was absolutely automatic, like the operation of a chemical formula: same conditions, same results.
   This interested me greatly.

0 1961-10-15, #Agenda Vol 02, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   Normally one would have said that my body was in trance; yet it could move, it could speaksince I did speak to you; but nevertheless, it was a peculiar feeling (which I still have somewhat), like having a head too large for my body. Its not painful or disagreeable, but Im not used to it.
   After our meeting yesterday, as soon as I saw clearly and could objectify it, I immediately sent all this to you (I didnt write because I had no time, but I told it all to you), for I felt that, not knowing what had happened, you might have thought I wasnt listening, or I dont know what!

0 1961-10-30, #Agenda Vol 02, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   But we have not yet reached the heart of the Vedic secret. The birth of Agni, the soul (and so many men are still unborn) is merely the start of the voyage. This inner flame seeks, it is the seeker within us, for it is a spark of the great primordial Fire and will never be satisfied until it has recovered its solar totality, the lost sun of which the Veda incessantly speaks. Yet even when we have risen from plane to plane and the Flame has taken successive births in the triple world of our lower existence (the physical, vital and mental world), it will still remain unsatisfiedit wants to ascend, ascend further. And soon we reach a mental frontier where there seems to be nothing to grasp any longer, nor even to see, and nothing remains but to abolish everything and leap into the ecstasy of a great Light. At this point, we feel almost painfully the imprisoning carapace of matter all around us, preventing that apotheosis of the Flame; then we understand the cry, My kingdom is not of this world, and the insistence of Indias Vedantic sagesand perhaps the sages of all worlds and all religions that we must abandon this body to embrace the Eternal. Will our flame thus forever be truncated here below and our quest always end in disappointment? Shall we always have to choose one or the other, to renounce earth to gain heaven?
   Yet beyond the lower triple world, the Rishis had discovered a certain fourth, touryam svid; they found the vast dwelling place, the solar world, Swar: I have arisen from earth to the mid-world [life], I have arisen from the mid-world to heaven [mind], from the level of the firmament of heaven I have gone to the Sun-world, the Light (Yajur-veda 17.67). And it is said, Mortals, they achieved immortality (Rig-veda I.110.4). What then was their secret? How did they pass from a heaven of mind to the great heaven without leaving the body, without, as it were, going off into ecstasies?

0 1961-11-05, #Agenda Vol 02, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   This man clearly led a rather loose life. Right after he left here he spent some time in the Himalayas and became a Sannyasi. Then he went to France and from France to England. In England he married againbigamy! I didnt care, of course (the less he showed up in my life, the better), but he was in a fix! One day I suddenly received some official letters from a lawyer telling me I had initiated divorce proceedings against Richard. it seems I had a lawyer over there! A lawyer I had never asked for, whose name I didnt know, a lawyer I didnt even know existedmy lawyer! The trial was taking place at Nice, and I was accusing Richard of abandoning me without any means of support! (That was nothing new I had paid all the expenses from the first day we met! But anyway.) Naturally, he couldnt plead that he was a bigamist; nor could he have me accuse him of being a bigamist, because it was true! So it seemed he hadnt been paying my expenses; but then I wasnt claiming anything from him in the case, no alimonya little incoherent, all that. After a few months I was finally informed that I was divorced, which was rather convenient for me as far as the bank was concerned. I had a marriage contract stipulating that our properties were separate; since I was the one with the money (he had nothing), I wanted to be free to do with it as I pleased. But the French were impossible in such matters: the woman was considered the minor party, so even if the money was the wifes and not the husbands, she couldnt withdraw it without his authorization. I dont know if its still like that, but in those days the husb and always had to countersignan annoying situation! I got around this in Japan (the banker there found the rule stupid and told me to ignore it), but the bank here can be a pain in the neck, so it was good to get this cleared up.
   He remarried two or three more times. By now (I believe) he is the father of quite a large family, with grandchildren and perhaps great-grandchildren. He lives in America. Someone once told me he was dead, but I could sense that he wasnt. Then, out of the blue, E. arrived, full of admiration, telling me she had met Richard and how stunningly he could preach to people.

0 1961-11-07, #Agenda Vol 02, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   I am telling you this because, as soon as I got your letter, I replied with what Ill read to you now; then I was immediately faced with something I couldnt formulate, the kind of thing that gives you the feeling of the unknown (all I knew was my own experience). So I did the usual thingbecame blank, turned towards the Truth; and I questioned Sri Aurobindo and beyondasking, if there were something to be known, that it be told to me. Then I dropped it, I paid no more attention. And only as I was coming here today was I told I cant really use the word told, but anyway, what was communicated to me concerning your question was that the difference between the two processes [the Rishis and the present one] is purely subjective, depending upon the way the experience is registered. I dont know if I can make myself clear. There is something which is the experience and which will be the Realization; and what appears to be a different, if not opposite, process is simply a subjective mental notation of one SINGLE experience. Do you follow?
   Thats what I was told.

0 1962-01-12 - supramental ship, #Agenda Vol 03, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   There have been times, while working in the most material mind (the mind ingrained in the material substance), when I felt my brain swelling and swelling and swelling, and my head becoming so large it seemed about to burst! On two occasions I was forced to stop, because it was (was it only an impression, or was it a fact?) in any event it seemed dangerous, as if the head would burst, because what was inside was becoming too tremendous (it was that power in Matter, that very powerful deep blue light which has such powerful vibrations; it is able to heal, for example, and change the functioning of the organsreally a very powerful thing materially). Well then, thats what was filling my head, more and more, more and more, and I had the feeling that my skull was (it was painful, you know) that there was a pressure inside my skull pushing out, pushing everything out. I wondered what was going to happen. Then, instead of following the movement, helping it along and going with it, I became immobile, passive, to see what would happen. And both times it stopped. I was no longer helping the movement along, you see, I simply remained passive and it came to a halt, there was a sort of stabilization.
   (silence)
  --
   For thought, its elementary, very simple. Its not difficult for the feelings either; for the heart, the emotional being, to expand to the dimensions of the Supreme is relatively easy. But this body! Its very difficult, very difficult to do without the body losing its center (how can I put it?) its center of coagulationwithout it dissolving into the surrounding mass. Although, if one were in a natural environment, with mountains and forests and rivers, with lots of space and lots of natural beauty, it could be rather pleasant! But its physically impossible to take a single step outside ones body without meeting unpleasant, painful things. At times you come in contact with a pleasant substance, something harmonious, warm, vibrating with a higher light; it happens. But its rare. Flowers, yes, sometimes flowers sometimes, not always. But this material world, oh! It batters you from all sides; it claws you, mauls youyou get clawed and scraped and battered by all sorts of things which which just dont blossom. How hard it all is! Oh, how closed human life is! How shriveled, hardened, without light, without warmth let alone joy.
   While sometimes, when you see water flowing along, or a ray of sunlight in the treesoh, how it sings! The cells sing, they are happy.

0 1962-01-21, #Agenda Vol 03, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   It came after the vision of the great divine Becoming.2 Since this world is progressive, I was wondering, since it is increasingly becoming the Divine, wont there always be this deeply painful sense of the nondivine, of the state that, compared with the one to come, is not divine? Wont there always be what we call adverse forces, in other words, things that dont harmoniously follow the movement? Then came the answer, the vision of That: No, the moment of this very Possibility is drawing near, the moment for the manifestation of the essence of perfect Love, which can transform this unconsciousness, this ignorance and this ill will that goes with it into a luminous and joyous progression, wholly progressive, wholly comprehensive, thirsting for perfection.
   It was very concrete.

0 1962-01-27, #Agenda Vol 03, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   I did try once in Francewith Hohlenberg, that painter who came here during the war [World War I] and then had to go back.2
   He came to France and asked me. He absolutely insisted. He had read all Theons stuff and was well up on everything and very anxious to try. So I taught him how to do it; and whats more, I was there, he did it in my presence. And, mon petit, the moment he went out of his body, he was thrown into a panic! The man was no cowardhe was very courageous but it absolutely terrified him! Sheer panic. So I said no, no, no.

0 1962-02-24, #Agenda Vol 03, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   And in the afternoon, I had a funny experience at the Playground.3 When I got down from the car to go inside, I felt. For close to a year now I have been saddled with (I mean it was imposed on me) a useless pair of legs: weak, awkward, old, worn outworthless. I constantly had to will them to walk, and even then they were more than clumsy. And it was all swept away in the same manner (sweeping gesture). I literally almost danced! Imagine, getting rid of a pair of legs just like that! INSTANTLY my legs felt the way they used to (I have always had strong legs)that alert, solid, agile strength and I had to restrain myself from cavorting about! Ah, now we can walk! Keep calm, I had to tell them, or they would have started skipping and prancing!
   And they stayed that way, there was no relapse. I was waiting to see if it would lastit did. Something seems to be over with now.
  --
   But is it necessary? Is all this disorganization necessary? Perhaps I call it disorganization when it isnt. You know, we are totally ignorant in that realm. We have our old human ways of seeing, but when it comes to the bodys functioning, we know nothing about whats good or not. Or even whats painful or not: the bodys initial impulse is to feel the pain, but upon reflection and attentive observation, we see it is simply an intensity of sensation were not used to. So it could well have been that. And if we were used to it (and especially if we didnt think of it as something troublesome), we would feel quite differently about it. In any case, its not something unbearablewe can bear a lot of things, much more than we imagine.
   I am not sure, you see. We keep going on with old notions, old routines and old habitswhat can we possibly know!
  --
   The 19th was so-so, and on the 20th I was concentrated all day long: no contacts with anyone, nothing external, only an intense invocation as intense and concentrated as when youre trying to melt into the Lord at death. It was like that. The same movement of identification, but at its core a will for everything to work out in a good way here [on the material plane]. In a good way I mean I said to the Lord, YOUR Good, the true Good, not. The true Good, a victorious Good, a real progress over the way life is usually lived. And I stayed in this unwavering concentration the whole day, all the time, all the time: even when I spoke, it was something very external speaking. And then at night when I went to bed I felt something had changed the body felt completely different. When I got up in the morning, all the pains and disorders and dangers had vanished. Lord, I said, You have given me a gift of health.
   And with this change, the bodily substance, the very stuff of the cells, was constantly being told, Dont you forget, now you see that miracles CAN happen. In other words, the way things work out in physical substance may not at all conform to the laws of Nature. Dont forget, now! It kept coming back like a refrain: Dont forget, now! This is how it is. And I saw how necessary this repetition was for the cells: they forget right away and try to find explanations (oh, how stupid can you be!). Its a sort of feeling (not at all an individual way of thinking), its Matters way of thinking. Matter is built like that, its part of its make-up. We call it thinking for lack of a better word, but its not thinking: it is a material way of understanding things, the way Matter is able to understand.
  --
   You can achieve excellent control of the heart. But I never practiced it violently, never strained myself. I think holding for 16 is too long. I used to do it simply like this: brea the in very slowly to the count of 4, then hold for 4 like this (I still have the knack of it!), lifting the diaphragm and lowering the head8 (Mother bends her neck), closing everything and exerting pressure (this is an almost instantaneous cure for hiccupsits handy!). Then while I held the air, I would make it circulate with the force (because it contained force, you see) and with the peace as well; and I would concentrate it wherever there was a physical disorder (a pain or something wrong somewhere). Its very effective. The way I did it was: inhale, hold, exhale and emptyyou are completely empty. Its very useful; very handy for underwater swimmers, for instance!
   I had trouble breathing in slowly enough thats a bit hard. I began with 4 and eventually managed to do 12. I did 12-12-12-12. It took me months to reach that, it cant be done quickly. To brea the in very slowly and hold all that air isnt easy.
  --
   But instead of doing equal amounts of time, it might be better to do less for inhaling and more for holding the breath. The holding part is extremely interesting! When the air is inside, lets say you have a headache or a sore throat or a pain in your arm, anything then you take the air (Mother demonstrates) and direct it to the unwell part very, very helpful and pleasant and interesting. You see the force go to the spot, settle in and stay there, all sorts of things.
   Ah, its funny, because just this morning. Did you come for the balcony?

0 1962-03-13, #Agenda Vol 03, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   What I can bring to the world are flashes something that goes beyond, above and through everything that is presently manifested. But I dont have the patience for the concrete, fixed, material form. I could have been a scholar, I could have been a writer, just as I could have been a painter and I have never had the patience for any of it. There was always something moving on too swiftly, too high and too far.
   So I greatly appreciate beautiful written form. I love it. There were periods in my life when I read ever so much I am quite a library! But its not my job.

0 1962-04-13, #Agenda Vol 03, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   The individual consciousness came back, just the sense of a limitation, limitation of pain; without that, no individual.2
   And we set off again on the way, certain of the Victory.

0 1962-05-13, #Agenda Vol 03, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   The first sign of the return to individuality was a prick of pain, a tiny point (Mother holds between her fingers a minuscule point in the space of her being). Yes, because I have a sore, a sore in a rather awkward place, and it hurts2 (Mother laughs). So I felt the pain: it was the sign of individuality coming back. Other than that, there was nothing any moreno body, no individual, no limits. But its strange, I have made a strange discovery3: I used to think it was the individual (Mother touches her body) who experienced pain and disabilities and all the misfortunes of human life; well, I perceived that what experiences misfortunes is not the individual not my body, but that each misfortune, each pain, each disability has its own individuality as it were, and each one represents a battle.
   And my body is a world of battles.

0 1962-05-15, #Agenda Vol 03, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   And actually, apart from the fact of suffering (you know, an ache here, an ache there, a pain here, a pain there, giving the sense of bodily individuality), apart from that, that great undulating movement of life is my normal consciousness. Meaning that I what I call Me (gesture high above), my consciousness, is completely outside the body. Thats what the consciousness of the body is (what Ive just been describing), with only points of pain as reminders of what a body usually is: an ache here, an ache there, another ache here. Thats what its like. And this pain has a small and extremely limited life; its not general, its not a body that suffers: it is suffering that suffers. Its a point, a point of paina scratch here, a sore there, things like that. Thats what is individual and suffersits not the body that has a sore, you understand.
   It is difficult to express.

0 1962-05-18, #Agenda Vol 03, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   The one really concrete link was pain. Thats how the contact was kept.
   When you said, I am no more in this body, I thought that because of the necessities of the Work some part of you had withdrawn.
  --
   And I have the perception a sensation, really, the sensation of something not at all me, but entrusted to me. More and more now, there is the feeling of something being entrusted to me in the universal organization for a definite purpose. Thats really the sensation I have now (the mind is very calm, so its difficult to express I dont think all these things, they are more like perceptions). And its not the usual kind of sensation: the ONLY (I insist on this), the ONLY sensation that remains in the old way is physical pain. And really, those points of pain they seem like the SYMBOLIC POINTS of what remains of the old consciousness.
   pain is the one thing I sense the way I used to. Food, for instance, taste, smell, vision, hearingall thats completely changed. They belong to another rhythm. And this condition has come progressively, like a crystallization of something behind the senses that doesnt come from herein taste, smell, vision, hearing, touch. Except this one point. Even the sense of touch is different now but paiN.
   pain is the old world.
   Its quite odd, you know; pain is like the symbolic (and rather too concrete!) sign of life in the Ignorance.
   And even there I have had an instant (but it was like a flash the flash of a new experience), an instant when pain disappeared into something else. It has happened three or four times. The pain suddenly became something completely different (not a pleasant sensation, not that at all): another state of consciousness.
   If that state remained, I would truly be free of the world as it is. Nonetheless, people can still hear me, cant they? And I can still see, but in a peculiar waya very peculiar way. At times I see with greater precision than ever before (generally, as I told you the other day, I seem to see from behind a veil; thats constant). I hear things that way too. Certain sounds. On one occasion I noticed a sound, a seemingly imperceptible sound, coming from about a hundred yards away, and it seemed to be right here. All this has changed I mean the whole way the organs function. Have the organs themselves changed, or is it their functioning? I dont know. But they all obey another lawabsolutely.
  --
   And the only concrete thing left in this worldthis world of illusionis pain. It seems to me the very essence of Falsehood.
   But what feels it feels it very concretely! I clearly see its false, but that doesnt stop my body from feeling itand there is a reason: it is the battlefield.
   I have even been forbidden to utilize my knowledge, power and force to annul the pain in the way I used to (and I used to do it very well). That has been totally forbidden. But I have seen that something else is in sight. Something else is in the making. It cant be called a miracle because its not a miracle, but its something wonderful the unknown. When will it come? How will it come? I dont know.
   But its interesting.

0 1962-05-22, #Agenda Vol 03, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   Theres such a wonderful passage in The Synthesis of Yoga (The Yoga of Self-Perfection), where he mentions four things (you surely remember this), four things the disciple needs (I have just translated it). I knew this, of course, but the passage is especially timely nowparticularly after that last experience, which is a jolt for a physical being. The fourth thing is wonderful. The first three we know: equality, peace and (a hard one) a spiritual ease in all circumstances. He added the word spiritual so people wouldnt think only of material easeits an ease in feelings, in sensations, in everything. But when you have a lot of pain its obviously not so easy! When physical pain keeps you from sleeping and eating, when you are plagued by constant physical painor rather by a whole host of physical pains!well, that bodily ease becomes difficult. Its the one thing thathas seemed difficult to me; but anyway, its being investigated I think it was sent for me to investigate.
   But the last thing he mentions is a marvel the joy and laughter of the soul. And its so true, so true! Always, all the time, no matter what happens, even when this body is in dreadful pain, the soul is laughing joyously within. Always, always, always.
   And suddenly, when I let myself go. You know, I have been advised (by the Lord!) to relax, relax, relax. He doesnt want action to result from the tension of an individual will; so relaxall right, relax. But when you relax and then suddenly get a horrible pain, you say Hey!but at the same time I laugh! What the people around me must think. I am crying and laughing! (Mother laughs.)
   Well.

0 1962-05-31, #Agenda Vol 03, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   Theres a strange thing that happens to me all the time, at least fifty times a day (and its particularly clear at night). In its most external form its like moving from one room to another, or from one house to another, and you go through the door or the wall almost without noticing it, automatically. Being in one room is reflected outwardly by quite a comfortable condition, a state where theres no pain at all, no pain anywhere, and a great peacea joyous peace, a state of perfect calm an ideal condition, at any rate, which sometimes lasts a long, long time. Its mainly at night, actually; during the day people interrupt me with all sorts of things, but for a certain number of hours at night this state is practically constant. And then suddenly, with no perceptible or apparent reason (I havent yet discovered the why or the wherefore of it), you seem to FALL into the other room, or into the other house, as though you had made a false step and then you have a pain here, an ache there, youre uncomfortable.
   Obviously its the continuation of the same experience I told you about,1 but now it has come to this. I mean the two states are now distinctnoticeably distinct; but so far I havent found either the why or the wherefore. Is it something coming from outside or just an old rut: yes, it really feels like an old rut, like a wrinkle in a piece of cloth; you know, you iron it out again and again, and the wrinkle comes back. Thats more the feeling it gives menot at all a conscious habit, just an old rut. But might something from outside also be provoking it?
  --
   Yes, these dreams arise from the subconscient; they are primarily subconscious habits. But the pain, the thorns in the garmentits so clear! (Mother laughs) And no way to get comfortable!
   In the past, a dream like that would nag me for hours, I would worry, wondering what calamities were going to befall me (this was long, long agoages ago). But that was idiotic, as I later understood; its a certain something in the subconscient, a symbolic form of well, of certain bad psychological habits we have, thats all. And I used to torment myself: How can I get rid of this? (Were all loaded with a multitude of such weaknesses built into the body.) And then through experience I understood I saw it was merely certain bad habits.
   The only thing to do is not torment yourself and to say to the Lord (in all sincerity, of course), Its up to You. Rid me of this. And it is very effective. Very effective. At times I have had old things like that dissolved in a flash; certain inveterate little habitsso stupid, but so ingrained you cant get rid of them. Then, while doing japa or walking or meditating or whatever, suddenly the flame flares up and (you have really had enough of it; it disgusts you, you want it to change, you really want the change) and you say to the Lord, I cant do it on my own. (You very sincerely know you cant do it; you have tried and tried and tried and have achieved exactly nothingyou cant do it.) Well then, I offer it to YouYou do it. Just like that. And all at once you see the thing fading away. It is simply wonderful. You know how Sri Aurobindo used to take away someones pain? Its exactly the same. Certain habits bound up with the bodys formation.
   One day I will certainly use the same method on those room changes, but for that it will have to become very clear and distinct, well defined in the consciousness. Because that change of room (intellectually you would call it a change of consciousness, but that means nothing at all; were dealing here with something very, very material) I have sometimes gone through it without experiencing ANY CHANGE OF EFFECT, which probably means I was centered not in the material consciousness but in a higher consciousness dwelling and looking on from elsewherea witness consciousness and I was in a state where everything flows flows like a river of tranquil peace. Truly, its marvelousall creation, all life, all movements, all things, and everything like a single mass, with the body in the midst of it all, blending homogeneously with the whole and it all flows on like a river of peace, peaceful and smiling, on to infinity. And then oops! You trip (gesture of inversion2) and once again find yourself SITUATEDyou ARE somewhere, at some specific moment of time; and then theres a pain here, a pain there, a pain. And sometimes I have seen, I have witnessed the change from the one to the other WITHOUT feeling the pains or experiencing the thing concretely, which means that I wasnt at all in the body, I wasnt BOUND to the body I was seeing, only seeing, just like a witness. And its always accompanied by the kind of observation an indulgent (but not blind) friend might make: But why? Why that again? Thats how it comes. Whats the use of that? And I cant catch hold of what makes it happen.
   It will come.
  --
   It was the first sound that came from the body when I had that last experience [April 13]. Along with the first pain, came that first soundso it must be quite well rooted.6 And it brings in exactly that vibration of eternal Life: the first thing I felt, all of a sudden, was a kind of strong calm, confident and smiling.
   Oh, I am sure it is very good, very helpful.
  --
   May 18: pain, the symbol of life in the Ignorance.
   Mother later specified: "It's like inverting a prism."

0 1962-06-02, #Agenda Vol 03, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   (Mother refers to the previous conversation, in which she was looking for the reasons behind the passage from one room to another, from the room of pain to the true room: "I can't catch hold of what makes it happen. What's happening? What's going on?!")
   I had an experience yesterday afternoon that might put us on the track.
  --
   But that is a singular state: there is no mental intervention at all; you live things POSITIVELY, just as you experience them physically, in the same way that this (Mother knocks on the table next to her) is physically a table. Its that kind of perception something positive. I positively said, I am going to my cousins place, and the relationship had an absolutely positive vibrationit wasnt at all something thought or even remembered: theres no remembering anything, its simply there, alive. A strange state. I have had it on several occasions, and when I have it I am aware that this must be the state people who know what is happening and make predictions are inin this state there is no possibility of doubt. No thoughts intervenenone at all, not one. Absolutely nothing intellectual: simply certain vital-physical vibrations, and then you know. And you dont even wonder how you know; its not that kind of thingits self-evident. And since I was in that state when I saw the reincarnation of the cousin, I am perfectly sure of what I saw. And god knows (Mother laughs), when I came out of it and began to look at it all with my usual consciousness, I said to myself, My word! I would never have thought of such a thing! It was millions of miles from any thought of mine. Besides, I never used to think of that cousin; he was a fine boy but I never paid much attention to him, he had no place in my active consciousness.
   Its fun.
  --
   I.e., the crystalline river and the muddy river, the room of pain and the true room. Mother later clarified: "At a given moment, the water was either one way or the other; I wasn't changing place, the STATE was changing."
   Mother reemphasized: "Those who use the mind to seek knowledge cannot enter the true room that is quite clear."

0 1962-06-30, #Agenda Vol 03, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   There was another time at Blois. They make Anjou wine at Blois. It was the same story: I never drank anything but water or herb tea, but there was a luncheon and they served us sparkling Anjou wine it seemed so light! Afterwards (I was with an artist friend, we were all artists) we went to see the museum, and it appears I was sparkling with wit! And I suddenly halted in front of a painting by now lets see, who was it? Cou? No, Clouet! Clouet: the princess one of the princesses.4 And I started making a few remarks out loud (it took me a little while to notice that people were listening). Look at this! I was saying. Just look at this! Look what this fellow has done to me! See what hes done to meit wasnt at all like that! It was actually a beautiful painting, but I was quite unhappy about it: Look what hes done to me! Lookhe made this like that, but thats not at all how it was, it was LIKE THIS! Details. And then I became aware (I wasnt too conscious physically) I realized that people were standing around listening, so I got a grip on myself, and left without a word. But I told my friends, Listen, it was definitely me! It was MY portrait, it was ME!
   Almost all my memories of past lives came like that; the particular being reincarnated in me rises to the surface and begins acting as if it were all on its own! Once in Italy, when I was fifteen, it happened in an extraordinary way. But that time I did some research. I was in Venice with my mother and I researched in museums and archives, and I discovered my name, and the names of the other people involved. I had relived a scene in the Ducal Palace, but relived it in such a such an absolutely intense way (laughinga scene where I was being strangled and thrown into a canal!) that my mother had to hurry me out of there as fast as she could! But that experience I wrote down, so the exact memory has been kept (I didnt write down the other experiences, so the details have all faded away, but this one was noted, although I didnt include any names). The next morning I did some research and uncovered the whole story. I told it all to Thon and Madame Thon, and he also had the memory of a past life there, during the same period. And as a matter of fact, I had seen a portrait there that was the spitting image of Thon! The portrait of one of the doges. It was absolutely (it was a Titian) absolutely Thon! HIS portrait, you know, as if it had just been done.5
  --
   Has Mother confused Clouet with Corneille de Lyon? Because it seems there is no Clouet at Blois, but there is a portrait of Madeleine of Scotland, daughter of Franois I, painted by Corneille de Lyon. Unless Mother confused Blois with another town and another chteau?
   Here we have a choice between several chilling faces. Of the five portraits of doges by Titian, that of the doge Antonio Crimani, painted between 1555 and 1576, is one of the few that have remained in the Palazzo Ducale in Venice. Might this be the one?
   Is the battle in question here that of Eylau (February 8, 1807) or Friedl and (June 14, 1807)?

0 1962-07-07, #Agenda Vol 03, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   This is something theyll understand that were not a bunch of defrocked monks meditating in a circle, but that all lifes activities are accepted and everyone keeps busy: the writer writes, the painter paints, the children do gymnastics; that, they will understand.
   Ill say it, but later on, towards the end. After exploring these changes of consciousness, which after all are the very basis of the work, Ill show how they translate practically. But if i start with this right away, without explaining why its like that.

0 1962-07-18, #Agenda Vol 03, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   But now the body the body itself, its very own selffeels it is WITHIN things or WITHIN people or WITHIN an action. There are no more limits, none of this (Mother touches the skin of her hands as if all separation had disappeared). Take this example: someone accidentally bumps me (it does happen) with an object or a part of his body. Well, it is NEVER something external: it happens INSIDE the bodys consciousness is much larger than my body. Yesterday, the table leg bumped my foot; so there was the ordinary outward reaction (it operates automatically and in a curious way the body jumped), and then the body-consciousness now I am speaking of the body-consciousness saw that an unexpected and involuntary collision of two objects had taken place INSIDE ITSELF. And it also saw that if it made a certain movement of concentration at that particular spot, inside itself, some pain or damage would result; but if it made the other movement of (how shall I put it?) of union, of abolishing all separation (which it can do very well), well, then the results of the blow would be annulled. And thats what happened, I did it. I was simply sitting down, and I let my body cope with the whole thing (while I watched with keen interest); and I noticed it really did feel the blow inside and not outsideit wasnt that something from outside had struck it, but that there had been an unexpected, or rather an unforeseen and involuntary collision of two things inside itself. And I clearly followed how the body made a more complete movement of identification (you see, someone with the sense of separation had moved the table, so the sense of separation accompanied the blow, and then of course there was all the regret,2 and so on and so forth); well, the body simply went into its usual state where theres no sense of separation, and the effect vanished instantaneously. Had I been asked, Where were you hit, what spot?, I couldnt have told, I dont know. All I know, because of words I heard spoken, is that the table leg bumped into my foot. But where? I cant say; I couldnt have said even five minutes after the incidentit had utterly disappeared, and disappeared through a VOLUNTARY movement.
   This body-consciousness has a will; it is constantly, constantly calling upon the Lords will: Lord, take possession of this, take possession of that, take. Theres no question of taking possession of the will, that was done ages ago, but: Take possession of these cells, those cells, this, that. It is the BODYS aspiration. Well, the blow wasnt caused by this will acting in the body; the blow didnt come directly from the body, but from something that had slipped in through an unconscious element; and the body simply erased, or absorbed, digested this unconsciousness and the thing vanished without a trace!

0 1962-07-25, #Agenda Vol 03, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   Then at a very young age (about eight or ten), along with my studies I began to paint. At twelve I was already doing portraits. All aspects of art and beauty, but particularly music and painting, fascinated me. I went through a very intense vital development during that period, with, just like in my early years, the presence of a kind of inner Guide; and all centered on studies: the study of sensations, observations, the study of technique, comparative studies, even a whole spectrum of observations dealing with taste, smell and hearinga kind of classification of experiences. And this extended to all facets of life, all the experiences life can bring, all of themmiseries, joys, difficulties, sufferings, everythingoh, a whole field of studies! And always this presence within, judging, deciding, classifying, organizing and systematizing everything.
   Then conscious yoga made a sudden entry into the picture when I met Thon; I must have been about twenty-one. Lifes orientation changed, a whole series of experiences took place, with the development of the vital giving interesting occult results.
  --
   painting is worse.
   No.

0 1962-07-31, #Agenda Vol 03, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   I have noticed that the very thing you feel youve done most poorly is usually the most useful. It has always been like that for me. I remember doing a lot of thingsa bit of painting, a bit of music, a bit of writing (very little)and it was just when I used to think, Oh, la-la! What a fiasco!, that people were the most touched and pleased.
   You mustnt be concerned with it, its totally irrelevant.

0 1962-08-08, #Agenda Vol 03, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   Well, wellwhy has that returned? I wondered. And then I saw that this body has been built in such a way that it instinctively ATTRACTS ordeals, painful experiences. And in the face of such formations, it is always passive, consenting, accepting, and totally confident in the ultimate outcome, with such an ingrained certitude that even at the moment of greatest difficulty, it will be helped and saved, and that the purpose behind all those ordeals is to speed up, to gain time, and to exhaust all the I cant say the evil possibilities, but all the hindrancesthings that hamper, block the way and seem to negate the goalso that they are pushed back into the past and no longer hinder progress.
   Once I saw that, the formation went away. It had come just to show me that. And once again the body gave its eternal assent: no matter what its burdened with, it will always be ready to receive and to bear it.

0 1962-09-05, #Agenda Vol 03, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   The experiences that left the most acute impressions on me (Mother makes a poignant gesture)you know, the kind of things that make you say, Oh, no, not that again, Ive had enough!are connected with my lives as a monarch: empress, queen and the like oh! Those are painful impressions, the most painful of all. And I have a keen memory of a resolution taken in my last life as an empress: Never again! I said. Ive had enough, I want no more of it! Id rather be not even Id rather be, I chose deliberately: I WANT to be an obscure being in an obscure family, free at last to do what I want! And thats the first thing I remembered this time: Yes, its an obscure family, an obscure being in an obscure milieu, so I may be free to do what I want; there isnt a horde of people watching me and spying on everything I do and plaguing me with rules about what I ought to be doing.
   It didnt last long! (Mother laughs.)
  --
   I was lying on my chaise longue in concentration when all at once I found myself in my friend Zs house. He and several others were playing music. I could see everything very clearly, even more clearly than in the physical, and I moved around very quickly, unimpeded. I stayed there watching for a while, and even tried to attract their attention, but they were unaware of me. Then suddenly something pulled me, a sort of instinct: I must go back. I felt pain in my throat. I remember that to get out of their room, which was all closed except for one small opening high up, my form seemed to vaporize (because I still had a form, though unlike our material onemore luminous, less opaque), and I went out like smoke through the open window. Then I found myself back in my room, next to my body, and I saw that my head was twisted and rigid against the cushion, and I was having trouble breathing. I wanted to get into my body: impossible. So I became afraid. I entered through the legs, and when I reached the knees I seemed to bounce back out; two, three times like that: the consciousness rose and then bounced back out like a spring. If I could only tip over this stool, I thought (there was a small stool under my feet), the noise would wake me up! But nothing doing. And I was breathing more and more heavily. I was terribly afraid. Suddenly I remembered Mother and cried out, Mother! Mother! and found myself back in my body, awake, with a stiff neck.
   (Mother laughs and laughs.)
  --
   The other things, exteriorization and so forth, are innate, just as some people are born artists or painters or aviators. Its one of Natures special combinations. Ive known some downright stupid girls who could exteriorize remarkably well and be fully conscious of their experiences in the subtle physical or the mind or the material vital (when one is undeveloped its more often in the material vital than the subtle physical). And they would tell you all about what they saw. But incapable of yoga.
   Natures fancies, I tell you.
  --
   I remember that one of the first things I asked Sri Aurobindo when I came here, after innumerable experiences and innumerable realizations, was, Why am I so mediocre? Everything I do is mediocre, all my realizations are mediocre, theres never anything remarkable or exceptionalits just average. It isnt low, but its not high eithereverything is average. And thats really how I felt. I painted: it wasnt bad painting, but many others could do as well. I played music: it wasnt bad music, but you couldnt say, Oh, what a musical genius! I wrote: it was perfectly ordinary. My thoughts slightly excelled those of my friends, but nothing exceptional; I had no special gift for philosophy or whatever. Everything I did was like that: my body had its skills, but nothing fantastic; I wasnt ugly, I wasnt beautiful you see, everything was mediocre, mediocre, mediocre, mediocre. Then he told me, It was indispensable.
   All right, so I kept quietand very quickly, within a few weeks, I understood.

0 1962-09-08, #Agenda Vol 03, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   Dont let this visit ruffle you. Essentially, his approach has always seemed peripheral to me, just one part of an immense whole. It represents ONE aspect of the quest for the Divine on earth,2 and it is part of an entire line, like all the sannyasins, all the saddhus, and so on. X happens to have come closer because he has worshipped the Goddess of Love so much, the Shaktis aspect of Love, and that naturally led him here, brought him close, but. I see it as part of a whole worldamong many other things. You know, theres that festival celebrated every ten years, I think, when all the saddhus go to ba the in the Ganges3; Ive seen all the photosits painful. Its its painful. It is no more beautiful or harmonious than a stampeding mob in a revolution. Its there is no special grace.
   Now, do you remember the story of that man who has been living at the source of the Ganges for twenty-five years? Here he is (Mother shows his photo). He was in his cave and V. said to him, Id like to take your picture. All right, he answered, and came out and sat down in the snowstark naked.

0 1962-09-18, #Agenda Vol 03, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   Mais comment puis-je chercher le repos dans une paix sans fin
   Moi qui abrite la force violente de la formidable Mre,

0 1962-10-12, #Agenda Vol 03, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   Its treated like an object: Now then! Lets get rid of this just as quickly as we can: its a nuisance and it gets in the way. And even those who feel the most sorrow dont want to see it; its too painful for them.
   (silence)

0 1962-10-27, #Agenda Vol 03, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   The first zone you encounter is the zone of painting, sculpture, architecture: everything that has a material form. It is the zone of forms, colored forms that are expressed as paintings, sculptures, and architecture. They are not forms as we know them, but rather typal forms; you can see garden types, for instance, wonderfully colored and beautiful, or construction types.
   Then comes the musical zone, and there you find the origin of the sounds that have inspired the various composers. Great waves of music, without sound. It seems a bit strange, but thats how it is.
  --
   Thus we have form, expressed in painting, sculpture or architecture; sound, expressed in musical themes; and thought, expressed in books, plays, novels, or even in philosophical and other kinds of intellectual theories (thats where you can send out ideas that will affect the whole world, because they influence receptive brains in any land, and are expressed by corresponding thoughts in the appropriate language). And above this zone, free of form, sound and though, is the play of forces appearing as colored lights. And when you go there and have the power, you can combine those forces so that they eventually materialize as creations on earth (it takes some time, its rarely immediate).
   But those great waves of music you hear, which you said were beyond soundsare they part of that domain of luminous vibrations?
  --
   And mind you, I knew nothing of all those worlds, I hadnt the slightest knowledge; but all my experiences came that wayunexpectedly, without my seeking anything. When I looked at a painting, same thing: something would suddenly open up inside my head and I would see the origin of the painting and such colors! One can get to that world directly from the vital, without going through all the mental gradations.
   ***

0 1962-10-30, #Agenda Vol 03, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   Do those zones of music and painting and so forth form part of the overmind or not?
   Hmm, yes I dont know. You see, all classifications, of any kind, always seem too rigid to me; they lack the suppleness that exists in the universe. We always feel the need to put one box inside another, one box inside another (Mother laughs), but thats not how it is! Its more a correspondence that being a part of something. Or all right, one is part of the other but which one is part of which other? In fact, they are part of something that is neither this, that, nor the other!
  --
   But I was entirely concentrated on that. I was in Paris, and I did nothing else but that; when I walked down the street, I was thinking only of that. One day, as I was crossing the Boulevard Saint Michel, I was almost run over (Ive told you this), because I was thinking of nothing but thatconcentrating, concentrating like sitting in front of a closed door, and it was painful! (intense gesture to the chest) Physically painful, from the pressure. And then suddenly, for no apparent reason I was neither more concentrated nor anything elsepoof! It opened. And with that. It didnt just last for hours, it lasted for months, mon petit! It didnt leave me, that light, that dazzling light, that light and immensity. And the sense of THAT willing, THAT knowing, THAT ruling the whole life, THAT guiding everythingsince then, this sense has never left me for a minute. And always, whenever I had a decision to make, I would simply stop for a second and receive the indication from there.
   But that was ages ago. I have done a lot of things since then. It was long ago, in 1912. And now oh, this old carcass!

0 1962-11-07, #Agenda Vol 03, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   After a while, it becomes almost automatic; I do it hundreds of times a day. Its difficult to describe, because the description makes it too concrete. But its a drawing back, an interiorizationa self-gathering. But all those words seem dense, heavy; too material, too heavy. Yet its a very concrete sensation, very concrete, which immediately brings about a kind of stabilizationeverything stops. Everything stops, to the point where even a vibration of pain is stopped, it doesnt exist any more. But when you leave this state, back it comes again. It gets cured only when you persist for some time; otherwise the two might continue to coexist.
   The most superficial way of putting it is: to take a step back. But its not that, of course.

0 1962-11-17, #Agenda Vol 03, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   One day (for me now, everything is part of an extremely precise play of forces) and one day I had a sort of sensation of one of those profound upheavals something very widespread and full of GREAT pain. So something in me spontaneously sprang up from the individual soul, the deep psychic being, and said, Oh! Lord, is it Your will that we have this experience again? Then everything stabilized, stopped, and there was a splendor of Light. But I received no response. Except for that splendor of Light something triumphant, you know. But it may just as well mean that no matter what happens, this will always be therewhich is obvious.
   (silence)

0 1962-12-15, #Agenda Vol 03, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   This B. seems to have had the idea that the perfect man, the immortal man, would be spherical! And then Thon always used to say (he told me the whole story himself): I told him it wasnt possible, it would be too impracticalpeople couldnt kiss! His idea of a joke. Thon also told me that when B. came to Tlemcen (they first met in Egypt, then again in Tlemcen), he saw the house Thon was building and asked, Why is your house painted red? Does it have some mystical significance? And Thon replied, No, its because red goes well with green! So you get the picture. But I dont remember his name any more; in his time he was very well known, he was a contemporary of the fellow who wrote The Great Initiates.
   Schur?

0 1962-12-19, #Agenda Vol 03, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   It was difficult and it attracts a lot of. Its like another type of exercise, as if my body were now being taught other kinds of things, another way of being, you understand, another way. And its trying to find a harmony, the equilibrium of a constant harmony. But its very, very, very difficult. Its not at all the usual condition: in ordinary life, the cells are accustomed to a very restless and unexpected life, with ups and downs, peaks of intense sensation, now sorrow, now pleasure, now acute pain, now something very pleasantall of this jumbled up in a sort of chaos. And I have realized that for the people here, even those near me, its even worse than that! This doesnt make sense to me any more. On its own the body is naturally in a sort of gently undulating movement, a very harmonious, very peaceful, very quiet movement. And when its not forced into outer activity theres such a wonderful sense of the divine Presence everywhere, everywherein it, around it, over it, in everything, everywhere and so concrete! (Mother touches her hands, her arms, her face, as if she were bathing in the Lord.) Its really inexpressible. And well, THATS what it wants to have ALL THE TIME, in all circumstances, even when its forced to have contacts with the outside. So I cant go too quickly; things like the balcony cause a bit too much pressure, and the body starts feeling a little unsure of itself.
   Yesterday, for instance, I had to see F. and R., since they had just arrived the day before. I spent three-quarters of an hour with them, and by the time it was over they had literally EMPTIED the atmosphere of all spiritual senseit had become empty and hollow. It took me two or three minutes of concentration (which isnt so long) to bring it all back to normal.

0 1963-01-09, #Agenda Vol 04, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   If the inner being the true beingis the ruler, the power of the true being makes the body act automatically; but then it doesnt grow conscious of its own change, it doesnt collaborate in its change, so for the change to happen it would take maybe millennia. The true being has to be like this (gesture to the background, standing back) and the body has to do everything BY ITSELF, in other words, contain the Lord, receive the Lord, give itself to the Lord, BE the Lord. It does aspireoh, its intense, aflame thats very good. But the Lord (smiling) doesnt conform to the ordinary habit! So all the habits, the minute He just tries to take possession of one function or another, even partially (not totally), all the interrelationships, all the movements are changed instantlypanic. Panic at the particular spot. And the result: you faint, or you are just about to faint, or you have an excruciating pain, or anyway something APPARENTLY breaks down completely. So whats to be done? Wait patiently until that small number or large number of cells, that little spot of consciousness, has learned its lesson. It takes one day, two days, three days, then the chaotic, upsetting big event calms down, is explained, and those particular cells say to themselves (or begin saying to themselves), God, how dumb we are! It takes a little while, then they understand.
   But there are thousands and thousands and thousands of them!

0 1963-01-12, #Agenda Vol 04, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   And it keeps coming and coming. Many come and are not even aware of it! And I keep going and going. Consciously, most of the time, but also quite often not consciously. Heres an example: someone is very ill, someone who truly loves me (its Z, A.s wife). A. informed me she was ill. So I increased the dose (everyone is inside, I am with everyone, that goes without saying, but when something goes wrong I increase the dose). I increased the dose. I expected an improvement but it didnt happen. So I increased the dose again. The next day, I received a letter from A. saying that the night before, Z had had an interesting experience. She has asthma (asthmatics feel as if they are dying, its very painful, and she is very sensitive, very nervousshe was really unwell, so they drugged her, and so). Well then, during an acute attack of asthma, she sat up in her bed, her legs hanging down. Then her feet began to feel cold and she reached out for her slippers; she bent down, and instead of her slippers she felt something soft and alive. Astonished, she looks down and sees my feet. My feet were there with the sandals I used to wear to go outmy bare feet. So she touched my feet and said, Ohh, Mother is here! Immediately she lay down again, fell asleep and woke up cured.
   And she didnt make it up: my feet WERE there. My feet, I mean something of me which took that form to be perceptible to her.

0 1963-01-14, #Agenda Vol 04, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   This delight, this wonderful Laughter which dissolves all shadows, all pain, all suffering We only have to go deep enough into ourselves to find the inner Sun and let ourselves be bathed in it. Then everything is but a cascade of harmonious, luminous, sun-filled laughter which leaves no room for shadow and pain.
   In fact, even the greatest difficulty, even the greatest grief, even the greatest physical pain, if you can look at them from THERE, take your stand THERE, you see the unreality of the difficulty, the unreality of the grief, the unreality of the pain and all becomes a joyful and luminous vibration.
   It is ultimately the most powerful means of dissolving difficulties, overcoming grief and getting rid of pain. The first two [difficulties and grief] are relatively easy (relatively), the last [ pain] is more difficult because of our habit of regarding the body and its sensations as extremely concrete and positive but actually it is the same thing, its just that we havent been taught and accustomed to seeing our body as something fluid, plastic, uncertain, malleable. We havent learned to permeate it with this luminous Laughter which dissolves all shadows and difficulties, all discords, all disharmony, all that grates, cries and weeps.
   (silence)

0 1963-01-30, #Agenda Vol 04, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   In my case it was from the age of twenty to thirty that I was concerned with French (before twenty I was more involved in vision: painting; and sound: music), but as regards language, literature, language sounds (written or spoken), it was approximately from twenty to thirty. The Prayers and Meditations were written spontaneously with that rhythm. If I stayed in an ordinary consciousness I would get the knack of that rhythm but now it doesnt work that way, it wont do!
   Yesterday, after my translation, I was surprised at that sense a sense of absolute: THATS HOW IT IS. Then I tried to enter into the literary mind and wondered, What would be its various suggestions? And suddenly, I saw somehow (somehow, somewhere there) a host of suggestions for every line! Ohh! No doubt, I thought, it IS an absolute! The words came like that, without any room for discussion or anything. To give you an example: when he says the clamour of the human plane, clameur exists in French, its a very nice wordhe didnt want it, he said No, without any discussion. It wasnt an answer to a discussion, he just said, Not clameur: vacarme.1 It isnt as though he was weighing one word against another, it wasnt a matter of words but the THOUGHT of the word, the SENSE of the word: No, not clameur, its vacarme.

0 1963-02-19, #Agenda Vol 04, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   But its amusing because I had never paid much attention to that [the questions of language], the experience is novel, almost the discovery of the truth behind expression. Before, my concern was to be as clear, exact and precise as possible; to say exactly what I meant and put each word in its proper place. But thats not it! Each word has its own life! Some are drawn together by affinity, others repel each other its very funny!
   Pralaya: end of a world, apocalypse.

0 1963-02-23, #Agenda Vol 04, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   We have a great mathematician here who comes from Madras regularly, Dr. V. (you know him, dont you?), and for my birthday,1 he played around with the figures of my date of birth and made up with them a square with small compartments (what a painstaking work it must be!): any way you read it, it always adds up to the same figure. Admirable. The figure is 116. Heavenly mathematics, all that (!) and it is supposed to be my number of years. But I find it a little on the short side. Because if the present pace is any indication, 116 doesnt leave me many years, thirty years or so yes, some thirty years, thats all. What can you achieve in thirty years?! The way things are moving, oh! When Sri Aurobindo said three hundred years, I think he gave the minimum figure.
   Well see.

0 1963-03-09, #Agenda Vol 04, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   Take the example of someone ill, even feeling pain. When Sri Aurobindo was in possession of this supramental Power (at certain times he said it was totally under his control, he could do whatever he wanted with it and apply it wherever he wanted), then he would put this Will on some disorder or other, physical or vital, say (or mental, of course), he would put this Force of a superior harmony, a superior, supramental order, keep it there, and it would act instantly. And it was an orderit created an order and harmony superior to natural harmony. Which means that if the object was to cure, for example, the cure was more perfect and total than a cure brought about by the ordinary physical and mental methods.
   There were hosts of instances. But people are so blind, you know, so bogged down in their ordinary consciousness, that they always have ready explanations. They can always explain it away. Only those who had faith and aspiration and something very pure in them, that is, those who really wanted to know, were aware of it.

0 1963-03-19, #Agenda Vol 04, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   I came across a man who had that blue light but I found him rather formidable. He looked after all the religious rites and priests of B.s state. He came here and asked to see me. I saw him on a December 9 (I think) when I paid a visit to the estate at Aryankuppam. I was walking in the gardens when suddenly I felt something pulling at meand none too gently! I turned around and saw a tall man, standing and staring at me. So (I didnt know who he was, no one had told me), I stared back and simply answered his impudence! And pfft! it just fell off. I was surprised. Later (I had not yet been told who he was), he asked to see me. When he entered the room, I felt I felt a solid being. I dont know how to define it, I had never before felt it in a human beingsolid. As solid as rock. Extraordinarily solidcoagulated, an edifice. And quite powerful, I must say. Not like an arrow (gesture upward) but all around him. Then it was very funny (because theres no doubt he must have had an awesome effect on people instantly, without a word or anything), but I answered in my own way, with something else!
   He entered the room wearing some kind of religious headdress, I cant say what, and intending to be very arrogant. He went past me stiffly, and suddenly what do I see but the man do his pranam.2 He stepped back, took off his hat and did his pranam. And stayed that way for nearly a quarter of an hour. And it was interesting, his response was interesting. Then he started talking to me (someone translatedhe spoke in Hindi, I think), asking me to take care of B. I said something in turn, and then thought strongly, Now, time is up, it cant last forever! (He had already been there for more than fifteen minutes.) And suddenly I see him stiffen, put his thing back on his head, and go.

0 1963-03-23, #Agenda Vol 04, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   Only one thing (which is not even absolute): a sort of equality that has come into the bodynot an equality of soul (laughing): an equality in the cells! It has come into the body. There is no longer that clash of joy and painalways and for everything, every minute, every reaction, You, Lord, to You, Lord. As though the cells were chanting, To You Lord, to You Lord, to You Lord. And well, thats how it is.
   There are enough physical miseries to experience what people call physical painquite enough (!) Yet, materially, everything is organized to give every possible joy! For example (ever since the age of five it has been like that), whenever the body felt, Oh, if I had this. Oh, it would be nice to have that, the thing would come in no time. Fantastic! It has always been that way, only it has become more conscious. Before, it would happen without my noticing it, quite naturally. Now, of course, the body has changed, its no longer a baby, it no longer has a childs fancies. But when that kind of Rhythm comes, when something says, Oh, this is fine! mon petit, it comes in TORRENTS from all sides without my saying a word. Just like that. There was a time when the body enjoyed it, it was delighted by it, made very happy by it (even two years ago, a little more perhaps), very happy, it found that amusingit was lovely, you see. But now: To You Lord. Only this, a sort of quiet, constant joy: To You Lord, to You Lord, to You Lord. And on both accounts: for physical pain as well. In that regard, the body is making progress. Although to tell the truth, its life is made so easy! So easy that it would have to be quite hard to please not be satisfied the Lord is full of infinite grace.
   No, in spite of everything, the body doesnt have that sort of eternal stability, the sense of its immortality (immortality isnt the right word), of its permanence. Not that it has a sense of impermanence, far from it, the cells feel eternal that much is there. But a certain something that would be sheltered from all attacks. It still feels the attacks. It feels an instability, it doesnt have a sense of absolute security, it hasnt yet reached a state of absolute security thats it: the sense of security. There are still vibrations of insecurity. Yet that seems so mean, so silly! It still lives in insecurity. Security, the sense of security only comes through union with the Supremenothing in life as it is, nothing in the world as it is, can offer the sense of security, its impossible. But to feel the Supremes presence so constantly, to be able to pass everything on to Him, To You, to You, to You, and yet not to have a sense of security! A shock or a blow comes (not necessarily personally, but in life), and theres still a particular vibration: the vibration of insecurityit still exists. The body finds that disquieting, painful: Why? Not that it complains, but it complains about itself, it finds itself not up to the mark.
   To know that all is You, that You alone exist, to feel You everywhere, to feel You always, and still to be open to the first thing that comes from outside to give you a blow, a sense of insecurityhow absurd!

0 1963-03-30, #Agenda Vol 04, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   It gives me the impression of a miniature painting done with a magnifying glass and tiny dotsminiatures are painted with a very fine brush, very pointed, and you make tiny dots with a big magnifying glass. It gives me the impression of that work. And it takes many, many, many tiny dots to paint just a bit of cheek.
   (silence)

0 1963-04-20, #Agenda Vol 04, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   The other extreme is an innate ability to go out of ones body, a spontaneous ability to go out of ones body. To have a trance as you understand it, concrete, absolutely material, one must be able to go out, come back in, go out, come back in [at will]. But as people generally take great pains to go out, they dont know how to get back in any more! So they find themselves in ridiculous situations.
   I had two experiences of that kind. The first was at Tlemcen3 and the second in Japan. There was an epidemic of influenza, an influenza that came from the war (the 1914 war), and was generally fatal. People would get pneumonia after three days, and plop! finished. In Japan they never have epidemics (its a country where epidemics are unknown), so they were caught unawares; it was an ideal breeding ground, absolutely unpreparedincredible: people died by the thousands every day, it was incredible! Everybody lived in terror, they didnt dare to go out without masks over their mouths. Then somebody whom I wont name asked me (in a brusque tone), What Is this? I answered him, Better not think about it. Why not? he said, Its very interesting! We must find out, at least you are able to find out whatever this is. Silly me, I was just about to go out; I had to visit a girl who lived at the other end of Tokyo (Tokyo is the largest city in the world, it takes a long time to go from one end to the other), and I wasnt so well-off I could go about in a car: I took the tram. What an atmosphere! An atmosphere of panic in the city! You see, we lived in a house surrounded by a big park, secluded, but the atmosphere in the city was horrible. And the question, What Is this? naturally came to put me in contact I came back home with the illness. I was sure to catch it, it had to happen! (laughing) I came home with it.

0 1963-05-03, #Agenda Vol 04, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   When I lie down, I go from one state to the other with extraordinary speed. And Ive noticed (the thing is just at its beginning, so I cant really say), Ive noticed that in that state, the Movement2 exceeds the force or power that concentrates the cells into an individual form. And that state seems to be all-powerful, although devoid of conscious will or vision (for the moment). Its a state (how can I explain this?) whose characteristics exceed the power that concentrates the cells into an individual body. The effect is automatic (not willed): as soon as something takes the form of a physical pain, it disappears INSTANTLY. But then, and this is most interesting, the second the body reverts to a certain stateits ordinary state, which isnt the ordinary human state, of course, but its ordinary, habitual stateit recaptures the MEMORY of its pain, and along with the memory comes the possibility of reverting to it if a certain number of conditions are not automatically fulfilled. I dont know if what I am saying makes any sense, but thats how the experience is. It is probably the passage from the true thing to the thing no longer truenot what is meant by Falsehood here on earth (thats something else altogether), but a first alteration compared to the pure Vibration. It gives the impression of a wrong habit, what remains is merely a question of a wrong habit. Its not the principle of distortion that works here, but the wrong habit due to the effect of ANOTHER principle. And something is to be found to checkcheck, eliminate, prevent that effect from recurring automatically.
   Because it happens CONSTANTLY. Its a constant phenomenon: passing from this to that, this to that, this to that, to such a pointits so strong that a second comes, or a minute, or anyway a certain interval of time (I dont know), when you are neither this nor that; then you have a feeling of nothingness. It lasts just an instant; if it lasted longer, it would probably result in fainting or something, I cant say what. But it happens all the time: this, that (oscillating gesture). And between this and that, there is a passage.
  --
   I forgot: immediately afterwards I swept everything clean. Except for what Ive just said, I dont remember what it was I dont remember what it was because I did NOT want it to exist. But it was horrible. And in the morning, there was such a painful impression! So I thought something was wrong over there, and when I received your letter, I understood. But it isnt limited to one person or another, one place or another: it seems to evoke a universal way of being, thats what troubles me. As if an entire way of being which Ive been resisting for for, well, more than seventy years at any rate, which Ive been keeping at arms length so it may no longer exist in a real way, as if it were all forced on me. Like a thing from a past that no longer has the right to exist.
   Afterwards, it got better. That night was the worst.

0 1963-05-11, #Agenda Vol 04, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   Mother helps a disciple, a painter, to illustrate some passages from Savitri.
   Mahalakshmi's music.

0 1963-05-18, #Agenda Vol 04, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   (Mother asks for a box of paints to demonstrate practically the gradation of colors of the levels of consciousness, from the most material Nature to the Supreme. The point is to illustrate the symbol of Infinity, the figure 8, which Mother explained in the conversation of May 11: the infinite play of the Supreme reaching down to Nature and Nature rising toward the Supreme. Mother speaks in English in the presence of a disciple, who is a painter, so that he may convey her explanations to H., the disciple who is preparing illustrations for "Savitri".)
   Of course, all these things are lights, so you cant reproduce them. But still, it must be a violet that is not dull and not dark (Mother starts from the most material Nature). What she has put is too red, but if its too blue, it wont be good eitheryou understand the difficulty? Then after violet there is blue, which must be truly blue, not too light, but it must be a bright blue. Not too light because there are three consecutive blues: there is the blue of the Mind, and then comes the Higher Mind, which is paler, and then the Illumined Mind, which is the color of the flag [Mothers flag], a silver blue, but naturally paler than that. And after this comes yellow, a yellow that is the yellow of the Intuitive Mind; it must not be golden, it must be the color of cadmium. Then after this yellow, which is pale, we have the Overmind with all the colors they must all be bright colors, not dark: blue, red, green, violet, purple, yellow, all of them, all the colors. And after that, we then have all the golds of the Supermind, with its three layers. And then, after that, there is one layer of golden whiteit is white, but a golden white. After this golden white, there is silver whitesilver white: how can I explain that? (H. has sent me some ridiculous pictures of a sun shining on waterit has nothing to do with that.) If you put silver, silver gray (Mother shows a silver box nearby shining brilliantly in the sun), silver gray together with white that is, it is white, but if you put the four whites together you see the difference. There is a white white, then there is a white with a touch of pink, then a silvery white and a golden white. It makes four worlds.
  --
   The problem is this: you can take the attitude of endurance and endure everything, to the point where you are able to turn pain into ecstasy, as he saysits an experiment that can always be made, at any given moment. But materialist-minded people will tell you, Thats all very well, but youre ruining your body. And thats where (laughing) we would have to carry out all kinds of experiments, as they do with guinea pigs, to find out whether ecstasy has the power to restore order in the body.
   You suffer from, say, a physical trouble, purely physical (morally speaking, it goes without saying, the thing is quite clear; I mean something purely material). Something is disorganized in the working or the structure of the organs. The result is pain. At first you endure, then out of endurance comes perfect equality, and out of perfect equality comes ecstasyits perfectly possible; its not only possible, it has been proved. But the experiment should be carried through TO THE END to know whether ecstasy has the power to restore the bodys order, or whether it ends in dissolution: you are in ecstasy and die in ecstasy. That is, you leave your body while in ecstasy. Is that so? Its not only possible, its perfectly obvious. But thats not what we want! We want to restore order, to eliminate disorder IN MATTERdoes ecstasy have the power to restore order in the physical working and triumph over the forces of dissolution?
   The only way to find out is to make the experiment!
  --
   Probably its necessary because at times, when everything is in utter confusion, at times I ask for an Assurance and I see very well, very well that if my bodys cells, the body consciousness were told, You are immortal; all those difficulties are experiences; the pain you feel has no importance; this apparent decomposition has no importance; all those things are necessary experiences, and you will go on to the end of the experience, that is, to transformation, if it were told that, obviously it would be mere childs play, just enduring the difficulties thats nothing. So I wonder. But never have I been told that, never, never have I been given the Assurancenow and then the body is in a sort of STATE, a state of immortality, but it isnt constant, its dependent on other things; so the minute its dependent, it is no longer a supreme Assurance. There is at the same time a sort of discernment: very likely there would be a general slackening of the cells effort if they were told, Never mind, none of this is important, because you will last till the work is done. Maybe they would flag. The concentration of will in the battle would disappear. Which means one of the necessary conditions would be missing.
   Then again something else comes and says, Oh, you always have very favorable explanations to comfort yourself! You see, I am like a spectator (Mother does the same gesture of great cosmic waves assailing her) at a sort of contest of all the different reactions. (I put it into words to make myself understood, but there are no wordsonly SENSATIONS; the verbal translation is just for explaining, but they are like sensations, or rather states of consciousness. They are all states of consciousness.) And they all run into each other (gesture of waves).

0 1963-05-22, #Agenda Vol 04, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   The other evening, around 6:30, I was in a lot of pain; my head seemed about to burst, I really suffered: a racking pain. Then I lay down, and suddenly I felt a sort of relaxationa sudden reversal followed by an easing. And, the next day, I came to know that it happened at the precise time when V. told you I was ill.
   Not only that, but there was a rather peculiar experience: a Will came into me. I dont know, a Will: Decide. Something that wanted me to decide: Its for you to decide. So I immediately cast that Power on you, saying, He must be cured.

0 1963-06-03, #Agenda Vol 04, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   I think their power comes from a higher layer [higher than the cellular mind]. Because their action is very cerebral: its effect is always here (gesture at the forehead and temples), it takes you here (same gesture)its even painful!
   Its cerebral.

0 1963-06-15, #Agenda Vol 04, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   (Then Mother comments on the visit Pandit Nehru paid to her two days earlier, on June 13:)
   With the visit, which we could call presidential, naturally there was a lot of hullabaloo here: everybody was excited (most people were, at any rate). The visit was, so to speak, forced upon me, in the sense that I didnt want to see him I didnt feel I was in such a state that the visit could have a paramount importance. Some people had high hopes in this visit (here and there, even in Switzerland, even in America), they thought I would be able to do something. But practically speaking, it was an illusion, naturally.

0 1963-06-19, #Agenda Vol 04, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   And my experience did not REACH there; there was no contact, I was powerless. What little light that turned on because of my presence and was considered as a dazzling sun was to me a mere street lamp. It was painful.
   I thought, Why? Why am I not happy and quiet here, too? And something answered, Because I want to change that. If I accepted it, I wouldnt even notice it; its because I want to change that darkness. So then then there will be joy only when we have FOUND the wayand how to find it? All the methods I use for the yoga and for transformation, all were useless, useless, useless, no action, no action, no effect, no effect. Ive never seen a place so unreceptive! No effect, none at all. And everybody VERY content with what he knew!

0 1963-07-03, #Agenda Vol 04, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   I saw two examples of this, one physically and the other intellectually (I am referring to things I was in contact with materially). Intellectually, it was a studio friend; for years we had done painting together, she was a very gentle girl, older than I, very serious, and a very good painter. During the last years of my life in Paris, I saw her often and I spoke to her, first of occult matters and the Cosmic philosophy, then of what I knew of Sri Aurobindo (I had a group there and I used to explain certain things), and she would listen with great understandingshe understood, she approved. Now, one day, I went to her house and she told me she was in a great torment. When she was awake, she had no doubts, she understood well, she felt the limitations and obscurities of religion (she came from a family with several archbishops and a cardinalwell, one of those old French families). But at night, she told me, I suddenly wake up with an anguish and somethingfrom my subconscient, obviouslytells me, But after all this, what if you go to hell? And she repeated, When I am awake it doesnt have any force, but at night, when it comes up from the subconscient, it chokes me.
   Then I looked, and I saw a kind of huge octopus over the earth: that formation of the Churchof hellwith which they hold people in their grip. The fear of hell. Even when all your reason, all your intelligence, all your feeling is against it, there is, at night, that octopus of the fear of hell which comes and grips you.
  --
   Another time, when I was younger, I was in Italy, in Venice, painting in a corner of St. Marks Cathedral (a marvelous place of great beauty), and I happened to be sitting right next to a confessional. One day, as I sat there painting, I saw the priest arrive and enter the confessional that man completely black, tall, thin, the very face of wickedness and hardness: a pitiless wickedness. He closeted himself in there. After a short while there came a rather young woman, perhaps thirty years old, gentle, very sweetnot intelligent but very sweetentirely dressed in black. She entered the box (he was already shut in and could no longer be seen), and they spoke through a grille. I should add that its far more medieval than in France, it was really it was almost theatrical. She knelt down there, I saw her long gown flowing out, and she was speaking. (I couldnt hear, she was whispering; besides, both of them spoke in Italian, although I understand Italian.) The voices were barely audible, there was no sound. Then all at once, I heard the woman sobbing (she was sobbing in spasms), and it went on till suddenlya collapse: she crumpled in a heap on the floor. Then that man opened the door, shoving aside her body with the door and he strode away without a backward glance. I was young, you know, and if I could have, I would have killed him. What he had just done was monstrous. And he was going away it was a chunk of steel that walked out.
   Incidents of that sort have left me with a peculiar impression. The stories of the Inquisition had already given me a sufficient Now, of course, youve heard what I told you [the story of the Asura], and thats really my way of seeing the thing. But there was a time when I might have said, No religion has done more evil in the world than this one.
  --
   And in a way, it pains me to see that what little I can do, this book on Sri Aurobindo, for instance, isnt understood. There is a wall in Francea refusal, I cant get in there, its blocked. It pains me. With the people I know there its the same thing; everywhere I meet with a wall of incomprehensionits absolutely and completely closed.3
   (Long silence) With Frances intellectual quality, the quality of her mind, the day she is truly touched spiritually (she never has been), the day she is touched spiritually, it will be something exceptional.

0 1963-07-06, #Agenda Vol 04, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   He was very conscious, with a lovely faith. He was an active man, very energetic (a short man). How active! And very energetic, with great authority, oh! The idea of being dependent on people who would have to nurse him he preferred to leave. He was conscious enough to know that the essence of his being, of his experience, is not lost but still there is all that materially one has built painstakingly, and especially in his case, his position is the result of a whole life. I dont know.
   Begin again in a little baby? (Mother shakes her head negatively) Theres the rub, you see. When Sri Aurobindo left, he said, I will return in a being formed supramentallyentirely conscious, with full capacities.

0 1963-07-13, #Agenda Vol 04, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   I must now bring myself to write to you. With regret and sadness, I confess, since it is to inform you that we do not think it possible to publish your book Sri Aurobindo or the Adventure of Consciousness. I confess that what prevented me from writing to you earlier is not so much the fear of causing you pain, for you are able to rise above the shock such news cannot but cause, as the fact that I knew it would be impossible to explain our reasons to you. Frankly, we cannot really understand this book. And how to explain the reasons for not understanding something? As for me, I often had the feeling of passing from one plane to another, from the level of fact to that of conjecture, from the level of logic (with defined terms as a starting point) to that of presupposition (within a coherence unconnected with the knowledge you offer). I know that all this is disputable. I also know or guess that behind those pages lies an entire lived experience, but one doesnt feel the reader can participate in it. For what reason? Once again, I cannot say. The readers blindness, quite possibly. The minds limitation, too. But a book must build a bridge, pierce the screen, and there are doubtless cases in which doing so no longer depends on the author. I must therefore return this manuscript to you.
   (signed: P.A.L.)

0 1963-07-20, #Agenda Vol 04, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   The body had based its sort of sense of good health on a certain number of vibrations, and whenever those vibrations were present, it felt in good health; when something came and disturbed them, it felt that it was about to fall ill or that it was ill, depending on the intensity. All that has changed now: those basic vibrations have simply been removed, they no longer exist; the vibrations on which the body based its sense of good or ill healthremoved. They are replaced by something else, and something else of such a nature that good health and illness have lost all meaning! Now, there is the sense of an established harmony among the cells, increasingly established among the cells, which represents the right functioning, whatever that may be: its no longer a question of a stomach or a heart or this or that. And the slightest thing that comes and disturbs that harmony is VERY painful, but at the same time there is the knowledge of what to do to reestablish the harmony instantly; and if the harmony is reestablished, the functioning isnt affected. But if out of curiosity, for instance (its a mental illness in humans), you start asking yourself, Whats that? What effect will it have? Whats going to happen? (what the body calls the desire to learn), if you are unlucky enough to be that way, you can be sure (laughing) that youll have something very unpleasant which, according to the doctor (according to ignoramuses), becomes an illness or disrupts the bodys functioning. While if you dont have that unhealthy curiosity and, on the contrary, will the harmony not to be disrupted, you only have to, we could say poetically, bring one drop of the Lord on the troubled spot for everything to be fine again.
   The body is unable to know things in the way it did formerly.

0 1963-07-27, #Agenda Vol 04, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   Ill give you an example: last time you were with me, I got (while you were present) a pain here (gesture to the right side), a frightful pain of the kind that makes people howl (they think theyre very sick, of course!), it came here like that. You didnt see anything, did you, I didnt show anything.
   As long as you were here, I didnt bother about it. I simply thought of something else. But when you left, I thought, Theres no reason to leave that here. So I concentrated I called the Lord and put Him here (gesture to the side), and I saw it all, what Ive just told you, that state of stupid negation, and how if you allow the thing to follow what they call its normal course, it becomes a good illness (Mother laughs), a serious illness. I call the Lord. (He is always here! But the fact that I concentrate and keep quiet.) And then its almost instantaneous: the first thing is a reactionalmost a STATE rather than a reactionwhich DENIES the possibility of divine Action. It isnt a will, its an automatic negation. Then there is always a Smile that answers (thats what is interesting, theres never any anger or any force that imposes itself, only a Smile), and almost instantly the pain disappearsThat settles in, luminous, tranquil.
   It isnt final, mind you, only a first contact: the experience recurs on another occasion and for another reason (they arent mental reasons, they are occasions), it recurs, but there is already a beginning of collaboration: the cells have LEARNED that with That, the state changed (very interestingly, they remember), so they begin to collaborate, and the Action is even more rapid. Then a third time, a few hours away, it recurs once again; but then THE CELLS THEMSELVES call and ask for the divine Action, because they remember. And then That comes in, gloriously, like something established.
  --
   So, regularly, as soon as there comes a pain somewhere or a discomfort or anything, immediately, instantly, the first reaction: Ah! Lord, what do You want me to learn? And I become attentive.
   If everybody does the same thing, if all those who can do it (sincerely, of course, without pretense) do it sincerely: Ah! Lord, what do You want me to learn? and then observe, wait, then things are easier, you put yourself at least in better conditions.

0 1963-08-07, #Agenda Vol 04, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   Just this morning, it was the same thing for me. You see, when the difficulty comes, there is a kind of general disorganization in the body, with intense pains, and (I observe, I want to follow the thing) its not at all a progressive abatement followed by recovery, thats not how it works: its absolutely like the reversal of a prismeverything vanishes at one stroke. There remains only that stupid habit the body has of remembering. And in remembering the remembrance makes you feel tired and out of sorts but the thing is over.
   The bodys remembrance is yet another thing that will have to be worked upon.
   There is a state in which you dont feel anythinga state and a positive one, because its a state of peace; a kind of very tranquil and very happy peace; a peace which makes you feel like staying that way forever: Oh, if I could be that way forever! Or else theres a chaos in which everything clashes and denies and quarrelsas though everything were in an uproar. It reminds me of the very first experience I had when I was I really lived that Pulsation of Love and when it was decided I was to take my body again, to reenter my body; well, I had contact with my body, I knew I was in contact with my body, only through a pain. Contact with the body meant suffering.
   I said that, in fact.
  --
   All that the body knows, all that it has learned, it has learned it as an aggregate, so if all that goes into another body, everything has to be learned againwhich is a pain in the neck. You waste a lot of time.
   (silence)

0 1963-08-10, #Agenda Vol 04, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   As long as we are dealing with moral things, this is absolutely obvious and indisputable: all moral pain, when you know how to take it, shapes your character and leads you straight to ecstasy. But when it comes to the body
   Its true that the doctor himself said ([laughing], the doctor1 symbolizes Doubt with a capital D) that if you teach your body to bear pain, it grows more and more enduring and doesnt get disrupted so fast thats a concrete result. People who know how not to be thoroughly upset as soon as they have a pain here or there, who are able to bear quietly and keep their balance, it seems that in their case the bodys capacity to bear disorder without breaking down increases. Thats very important. You remember, in a previous Agenda I asked myself the question from a purely practical and physical point of view, and it does seem to be true. Inwardly, I have been told many a timetold and shown with all sorts of little experiences that the body can bear far more than people think, provided they dont add fear or anxiety to the pain; if you can get rid of that mental factor, the body, left to itself, without either fear or fright or anxiety for what will happenwithout anguishcan bear a great deal.
   The second step is that once the body has decided to bear pain (it really takes the decision to do so), instantly the acuteness, the acute sensation in the pain vanishes. I am speaking on an absolutely material level.
   And if you have calm (it requires an inner calm, which is another factor), if you have inner calm, then the pain turns into an almost pleasant sensationnot pleasant in the ordinary sense of the word, but there comes an almost comfortable impression. Once again, I am speaking on a purely physical, material level.
   The last stage: when the cells have faith in the divine Presence and the divine sovereign Will and trust that all is for the good, then ecstasy comes the cells open up, become luminous and ecstatic.
  --
   The last one is probably not within everybodys reach (!) but the first three are quite obvious I know it works like that. The only point that bothered me (I told you once) is that it isnt a purely psychological experience and that enduring pain causes wear and tear in the body. But I inquired with the doctor (I casually made him talk), and he told me that if the body is taught very young to bear pain, its capacity to bear increases so much that it can effectively withstand illnesses, which means that the illness doesnt follow its course, it aborts. Thats precious.
   The last experience (which Ive had these last few days), in which apparently there was a hitch (it wasnt really one) was a sort of demonstration. I told you what it was, you remember: its like a purge of all the vibrations that are false vibrations, that arent the pure and simple response to the supreme Influence (all that in the cells still responds to the vibrations of falsehood, either from habit or from the people around or the food takenfifty thousand things). Then, with an aspiration or a decision, almost a prayer for purification coming from the body, something happens which, naturally, upsets the balance; the imbalance in turn brings about a general discomfort. The form discomfort takes is habitually the same: first, pains and all kinds of sensations I need not describe; if that state goes on developing, if it is allowed to assume its full proportions, it results in the past it resulted in a faint. But this time, I followed the process for about two hours from the moment I got up: the struggle between the new balance, the new Influence that was getting established, and the resistance of all the existing elements forced to go away. That created a sort of conflict. The consciousness remained very clear the consciousness of the BODY remained very clear, very quiet, perfectly trusting. So for two hours I was able to follow the process (while going on with all my usual activities, without changing anything), until I felt, or rather was told sufficiently clearly that the Lord wanted my body to be completely immobile for a while so that He might complete His work. But I am not all alone: there are other people here to help me and watch over everything (but I dont say or explain anything to them, those are things I dont talk about I dont say what goes on, I dont say anything), so I sat there wondering, Is it really and truly indispensable? (Mother laughs) Then I felt the Lord exert a little more pressure, which heightened the intensity of the conflict, so that I had all the signs of fainting I understood (!) I stood up, let my body moan a little to make it plain it didnt feel too well (!) and I stretched out. Then I was immobile, and in that immobility, I saw the work that was being donea work that cannot be done if you go on moving about. I saw the work. It took nearly half an hour; in half an hour it was over. Which means there is really there is a fact I cannot doubt, even if all the surrounding thoughts and forces contradict it: I cannot doubt that the consciousness is increasing more and more the consciousness in the body. It is growing more and more precise, luminous, exactQUIETvery peaceful. Yet very conscious of a TREMENDOUS battle against millennial habits. Do you follow?
   When it was over, I saw that even physically, bodily, there is a strength: the result is an increased strength. A very clearly increased strength.
  --
   No, because I have a growing proof that those things I have mastered now, in the body, I have the power (I keep receiving letters and notes from here or there, from people here or there who have an illness) it is beginning; so far its only a beginning, a very small beginning: the power to eliminate pain.
   You know, on a smaller scale, what happened with your illness.
  --
   No! That Sri Aurobindo wrote very clearly: for all those who have faith and open themselves in surrender and faith, the work will be done automatically.4 As long as he was here, mon petit, all the thirty years I spent with him working, NOT ONCE did I have to make an effort for a transformation. Simply, whenever there was a difficulty, I repeated, My Lord, my Lord, my Lord I just thought of himhop! it went away. Physical pain: he annulled it. You know, some things that were hampering the body, some old habits that had come back, I only had to tell him: off they would go. And through me, he did the same for others. He always said that he and I did the Work (in fact, when he was here, it was he who did it; I only did the external work), that he and I did the Work, and that all that was asked from the others was faith and surrender, nothing more.
   If they had trust and gave themselves in perfect trust, the Work was done automatically.
  --
   This body was built for that purpose, because I remember very well that when the war the First World Warstarted and I offered my body up in sacrifice to the Lord so that the war would not be in vain, every part of my body, one after another (Mother touches her legs, her arms etc.), or sometimes the same part several times over, represented a battlefield: I could see it, I could feel it, I LIVED it. Every time it was it was very strange, I had only to sit quietly and watch: I would see here, there, there, the whole thing in my body, all that was going on. And while it went on, I would put the concentration of the divine Force there, so that allall that pain, all that suffering, everythingwould hasten the preparation of the earth and the Descent of the Force. And that went on consciously throughout the war.
   The body was built for that purpose.

0 1963-08-24, #Agenda Vol 04, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   I have reached this conclusion: in principle, what gives rapture is the awareness of and union with the Divine (thats the principle), therefore the awareness of and union with the Divine, whether in the world as it is or in the building of a future world, must be the samein principle. Thats what I keep saying to myself all the time: How is it that you dont have that rapture? I do have it: at the time when the whole consciousness is centered in the union, whenever that is, in the midst of any activity, along with that movement of concentration of the consciousness on the union comes rapture. But I must admit it disappears when I am in that its a world of work, but a very chaotic world, in which I act on everything around meand necessarily I have to receive whats around me in order to act on it. I have reached a state in which all that I receive, even the things considered the most painful, leave me absolutely still and indifferentindifferent, not an inactive indifference: no painful reaction of any kind, absolutely neutral (gesture turned to the Eternal), a perfect equanimity. But within that equanimity, there is a precise knowledge of the thing to be done, the words to be said or written, the decision to be made, anyway all that action involves. All that takes place in a state of perfect neutrality, with a sense of the Power at the same time: the Power goes through me, the Power acts, and neutrality stays but theres no rapture. I dont have the enthusiasm, the joy and plenitude of action, not at all.
   And I must say that the state of consciousness that rapture gives would be dangerous in the present state of the world. Because it has almost absolute reactions I can see that that state of rapture has an OVERWHELMING power. But I insist on the word overwhelming, in the sense that its intolerant of, or intolerable to (yes, intolerable to) all thats unlike it! Its the same thing, or almost (not quite the same but almost), as supreme divine Love: the vibration of that ecstasy or rapture is a first hint of the vibration of divine Love, and thats absolutely yes, there is no other word, intolerant, in the sense that it doesnt brook the presence of anything contrary to it.

0 1963-08-31, #Agenda Vol 04, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   It was a very interesting worknot intellectual at all, a completely material work, down here, very, very practical. For example, what you write to someone should exactly correspond to the quality and quantity of the Powerwhich acts DIRECTLY, not through the mind. It was very interesting, a very painstaking work. And it was the keyone of the keys to perfect sincerity.
   That was my preoccupation these last few days.

0 1963-09-18, #Agenda Vol 04, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   You can, in much less time than a flash, eliminate any pain, any disorder, any illness from your body; and in a flash, it can all come back. And then you can switch from one to the other, from one to the other (back-and-forth gesture).
   The point not yet grasped or understood is how to stabilize that Peace.

0 1963-09-25, #Agenda Vol 04, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   But that experience [of the crumbling stairs], I know what it corresponds to, because I know the experience I had when I went to sleep: its always when I am confronted with the Problem. I could put it this way (but that diminishes it a lot), Why is the world the way it is? Then there comes to me that sort of its an INTENSE state of compassionintense, almost painful for the condition of the world and humanity. When that comes, I have those difficulties at night. And then I ask, I want to know the REAL secretnot all the things people have told (which all seem to me just like a story to to comfort children), but the REAL thing. When I go into deep rest with that tension, its always translated by those things collapsing: I try to climb and crunch! crunch! crunch! all the time, all the time everything crumbles under the weight of my ascent. Until I see that ill will trying to stop me from finding what I want to find, so I get angry and it stops instantlyis angry the word? I dont know: I refuse, I refuse the situation. Then it stops short.
   And I awake saying to myself, You see, its all your fault: as long as you accept, you cannot know, you are in the dark; when you really refuse, you will know.

0 1963-09-28, #Agenda Vol 04, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   We can conceive it was a particular necessity within the whole, of course. But these are all conceptions, its still something mental I recently had in my hands a quotation from Sri Aurobindo in which he said that there is no problem the human mind cannot solve if it wants to. (Laughing) There is no problem that the mind cannot solve if it applies itself to it! But I dont care, I have no need of mental logicno need. And it would have no effect on my action thats not what I want, not at all! Its only because there is that increasingly acute contradiction between the Truth and what is. Its becoming painfully acute. You know, that suffering, that general misery is becoming almost unbearable.
   There was a time when I looked at all that with a smilea long time. For years and years it was a smile, the way you smile at a childish question. Now, I dont know why it has come it has been THRUST on me like a sort of acute anguishwhich certainly is necessary to get out of the problem.

0 1963-10-19, #Agenda Vol 04, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   Yesterday (this is an example I give you, but in all three domains its similar), yesterday it was a question of money. The question of money, for more than twelve years, has been a problemgrowing increasingly acute because the expenses are increasing fantastically while the income is decreasing! (laughing) So the two things together make the problem very acute. It results in things to be paid but no money, which means that the cashier (the poor cashier, it does him a lot of good from the yogic viewpoint: he has acquired a calm that he never had before! But still he is the one who has to stand the greatest tension), the cashier spends money and I cannot reimburse him. Very well. And then its not for me to run about, look for money, arrange things, discuss with people, of course, that wouldnt be proper (!), and those who do it for me have in them a rather sizable amount of tamas, which I cannot yet shake up. Anyway, yesterday they proposed something absurd to me (I dont want to go into the details, it doesnt matter), but their proposal was absurd and put me in a totally unacceptable situation. In other words, it might have brought a legal action against me, I might have been summoned before the court, anyway, all kinds of inadmissible thingsnot that I care personally, but theyre inadmissible. When they proposed their idea to me, I looked and saw it was silly; I was very quiet, when, suddenly, there came into me a Power (I told you it happens now and then) like this (massive gesture). When it comes, you feel as though you could destroydestroy everything with it you see, its too awesome for the present state of the earth. So I answered very quietly that it was unacceptable, I said why, and I returned the paper. Then something COMPELLED me to add: If I am here, it is not because of any necessity or obligation; it is not a necessity from the past, not a karma, not any obligation, any attraction, any attachment, but only, solely and absolutely because of the Lords Grace. I am here because He keeps me here, and when He no longer keeps me here, when He considers I am not to stay any longer, I wont stay. And I added (I was speaking in English), As for me (as for me [gesture upward] that is, not this [gesture to the body]), as for Me, I consider that the world isnt ready: its way of responding inwardly and outwardly, even visibly in those around me, proves that the world isnt ready something must happen for it to be ready. Or else it will take QUITE SOME TIME for it to be prepared. Its all the same to me: whether it is ready or not makes no difference. And everything could collapse, Icouldntcareless. And with what force I said that! My arm rose, my fist banged on the tablemon petit, I thought I was going to break everything!
   I was watching the scene, thinking, Why the devil am I made to do this?! These people are, apparently, quite devoted, quite surrendered and intimate enough not to be afraid. (I dont know what effect it had on them, but it must have had some effect.) As soon as it was over, I started working again, looking into affairs and so on. Afterwards, once I was alone, I wondered, Why did that come into me? And in the evening, I had the solution to the situation: its here (Mother takes an envelope on the table). I didnt even look at it (Mother opens the envelope and looks at the amount of a check).
  --
   Afterwards, I asked myself, But what the devil can be done with all this? Disturb these people? They are quite incapable of getting out of their condition in this life and will probably need many, many, many lives to awaken to the NEED TO KNOWas long as they can move about, you know (laughing), as long as they can move about and things arent too painful, theyre quite contented! And then, in addition, there is, all the way down, that whole inert mass, you know, of men who are very close to the animalwhat can be done with that? If that too has to be ready, it seems to me impossible. Because that young couple, according to human opinion, are very fine people!
   So how many HOW MANY consciousnesses must there be, what quantity, if we may say (intensity, there is: off and on it shines like stars), what is the mass of consciousnesses necessary to enable this new world to come down on earth? Otherwise, what would happen to it? It would be swallowed up. Like in 60, when I saw the supramental forces descend (mon petit, what a sight it was! They were descending, it was stupendous, marvelous; they were like torrents, you felt as though they were going to inundate everything), and then, from below, there rose up great, dark blue masses like this, and they went vroof! (gesture of engulfing) And everything was swallowed up.
  --
   Another time, a fellow (there are some demented characters of that kind) had come from Australia: he was a teacher and had been given classes in the School. He started to preach unbelievable thingshe was God incarnate, you see! Until the day it began to be a pain in the neck. And he had declared he would stay here forever. People were annoyed, everyone was annoyed, they didnt know what to do. I was in my room here (it was three years ago, maybe four). I remember: I was sitting on my bed (at the time I used to work on my bed, over there), and I received a letter in which I was told in short, that it had become impossible, intolerable, that he could not be kept here. So I concentrated for a minute and Kali arrivedKali in her battling mood, a black, dancing Kali. I told her, Why dont you go on his head? (Laughing) She went and did her dance on his head the next day, he wrote he was leaving the Ashram. In this case, it was very clear: the day before, he had declared that he wouldnt budge, that he intended to stay here and continue his lessons, and that we would have to send him away forcibly for him to go (they had told me all this quite tearfully). Kalis dance convinced him he had better go!
   But all that, you see, its the play of the world. What is going on now is something else, altogether something else.

0 1963-10-26, #Agenda Vol 04, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   First it came from one direction, then a dead calmits always that way. You know how cyclones work? Its something that rotates, and at the center theres a dead calm; all around is a whirlwind, and it rotates as it advances. So the first part (what might be called the front of the cyclone) arrives from one direction, then it goes on rotating, and the second part comes from the opposite direction. We have an American rear admiral here who knows those things very wellall seafaring people know themhe had seen the cyclone from a distance on the sea and warned us. But its always that way, I had noticed it. The first wave arrived from the north, but as we were forewarned, everything had been closed. Then the wind died down completely, but the southern windows had been left open. And the second wave came from the other direction (it came around evening, a little before 7, I dont remember; anyway, I was sitting at the table here). And I saw I saw that whirlwind coming, and inside it there were formations: like heaped masses, some gray-black, others reddish-brown. And I watched it all; I saw them from a distance, there were lots of them: big formations, about as big as houses. They came in heaped masses, with kinds of formations WITHIN the whirlwind. So I was here, just beginning to have my dinner, when a reddish-brown formation went over, like this, right from here towards your house (Mother sweeps across the room from south to north), and it struck me. Mon petit, howling pains! And then a horrible discomfort. So naturally, my usual remedy: I stayed still and offered it all to the Lord. The formation went past, didnt stop (it went past, struck and went away), and left behind it (afterwards the pains were dull, they could be controlled) a kind of very peculiar sense of discomfort a sort of wickedness, like big sharp claws raking ones stomach. So I was expecting something for youothers too fell sick who were in the path of the formation. But there must have been quite a number of cases, because I saw many formations that one did strike, you see. I saw it arrive as swiftly as the cyclone, strike, and then go on. So when I was told that you had a fever, instantly I thought, Thats it.
   Was it painful?
   Oh, terrible, as if I were burning within.
  --
   The strange thing is that L., who was in the path of this formation (gesture from south to north), was sick, like you, he had a fever: the same thing, the same painsvery particular pains. And U. too was nearly caught; but the day before, I had explained to him how to defend himself, and he told me he had used my method and it worked quite well. I had explained to him how to pass the thing on to the Lord (that is, to learn to offer it). He tried it and told me, It worked quite well, the thing didnt take root: a moment of discomfort, and it was over.
   One should learn to do that. If one does it with ones head, its useless; whats effective is when you are able to summon that sort of eternal immobility then, the effect is immediate. But generally, people know how to do it for others but not for themselves, because for themselves, they go on vibratingwhen it hurts a lot, its difficult to stop that vibrating. But it CAN be done; even when the pain is absolutely acute, almost unbearable (normally one would start screaming), one CAN, one can do it and summon that silent immobility to the painful spotimmobility of eternity. Very, very quickly, within a few seconds, the intensity disappears; there remains only a memory, which one should take care not to reawaken by thinking about it, but which lingers as a memory in the body, as when youve given yourself a good knock, a sound blow, and the acute pain has gone, but the mark stays. It stays a more or less long time. If one made the effort to stay very, very quiet, immobile, without doing anything, thinking anything, wanting anything, for a long enough time, I think there would be very little effect.
   So much so that, for example, one KNOWS one has a violent fever (the thing comes with a violent fever, a violent reaction), yet there is no sign of fever! I had the experience three or four times; I had those things that bring on bouts of violent fever, and when the doctor came, I asked him, Doctor, do I have a fever? (I knew very well I had a fever, I didnt need to ask him! One of those fevers that make you run a very high temperature; but then there was that immobility I had summoned.) The doctor feels my pulse: No, youre fine!

0 1963-11-20, #Agenda Vol 04, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   I tried to find out why your physical life began (well, not quite began, but you were very, very young, just the same) with such a painful experience [the concentration camps]. And I saw why: it was like a separationnot separation, but disentanglement, you understand? There are two things in every human being: what comes from the past and has persisted because it is formed and conscious, and then all that dark, unconscious mass, really muddy, that is added in every new life. Then the other thing gets into that and finds itself imprisoned, you knowadulterated and imprisoned and generally it takes more than half ones life to emerge from that entanglement. Well, for you, care was taken to more than double the dose at the beginning, and it caused a kind of tearing apart: one part went up above, another part fell down below. And the part (it acted almost like a filter), the part that rose up was very cleansed, very cleansed of all that swarming: its becoming very, very conscious of the mixture. Just see, today, the whole morning until I was swamped with work by people, till then there was a sharp awareness of the part of the being that still belongs, as I said, to Unconsciousness, to Ignorance, to Darkness, to Stupidity, and is not even as harmonious as a tree or a flower; something thats not even as tranquil as a stone, not even as harmonious and not even as strong as the animal something that is really a downfall. That is really human inferiority. And maybe (no, I shouldnt say maybe: I know) it was necessary for things to settle downsettle, you know, as when you let a liquid settle? Thats exactly it: its the Light that settles, the Consciousness that settles. And indeed its true, there is in you a part that has entirely settled. Every time I see it (it comes in the course of the work, you understand), its lovely in its quality of light, its quality of vibration, and it has settled considerably. But its true that there is also a kind of sediment, a deposit (deposit, you know?) which is a bit heavy thats what youre conscious of.
   But you shouldnt say me! Its not you, that residue isnt you! But you are indeed conscious of the Light, arent you?
  --
   But you cant imagine, its wonderful! Immediately there comesclear, simple, effortlessly, without seeking for itexactly what has to be done or said or written: the whole tension stops, its over. And then, if you need paper, the paper is there; if you need a fountain pen, you find just the one you need; if you need (theres no seeking: above all dont seek, dont try to seek, youll just make another mess)its there. And thats a fact of EVERY MINUTE. You have the field of experience every second. For instance, youre dealing with a servant who doesnt do things properly or as you think they should be done, or youre dealing with a stomach that doesnt work the way youd like it to and it hurts: its the same method, there is no other. You know, at times situations get so tense that you feel as if youre about to faint, the body cant stand it any more, its so tense; or else theres a pain, something wrong, things arent sorting themselves out, and theres a tension; so immediately you stop everything: Lord, You, its up to You. At first there comes a peace, as if you were entirely outside existence, and then its gone the pain goes, the dizziness disappears. And what is to happen happens automatically. And, you see, its not in meditation, not in actions of terrestrial importance: its the field of experience you have ALL the time, without interruptionwhen you know how to put it to use. And for everything: when something hurts, for instance, when things resist or grate or howl inside there, instead of your saying, Oh, how it hurts! you call the Lord in there: Come in here, and then you stay calm, not thinking of anythingyou simply stay still in your sensation. And more than a thousand times, you know, I was almost bewildered: Look! The pain is gone! You didnt even notice how it went. So people who want to lead a special life or have a special organization to have experiences, thats quite silly the greatest possible diversity of experiences is at your disposal every minute, every minute. Only you must learn not to have a mental ambition for great things. Just the other day, I was shown in such a clear way a very small thing I had done (I, its the body speaking), a very small things that had been done by the Lord in this body (thats a long sentence!), and I was shown the terrestrial consequence of that very small thingit was visible, I mean, as my hand is visible to my eyesand the terrestrial correspondence. Then I understood.
   We are given everythingEVERYTHING. All the difficulties that have to be overcome, all of them (and the more capable we are, that is, the more complex the instrument is, the more numerous the difficulties are), all the difficulties, all the opportunities to overcome them, all the possible experiences, and limited in time and space so they can be innumerable. And it has repercussions and consequences all over the earth (I am not concerned with what goes on in the universe because, for the time being, that isnt my work). But it is certain (because it has been said so and I know it) that what goes on on the earth has repercussions throughout the universe. Sitting there, you live the everyday life with its usual insignificance, its unimportance, its lack of interest and its a WONDERFUL field of experiences, of innumerable experiences, not only innumerable but as varied as can be, from the most subtle to the most material, without leaving your body. Only, you should have RETURNED to it. You cannot have authority over your body without having left it.

0 1963-12-03, #Agenda Vol 04, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   December 2nd was interestingsports day1: the day before, the 1st, the weather was wonderful, and insofar as I gave it thought I was convinced that on the 2nd it would be just as fine. But in the morning I saw it was nothing of the sort, and as the day went by, it became worse and worse. In the beginning my first movement was to say to myself, Well, I didnt see to it, I should have given it thought, but then I saw that was absurd. Then I told the Lord, Why are You doing this? Its not very nice! Those children have worked so hard, they have taken great pains. And just as I said it, the consciousness was looking at what I said, smiling, Oh, my! How silly still to be that way! And then there was yet another thing (its becoming very, very complete), something that wasnt exactly the Lord, but like an expression of the Lord, telling me (not with words, of course, but how can I explain? Sri Aurobindo describes it very well in the Yoga of Self-Perfection: its a very new thing which has to do with action, feeling, sensation and consciousness all at the same time; its all of them togethernone of those things, yet all of them), so it was there, telling me (I am putting it into words, but that distorts it entirely), So what! What if its a test, what do you have to say about it? So immediately in the consciousness here the consciousness at work here the thought awakened, Ah, it has to become a test, then. In THEIR consciousness it has to become a test. (Because at first I had made a kind of attempt to stop the rain; then I saw it didnt correspond to the Truth and that the rain had to be acceptedwhy accepted? To do nothing after having worked so hard? And to accept is easy, its nothing, its not interesting, nothing new.) So a test, all right. If they take it as a test, they will go through it victoriously and it will be very good. And all the time, I was so concentrated on them [at the sports ground] that I no longer knew what I was doing or where I was. It lasted from 4 P.M. to 8 P.M. Around 8 P.M., I received the news: they had gone on with the performance just the same, the important visitors had remained till the end, so ultimately it was a real success.
   There was only one difficulty: the little children, who cannot be conscious of a test, of course, and who remained four and a half hours in the rain. I didnt want it to do any damage there were about a hundred small ones, tiny tots. I spent the night in concentration to bring into their material sensation the true reaction (because, for a short while, children love rain, they have a lot of fun in it), so I said to myself, That part of their consciousness should predominate so there is no damage. And I waited for the day after. The day after, no one was sick.

0 1963-12-11, #Agenda Vol 04, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   But the reaction on the body was painful, as it was the first time. The first time (according to X and the Swami), it was supposed to kill meit didnt even make me seriously ill, but it had a very unpleasant effect. I told you at the time that it was a mantra intended to drain you of all your blood; Ive seen several examples of people who died in that way: it was found afterwards to be the result of a mantric formation. In my case, all it succeeded in doing was to make me sick, as if everything came out I vomited terribly. Then there was something pulling me and I absolutely had to go my consciousness told me I had to go and see someone (I was all alone in my bathroom when it happened), a particular person whom I had to go and see; and when I opened the door, Z was there, waiting to prepare my bath, but I didnt see him at all and I absolutely wanted to go somewhere, into the other room, so I pushed against him, thinking, Whats this obstacle in my way? And he thought I was fainting on him! It caused quite a to-do.
   I was completely in trance, you see. I was walking, but completely in trance.
   Anyway, things went back to normal fairly quickly at the time. But the other day, the 9th, there was a return of that attack, as though that ill will hadnt been completely eliminated, completely defeated there was a return. It didnt have the same effect, but it was painful. A curious feeling, as if (I was sitting at the table, as I always do on mornings when there is meditation), then at the beginning, in some parts of the body, the cells seemed to be grating. I concentrated, I called, and I saw there was a battlea formidable battle being waged down below. It was grating, its curious. A kind of grating of things that arent smooth. And I wondered, When will it be able to relax? Then spasms here, at the solar plexus. And on those days, the doctor and P. always stay here for the meditation; but I was in trance, in my battle, when suddenly I felt a pressure on my pulse (laughing): it was the doctor, who had got up from his meditation (I must have been making some strange noises!) and was feeling my pulseit seems my pulse was fading! But I didnt come out of my trance (I was conscious, but I didnt come out of it), I stayed like that till the end of the meditation, even a little afterwards. Then when the grating diminished, I came out of the trance and saw them both standing in front of me. I gave them a nice smile and told them, Its all right. And I lay down. Then I went into a deep trance, completely out of the body, and everything returned to normal.
   Afterwards I took a look. I wasnt too happy: To do that during the meditation! And I was told that it could be done only during the meditation and not at any other time, in activity or even in concentration, because its not the same thing: it could be done only in deep meditation. So I said, Very well. And I was also shown that there was a concrete result, a kind of partial victory over that type of ill willa very, very aggressive ill will, extremely aggressive, which belongs to another age: its something that no longer has the right to exist on the earth. It must go.
  --
   The other state, the state in which there is me and other people, is becoming unpleasant; it brings things the consciousness disapproves of, reactions the consciousness disapproves of: Still this? Still this smallness, still this limitation, still this incomprehension, still this darkness? All the time like that. So, immediately, something within goes like this (gesture of inner reversal), and it becomes the other way. And the other way is so soft, oh! So soft, so smooth, without clashes, without friction, without unpleasant reactions thats what happened when there was that very painful grating during the meditation on the 9th it was because the individual reactions of the cells were not in accord with the general harmony.
   Its becoming a little interesting. Its a little new.

0 1963-12-21, #Agenda Vol 04, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   From my earliest childhood (when I was five, my memories at five) and for more than eighty years, I have always been surrounded with people who brought me an abundance of revolt, discontent, and then, more and more so, cases (certain cases have been very acute and still are) of sheer ingratitudenot towards me, that doesnt matter at all: towards the Divine. Ingratitude that is something I have often found very, very painful that it should exist. Its one of the things I have seen in my life that seemed to me the most the most intolerable that sort of acid bitterness against the Divine, because things are as they are, because all that suffering was permitted. It takes on more or less ignorant, more or less intellectual forms but its a kind of bitterness. It takes sometimes personal forms, which makes the struggle even more difficult because you cant mix in questions of personsits not a personal question, its an ERROR to think that there can be a single personal movement in the world; its mans ignorant consciousness which makes it personal, but it isnt: its all terrestrial attitudes.
   It came with the Mind; animals dont have that. And thats why I feel a sweetness in animals, even the supposedly most ferocious, which doesnt exist in man.

0 1963-12-25, #Agenda Vol 04, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   But the remarkable thing is that my physical pain went away immediately; I felt a pain in the nape of my neck, like a weight that hurt and pressed on the nerves, and it went away instantly: Oh, its nothing, just that!
   Then He seemed to lead me to other places, where I saw a sort of scorpion with a very odd shape (it was also a sort of entity in that realm and it gave other illnesses) trying to climb up somewhere. There was also a truncated snake which had been cut through, and out of the cut something like its life was escaping, yet it was still alive. All kinds of horrors. But there wasnt the slightest feeling of disgust: it was more like a consciousness studying, observing, and the I that observed was the force exerted by the consciousness on the play of those things.
  --
   Its a kind of study a useful one, maybe. And I noticed, I remember having complained, Oh, it hurts! (Apparently I was sound asleep, but I was very conscious of my body.) So it interested me, and I turned to the Lord: It hurts quite a bit. So He extended his hand, took that thing away and presented it to me, saying, Oh, its only that! It wasnt pretty. But then, INSTANTLY, the pain went away. I had been feeling some pain in the evening before going to bed (the nerves ached, the neck muscles hurt, it was like something weighing down heavily and clinging to me painfully); I saw His hand take it and present that animal to me, and I heard the voice say, Oh, its only that (He speaks to me in English), its only thatgone!
   Exactly what Sri Aurobindo did when he was here: his hand seemed to come, take hold of the pain, and the illness went away.
   Only, these nights are a little tiring. Nights of work, of struggle. And then during the day, there is that avalanche of people and things. If you dont go mad, its a sure sign you had no predisposition to madness! (Mother laughs)

0 1963-12-31, #Agenda Vol 04, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   In fact, in Savitri, Sri Aurobindo went through all the worlds, and it so happens that I am following that without knowing it (because I never rememberthank God, I really thank heaven!I asked the Lord to take away my mental memory and He took it away entirely, so I am not weighed down), but I follow that description in Savitri without mentally knowing the sequence of the worlds, and these last few days I was in that Muddle of Falsehood (I told you last time), it was really painful, and I was tracking it down to the most tenuous vibrations, those that go back to the origin, to the moment when Truth could turn into Falsehoodhow it all happened. And it is so tenuous, almost imperceptible, that deformation, the original Deformation, that you tend to lose heart and you think, Its still really quite easy to topple over the slightest thing and you can still topple over into Falsehood, into Deformation. And yesterday, I had in my hands a passage from Savitri that was brought to meits a marvel, but its so sad, so miserable, oh, I could have cried (I dont easily cry).
   The world grew full of menacing Energies,
  --
   It makes you wonder. Its like something gluey surrounding you, touching you all over; you cant go forward, you cant do anything without encountering those black and gluey fingers of Falsehood. It was a very painful impression.
   And last night, there was the Answer, as it were. This morning, when I got up, I didnt remember clearly, but in the middle of the night I knew it very well. (Its not going from sleep to the waking consciousness: it is coming out of one state to enter another one, and when I came out of that state to enter the so-called normal one, I remembered very well.) I was as if made to live the WAY of turning that Falsehood into Truth, and it was so joyful! So joyful. In the sense that its a vibration similar to joy that is capable of dissolving and overcoming the vibration of Falsehood. That was very important: it isnt effort, it isnt righteousness, or scruple or rigidity, none of that, none of that has any effect on that sadness (it is a sadness) of Falsehoodits something so sad, so helpless, so miserable so miserable. And only a vibration of Joy can change it.
  --
   Love ended early in hate, delight killed with pain,
   Truth into falsity grew and death ruled life.

0 1964-01-08, #Agenda Vol 05, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   So, as I am supposed to do sketches for H.s paintings, I did the sketch: Falsehood is the sorrow of the Lord.
   (Mother shows the sketch representing the Lords sorrowful face. Long silence)

0 1964-02-05, #Agenda Vol 05, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   Some time ago, I was saying to myself, Some people see physical things at a distance, but I have never seen anything of the sort. I have seen things in the subtle physical (very close to the physical, with a very small difference), but that wasnt a physical vision: it was a vision in the subtle physical. Some time ago I said to myself, Thats odd, physically I have no special capacities, I have never observed interesting phenomena! (Mother laughs) But that was in passing. And now this story! But, mon petit, it took me forty-eight hours to be convinced that it wasnt in the book! I havent yet got over it! Because my eyes have the eyes memory, a very precise memory; they were educated by painting and they see things very exactly as they are (well, as they pretend to be materially). You know, I could have sworn that it was in the book. And clearly it isnt. Four people, apart from me, have seen the book, and its not there!
   I found that interesting, its new.

0 1964-03-07, #Agenda Vol 05, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   Amidst all that that mass of experience there was, standing out from the rest, the impression of the gorilla, of the fantastic power of progress that would turn him into a man. It was very odd, it was an extraordinary physical power, with an intense joy of progress, of the thrust forward, and it made a kind of simian form moving forward towards man. And then it was like something repeating itself in the spiral of evolution: the same brute power, the same vital force (theres no comparison, of course, man has lost all that completely), the fantastic force of life thats found in those animals was coming back into the human consciousness and, probably, into the human form, BUT with all that has been brought by the evolution of Mind (a painful enough detour), and transformed into the light of a higher certitude and a higher peace.
   And, you know, it wasnt a thing that came, diminished and came back again, it wasnt like that. It was an immensity, a full, solid, ESTABLISHED immensity. Not something that comes and presents itself to you to tell you, This is how it will be, it wasnt thatit was HERE.

WORDNET












--- Grep of noun pai
havasupai
hualapai
hualpai
paid vacation
paige
paigle
pail
pailful
paillasse
pain
pain in the ass
pain in the neck
pain pill
pain sensation
pain threshold
pain unit
paine
painful sensation
painfulness
painkiller
pains
painstakingness
paint
paint leaf
paint roller
paintball
paintball gun
paintbox
paintbrush
painted-leaf begonia
painted beauty
painted cup
painted daisy
painted desert
painted greenling
painted leaf
painted nettle
painted sandgrouse
painted terrapin
painted tongue
painted tortoise
painted turtle
painter
painter's colic
painting
pair
pair creation
pair formation
pair of pincers
pair of pliers
pair of scissors
pair of tongs
pair of tweezers
pair of virginals
pair production
pairing
paisa
paisley
paiute
paiwanic
walapai
yavapai



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Wikipedia - Aleksandra Boikova -- Russian pair skater
Wikipedia - Aleksandra Ekster -- 20th-century Russian painter
Wikipedia - Aleksandr Borisov (painter) -- Russian painter
Wikipedia - Aleksandr Galliamov -- Russian pair skater
Wikipedia - Aleksandr Gerasimov (painter) -- Soviet artist
Wikipedia - Aleksandr Gorelik -- Soviet pair skater
Wikipedia - Aleksei Saks -- Estonian pair skater
Wikipedia - Ales Pushkin -- Belarusian non-conformist painter, theater artist, performer, and art curator
Wikipedia - Alessandra Cernuschi -- Italian pair skater
Wikipedia - Alessandri Altarpiece -- 15th c. painting by Filippo Lippi
Wikipedia - Alessandro Alberti -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Alessandro Albini -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Alessandro Allori -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Alessandro Aretusi -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Alessandro Arrigoni -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Alessandro Baratta -- Italian painter and engraver
Wikipedia - Alessandro Franchi (painter) -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Alessandro Guardassoni -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Alessandro Lupo -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Alessandro Mazzola (painter) -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Alessandro Milesi -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Alessandro Sanquirico -- Italian scenic designer, architect, and painter
Wikipedia - Alessandro Turchi -- Italian painter (1578-1649)
Wikipedia - Alessandro Vitali -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Alesso Baldovinetti -- Italian painter (1427-1499)
Wikipedia - Alesso di Benozzo -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Aleutian Islands Campaign
Wikipedia - Aleutian Islands campaign -- WWII battle in Alaska, USA
Wikipedia - Alexander Casteels the Elder -- Flemish painter
Wikipedia - Alexander Enbert -- Russian pair skater
Wikipedia - Alexander Heubel -- Latvian painter
Wikipedia - Alexander Hugo Bakker Korff -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Alexander Kellock Brown -- Scottish landscape painter (1849-1922)
Wikipedia - Alexander Korovin -- Russian pair skater
Wikipedia - Alexander Kruse -- American painter
Wikipedia - Alexander Markuntsov -- Russian pair skater
Wikipedia - Alexander Michelis -- German landscape painter
Wikipedia - Alexander Mollinger -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Alexander Popov (figure skater) -- Russian pair skater
Wikipedia - Alexander Posch -- German painter
Wikipedia - Alexander Rizzoni -- Russian painter
Wikipedia - Alexander Roslin -- Swedish painter
Wikipedia - Alexander Semionov -- Soviet Russian painter
Wikipedia - Alexander Smirnov (figure skater) -- Russian pair skater
Wikipedia - Alexander Tiranoff -- American painter
Wikipedia - Alexander Vakhrameyev -- Russian painter (b. 1874, d. 1926)
Wikipedia - Alexandra Haeseker -- Canadian painter, printmaker and installation artist
Wikipedia - Alexandra Rodriguez Long -- Spanish pair skater
Wikipedia - Alexandre Bloch -- French painter
Wikipedia - Alexandre Calame -- Swiss painter
Wikipedia - Alexandre Egorov -- Russian painter and Haiku poet
Wikipedia - Alexandre-Gabriel Decamps -- French painter
Wikipedia - Alexandre Gregoire -- Haitian painter
Wikipedia - Alexandre-Hyacinthe Dunouy -- French painter
Wikipedia - Alexandre Jacovleff -- Russian painter
Wikipedia - Alexandre Paiva -- BJJ practitioner
Wikipedia - Alexandre Perrier -- Swiss painter
Wikipedia - Alexandre Roubtzoff -- French painter
Wikipedia - Alexandros Alexandrakis -- Greek painter
Wikipedia - Alexandros Christofis -- Greek painter
Wikipedia - Alex Cameron (artist) -- Canadian abstract landscape painter
Wikipedia - Alexei Karev -- Russian painter
Wikipedia - Alexei Menshikov -- Russian former pair skater
Wikipedia - Alexei Rogonov -- Russian pair skater
Wikipedia - Alexei Sintsov -- Russian pair skater
Wikipedia - Alexei Tikhonov -- Russian pair skater
Wikipedia - Alexey Parygin -- Russian painter
Wikipedia - Alexey Tyranov -- Russian painter
Wikipedia - Alexis Delahante -- French painter and antique/art dealer
Wikipedia - Alexis Gritchenko -- Ukrainian painter and art theorist
Wikipedia - Alexis Simon Belle -- French painter
Wikipedia - Alex Schomburg -- Puerto Rican commercial artist and comic-book artist and painter
Wikipedia - Alferez (rank) -- Junior officer rank in the militaries of Spain, Argentina, Chile and Uruguay
Wikipedia - Alfons Borrell i Palazon -- Spanish painter
Wikipedia - Alfonso de la Cerda of Spain -- Castilian noble and archdeacon of Paris (b. 1289, d. 1327)
Wikipedia - Alfonso Grosso Sanchez -- Spanish painter
Wikipedia - Alfonso XIII of Spain
Wikipedia - Alfonso XIII -- King of Spain (1886-1941) (ruled 1886-1931)
Wikipedia - Alfonso XII -- King of Spain
Wikipedia - Alfons Schilling -- Swiss painter
Wikipedia - Alfred-Arthur Brunel de Neuville -- French painter
Wikipedia - Alfred Bennett Bamford -- English painter
Wikipedia - Alfred Berger -- Austrian pair skater
Wikipedia - Alfred D. Crimi -- 20th century Italian-American painter
Wikipedia - Alfred Duriau -- Belgian painter
Wikipedia - Alfred Gerstenbrand -- Austrian painter
Wikipedia - Alfred Hitchens -- English painter
Wikipedia - Alfred Jacob Miller -- 19th-century American painter
Wikipedia - Alfred Kowalski -- Polish painter
Wikipedia - Alfred Lanz -- Swiss painter and sculptor
Wikipedia - Alfredo Luxoro -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Alfredo Vazquez -- Olympic sailor from Spain
Wikipedia - Alfred Pal -- Croatian painter and graphic designer
Wikipedia - Alfred Pinsky -- Canadian painter
Wikipedia - Alfred Roller -- Austrian painter, graphic designer, and set designer
Wikipedia - Alfred Schouppe -- Polish painter
Wikipedia - Alfred Schuermans -- Belgian painter
Wikipedia - Alfred Sisley -- 19th-century French painter
Wikipedia - Alfred Stevens (painter)
Wikipedia - Alfred Thomas Agate -- American painter and botanical illustrator
Wikipedia - Alfred Verwee -- Belgian painter
Wikipedia - Alfred William Hunt -- British painter
Wikipedia - Alf von Chmielowski -- Austrian painter
Wikipedia - Algeciras campaign
Wikipedia - Algirdas Petrulis -- Lithuanian painter
Wikipedia - Algos -- Ancient Greek mythological personifications of pain
Wikipedia - Alhambra Decree -- 1492 decree expulsion of Jews from Spain
Wikipedia - Alhambra -- Palace and fortress complex in Granada, Andalusia, Spain
Wikipedia - Al-Hasakah Governorate campaign (2012-2013) -- Syrian military campaign
Wikipedia - Ali Al Tajer -- Iraqi painter and art historian
Wikipedia - Alicante-Elche Airport -- International airport in Alicante, Spain
Wikipedia - Alice Blair Ring -- American painter
Wikipedia - Alice Dannenberg -- French painter
Wikipedia - Alice Frey -- Belgian painter
Wikipedia - Alice Meredith Williams -- British sculptor and painter, 1877-1934
Wikipedia - Alice no Paint Adventure
Wikipedia - Alice Vickery -- English physician and campaigner
Wikipedia - Alice Wheeldon -- British anti-war campaigner
Wikipedia - Alicia Boyle -- Irish painter (1908-1997)
Wikipedia - Alina Dikhtiar -- Ukrainian pair skater
Wikipedia - Alina Pepeleva -- Russian pair skater
Wikipedia - Ali Omar Ermes -- Libyan painter and author
Wikipedia - Alireza Shojaian -- Iranian painter
Wikipedia - Alisa Efimova -- Russian pair skater
Wikipedia - Alix d'Anethan -- Belgian painter
Wikipedia - Aljaferia -- Fortified palace in Zaragoza, Spain
Wikipedia - Aljona Savchenko -- Ukrainian-German pair skater
Wikipedia - Allan Edson -- Canadian landscape painter
Wikipedia - Allan Paivio -- Canadian psychologist and writer
Wikipedia - Allan Ramsay (artist) -- 18th-century Scottish portrait painter
Wikipedia - Allan Walton -- British painter
Wikipedia - Allegories (Bellini) -- Series of paintings by Giovanni Bellini and Andrea Previtali in the Gallerie dell'Accademia, Venice
Wikipedia - Allegory of Chastity -- ca. 1505 painting by Lorenzo Lotto
Wikipedia - Allegory of Fertility and Abundance -- Painting by Luca Signorelli
Wikipedia - Allegory of Prudence -- painting by Titian
Wikipedia - Allegory of the Earth -- Series of paintings
Wikipedia - Allegory of the Vanities of the World -- 1663 painting by Pieter Boel
Wikipedia - Allegory of Vanity and Repentance -- Painting by Cornelis van Haarlem
Wikipedia - Allegory of Virtue and Vice (Veronese) -- Painting by Paolo Veronese
Wikipedia - Allegory of Wisdom and Strength -- C. 1565 painting by Paolo Veronese
Wikipedia - Allied invasion of Sicily -- 1943 military campaign of World War II on the island of Sicily, Italy
Wikipedia - Allied logistics in the Kokoda Track campaign -- Allied logistics during WWII
Wikipedia - Allison Schulnik -- American painter, sculptor and filmmaker
Wikipedia - All-pairs testing
Wikipedia - Alma del Banco -- German painter
Wikipedia - Almohad Caliphate -- Medieval Berber dynasty in Spain and northern Africa
Wikipedia - Almonte (river) -- River in Spain
Wikipedia - Almoravid dynasty -- Medieval Berber dynasty in Spain and northern Africa
Wikipedia - Almudena Cathedral -- Roman Catholic cathedral in Madrid, Spain
Wikipedia - Almut Lehmann -- German pair skater
Wikipedia - Alois Arnegger -- Austrian painter
Wikipedia - Alois Hanslian -- German painter
Wikipedia - Alois Hirschbuhl -- Swiss painter and commander of Pontifical Swiss Guard
Wikipedia - Alois Houba -- Czech painter
Wikipedia - Alois Lichtsteiner -- Swiss painter
Wikipedia - Alois Mitschek -- Austrian painter
Wikipedia - Alonso Berruguete -- 16th century Spanish painter, sculptor and architect
Wikipedia - Alonso de Aragon -- 16th-century Catholic Archbishop in Spain
Wikipedia - Alonso Perez -- Spanish painter
Wikipedia - Aloyzas Smilingis -- Lithuanian sculptor and painter
Wikipedia - Alpaida
Wikipedia - Alpana -- Bengali style of painting
Wikipedia - Alpha (motorcycle) -- Motorcycle brand from Spain
Wikipedia - Alphonse Chigot -- French artist known for painting (1824-1917)
Wikipedia - Alphonse De Cuyper -- Belgian sculptor and painter
Wikipedia - Alphonse Moutte -- French painter
Wikipedia - Alphonse Mucha -- Czechoslovak photographer, painter and illustrator
Wikipedia - Alphonse Roubichou -- French painter
Wikipedia - Alpine chough -- A bird in the crow family which breeds in high mountains from Spain eastwards through southern Europe and North Africa to Central Asia and Nepal
Wikipedia - Alpine Landscape -- Painting by Paul Bril
Wikipedia - Alpo Jaakola -- Finnish painter and sculptor
Wikipedia - Also Sprach Zarathustra (painting)
Wikipedia - Alta California -- Former province of New Spain
Wikipedia - Altarpiece -- Artwork (painting, sculpture or relief) behind the altar
Wikipedia - Alvar Gullichsen -- Finnish painter and sculptor
Wikipedia - Alzano Madonna -- Painting by Giovanni Bellini
Wikipedia - Alziro Bergonzo -- Italian architect and painter
Wikipedia - Amadeo Luciano Lorenzato -- Brazilian painter
Wikipedia - Amaldus Nielsen -- Norwegian painter
Wikipedia - Amalia Ciardi Dupre -- Italian sculptor and painter
Wikipedia - Amalia de Angelis -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Amalia Pachelbel -- German painter and engraver
Wikipedia - Amanda Evora -- American pair skater
Wikipedia - A Man with an Axe -- Painting by Paul Gauguin
Wikipedia - Amazon Prime -- Paid subscription service offered by Amazon.com
Wikipedia - Ambassador of New Zealand to Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - Ambrogio Raffaele -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Ambrosius Bosschaert -- Dutch painter and art dealer
Wikipedia - Ambrosius Holbein -- Swiss painter
Wikipedia - A Meat Stall with the Holy Family Giving Alms -- painting by Pieter Aertsen
Wikipedia - Amedee Faure -- French painter
Wikipedia - Ameena Ahmad Ahuja -- Indian painter, calligrapher, writer and linguist
Wikipedia - Amelia Curran (painter) -- Painter
Wikipedia - Amelie Beaury-Saurel -- French painter
Wikipedia - Amelie Belin -- French painter and pastellist
Wikipedia - Amelie Lundahl -- Finnish painter
Wikipedia - America 500 Years -- Series of paintings
Wikipedia - American Campaign Medal -- American campaign medal
Wikipedia - American Collectors (Fred and Marcia Weisman) -- 1968 painting by David Hockney
Wikipedia - American Leadership Project -- US political campaign group
Wikipedia - American logistics in the Normandy campaign -- Supplies services during World War II
Wikipedia - American Pain Society
Wikipedia - American Paint Horse -- American breed of horse
Wikipedia - American Scene painting
Wikipedia - Amer Kobaslija -- Bosnian-American painter
Wikipedia - Amina Atakhanova -- Russian pair skater
Wikipedia - Amin Amir -- Somali-Canadian cartoonist and painter
Wikipedia - AmINext -- Social media campaign
Wikipedia - Amir Hajiyev -- Azerbaijani painter
Wikipedia - Ammonium lactate -- Pair of enantiomers
Wikipedia - Amnon David Ar -- Israeli painter
Wikipedia - Among the Sierra Nevada, California -- 1868 painting by Albert Bierstadt
Wikipedia - Amontillado -- Sherry originating in Spain
Wikipedia - Amotivational syndrome -- Impairments primarily associated with cannabis use
Wikipedia - Ampaire Electric EEL -- A hybrid electric aircraft
Wikipedia - Amparo Acker-Palmer -- Molecular biologist from Spain
Wikipedia - Amrita Sher-Gil -- Hungarian-Indian painter
Wikipedia - Amtrak paint schemes -- History of paint schemes applied to Amtrak locomotvies and rail cars
Wikipedia - Amvrosije Jankovic -- Serbian painter-iconographer.
Wikipedia - Amy Ellingson -- American contemporary abstract painter
Wikipedia - Amy Hughes (artist) -- British painter
Wikipedia - Amy Sherald -- American portrait painter (1973 - )
Wikipedia - Anabelle Langlois -- Canadian pair skater
Wikipedia - Anahita Dargahi -- Iranian painter and actress
Wikipedia - Analgesic -- Any member of the group of drugs used to achieve analgesia, relief from pain
Wikipedia - An Allegory of Truth and Time -- Painting by Annibale Carracci
Wikipedia - AnaM-CM-/s Morand -- Swiss pair skater
Wikipedia - Anant Pai -- Indian Comic artist
Wikipedia - Anapaite -- Hydrous phosphate mineral
Wikipedia - Anarchism in Spain
Wikipedia - Ana Shalikashvili -- Georgian painter (b. 1919, d. 2004)
Wikipedia - Anastas Bocaric -- Serbian painter
Wikipedia - Anastasia Dolidze -- Russian pair skater
Wikipedia - Anastasia Martiusheva -- Russian pair skater
Wikipedia - Anastasia Poluianova -- Russian pair skater
Wikipedia - Anatoly Kaigorodov -- Russian painter
Wikipedia - Andalusia -- Autonomous community of Spain
Wikipedia - Andecha Astur -- Left-wing nationalist party in Asturias, Spain
Wikipedia - Anders Zorn -- 19th and 20th-century Swedish painter and engraver
Wikipedia - Andokides (vase painter) -- Ancient Athenian vase painter
Wikipedia - Andrea Appiani -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Andrea Barbiani -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Andrea Bellunello -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Andrea Boscoli -- Italian painter (1560-1607)
Wikipedia - Andrea D'Antoni -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Andrea del Sarto -- Italian painter (1486-1530)
Wikipedia - Andrea del Verrocchio -- 15th century Italian sculptor, goldsmith and painter
Wikipedia - Andrea di Bartolo -- Medieval Italian painter, stained glass designer and illuminator of the Sienese School
Wikipedia - Andrea di Leone -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Andrea Gastaldi -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Andrea Hanak -- German painter
Wikipedia - Andrea Lopez Caballero -- Spanish painter
Wikipedia - Andrea Mantegna -- Italian Renaissance painter (1431-1506)
Wikipedia - Andrea Pais de Libera -- Italian bobsledder
Wikipedia - Andrea Polinori -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Andrea Pozzi -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Andrea Ramirez -- Spanish painter
Wikipedia - Andreas Alariesto -- Finnish painter
Wikipedia - Andreas Edvard Disen -- Norwegian painter
Wikipedia - Andreas Friis -- Danish painter
Wikipedia - Andreas Krystallis -- Greek painter
Wikipedia - Andreas Paul Weber -- German lithographer , draftsman and painter (1893-1980)
Wikipedia - Andreas Ritzos -- Greek painter (1421-1492)
Wikipedia - Andreas Roth (painter) -- German Painter
Wikipedia - Andre Beronneau -- French painter
Wikipedia - Andre Dunoyer de Segonzac -- French painter
Wikipedia - Andree Belle -- French painter
Wikipedia - Andre Evard -- Swiss painter
Wikipedia - Andre Giroux (painter) -- French painter
Wikipedia - Andre Gisson -- 20th-century American painter
Wikipedia - Andrei Andreyevich Popov -- Russian painter
Wikipedia - Andrei Bushkov -- Russian former pair skater
Wikipedia - Andrei Chuvilaev -- Russian pair skater
Wikipedia - Andrei Mironov (painter) -- Russian painter
Wikipedia - Andrei Novoselov -- Russian pair skater
Wikipedia - Andrei Ryabushkin -- Russian painter
Wikipedia - Andre Jolivard -- French painter
Wikipedia - Andre Mare -- French painter and designer
Wikipedia - Andre Planson -- French painter
Wikipedia - Andres Lopez Polanco -- Spanish painter
Wikipedia - Andre the Giant Has a Posse -- Street art campaign by Shepard Fairey
Wikipedia - Andrew Evans (figure skater) -- Canadian pair skater
Wikipedia - Andrew F. Bunner -- American painter and draughtsman
Wikipedia - Andrew Hunt (painter) -- British artist
Wikipedia - Andrew Law (artist) -- British painter (1873-1967)
Wikipedia - Andrew Lawrenceson Smith -- British artist and painter
Wikipedia - Andrew Sibley -- Australian painter
Wikipedia - Andrew Yang 2020 presidential campaign -- US presidential campaign
Wikipedia - Andrey Esionov -- Russian painter and graphic artist
Wikipedia - Andriy Bekh -- Ukrainian pair skater
Wikipedia - Andrus Johani -- Estonian painter
Wikipedia - Andrzej Jurkiewicz -- Polish painter
Wikipedia - Andrzej Stypinski -- Polish painter
Wikipedia - Andy Seitz -- American pair skater
Wikipedia - An Englishman in Moscow -- 1914 painting
Wikipedia - Aneta Kowalska -- Polish pair skater
Wikipedia - An Evening River Landscape with a Ferry -- Painting by Jan van Goyen
Wikipedia - An Experiment on a Bird in the Air Pump -- 1768 oil-on-canvas painting by Joseph Wright of Derby
Wikipedia - Anfal genocide -- Genocidal campaign against the Kurdish people
Wikipedia - Angela Brennan -- Australian painter
Wikipedia - Angelica Kauffman -- 18th/19th-century Swiss Neoclassical painter
Wikipedia - Angelica Veronica Airola -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Angelico Chavez -- Hispanic American Friar minor, priest, historian, author, poet, and painter
Wikipedia - Angelito Antonio -- Filipino painter
Wikipedia - Angelo Baccalario -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Angelo Boucheron -- Italian painter and engraver
Wikipedia - Angelo Canevari -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Angelo Cesselon -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Angelo Froglia -- Italian painter and sculptor
Wikipedia - Angelo Inganni -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Angelo Jank -- German painter
Wikipedia - Angelo Maccagnino -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Angelo Monticelli -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Angel Orensanz -- Spanish sculptor and painter
Wikipedia - Angelo Savelli -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Angelus Novus -- Painting by Paul Klee
Wikipedia - Angiolillo Arcuccio -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Anglers on the Seine at Poissy -- 1872 painting by Claude Monet
Wikipedia - Anglo-Spanish War (1585-1604) -- 1585-1604 war between the kingdoms of Spain and England
Wikipedia - Anglo-Spanish War (1625-1630) -- 1625-1630 war fought by Spain against the Kingdom of England and the United Provinces
Wikipedia - Anglo-Spanish War (1654-1660) -- 1654-1660 war between the English Protectorate under Oliver Cromwell and Spain
Wikipedia - Anguish -- Extreme pain, distress or anxiety
Wikipedia - Animal painter -- Person who creates paintings of animals
Wikipedia - Animal welfare and rights in Spain -- The treatment of and laws concerning non-human animals in Spain
Wikipedia - Animal Welfare Party -- Political party in the UK campaigning on animal welfare
Wikipedia - Anita Holdcroft -- Anaesthetist; pain researcher
Wikipedia - Anita-Pearl Ankor -- Ghanaian painter
Wikipedia - Anita Snellman -- Finnish painter
Wikipedia - Anita Tefkin -- American pair skater
Wikipedia - Anna Ancher -- Danish painter
Wikipedia - Anna Boch -- Belgian painter
Wikipedia - Anna Cassel -- Swedish painter
Wikipedia - Anna Caterina Gilli -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Anna Chao Pai -- American geneticist
Wikipedia - Anna ChromM-CM-= -- Czech painter and sculptor
Wikipedia - Anna Eliza Hardy -- American painter
Wikipedia - Anna Fussli -- Swiss painter
Wikipedia - Anna Hubler -- German pair skater
Wikipedia - Annalise Braakensiek -- Australian model, actress, television presenter, businesswoman and campaign ambassador
Wikipedia - Anna Margarethe Geiger -- German painter
Wikipedia - Anna Maria Anguissola -- Italian painter (c. 1555 - c. 1611)
Wikipedia - Anna Maria Werner -- German painter
Wikipedia - Anna May-Rychter -- German painter, watercolourist (1864-1955)
Wikipedia - Anna of Austria, Queen of Spain
Wikipedia - Anna Petersen -- Danish painter (1845-1910)
Wikipedia - Anna Risi -- Italian painting model. Muse and mistress of painter Anselm Feuerbach
Wikipedia - Anna Sahlsten -- Finnish painter
Wikipedia - Anna Tonelli -- Italian portrait painter
Wikipedia - Anna Vernikov -- American-Israeli pair skater
Wikipedia - Anna Waser -- Swiss painter
Wikipedia - Anna Wengberg -- Swedish painter
Wikipedia - Anna Zinkeisen -- Scottish painter
Wikipedia - Ann Charlotte Bartholomew -- English flower and miniature painter, and author
Wikipedia - Ann Craven -- American painter
Wikipedia - Anne and Jehanne -- 1894 painting by Laura Leroux-Revault
Wikipedia - Anne Bonnet -- Belgian painter
Wikipedia - Anne Carleton -- American painter, 1878-1968
Wikipedia - Anne Dangar -- Australian painter and potter
Wikipedia - Anne Daubenspeck-Focke -- German sculptor and painter
Wikipedia - Anne Donnelly -- Irish painter
Wikipedia - Anne Finlay -- Scottish painter (1898-1963)
Wikipedia - Anne Marie Telmanyi -- Danish painter and writer
Wikipedia - Anne Pierre de Kat -- Belgian painter
Wikipedia - Annette Bezor -- Australian painter (1950-2020)
Wikipedia - Anne Vallayer-Coster -- French painter
Wikipedia - Anne Walker (artist) -- American painter and printmaker
Wikipedia - Anne Yeats -- Irish painter
Wikipedia - Annibale Angelini -- Italian painter and scenographer
Wikipedia - Annibale Brugnoli -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Annibale Castelli -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Annibale Gatti -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Annika Hocke -- German pair skater
Wikipedia - An Ni -- Chinese pair skater
Wikipedia - Ann Kocsis -- American still-life painter
Wikipedia - Ann Mercy Hunt -- (1938-2014), medical researcher and campaigner
Wikipedia - Ann Thomson -- Australian painter and sculptor
Wikipedia - Annunciation (Cima da Conegliano) -- 1495 painting by Cima da Conegliano
Wikipedia - Annunciation (Memling) -- Oil-on-oak panel painting by Hans Memling
Wikipedia - Annunciation (Moretto) -- Painting by Moretto da Brescia
Wikipedia - Annunciation (Signorelli) -- Painting by Luca Signorelli in Volterra
Wikipedia - Annunciation (Uccello) -- c. 1425 painting by Paolo Uccello
Wikipedia - Annunciation (Veronese, Uffizi) -- Painting by Paolo Veronese
Wikipedia - Anodyne -- Historical term for a pain-killing drug
Wikipedia - Anoeta -- Human settlement in Tolosaldea, Gipuzkoa, Basque Country, Spain
Wikipedia - Anoma Wijewardene -- Sri Lankan painter
Wikipedia - Anosognosia -- Unawareness of one's own illness, symptoms or impairments
Wikipedia - Another Europe Is Possible -- European Union reform political campaigning group
Wikipedia - Anovelo da Imbonate -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Ansano di Andrea di Bartolo -- Italian painter (1421-1491)
Wikipedia - Anselm Feuerbach -- German painter
Wikipedia - Anselm Kiefer -- German painter and sculptor
Wikipedia - Anselmo Gianfanti -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Anshelm Schultzberg -- Swedish painter
Wikipedia - Ans Wortel -- Dutch painter, poet and writer
Wikipedia - Antal Berkes -- Hungarian painter
Wikipedia - Antanas JaroM-EM-!eviM-DM-^Mius -- Lithuanian painter
Wikipedia - Antelope Hills expedition -- 1858 military campaign of the Texas Rangers against the Comanche and Kiowa peoples
Wikipedia - Anthonore Christensen -- Danish flower painter
Wikipedia - Anthony Cudahy -- American painter
Wikipedia - Anthony Green (painter) -- British painter
Wikipedia - Anthony Holles (figure skater) -- British pair skater
Wikipedia - Anthony Painter -- Australian professional golfer
Wikipedia - Anthony Quinn -- Mexican-American actor, painter, writer and film director (1915-2001)
Wikipedia - Anti-Bin Tax Campaign
Wikipedia - Anti-cosmopolitan campaign -- Thinly disguised antisemitic campaign in the Soviet Union and Eastern Bloc, 1948-1953
Wikipedia - Anti-flash white -- Paint designed to reflect some of the thermal radiation from a nuclear explosion
Wikipedia - Antimenes Painter -- Ancient Greek vase painter
Wikipedia - Anti-religious campaign during the Russian Civil War -- Religious repression in Russia from 1917 to 1922
Wikipedia - Antireligious campaigns in China -- State-sponsored campaigns against religion in the People's Republic of China
Wikipedia - Anti-Rightist Campaign -- Chinese political campaign under Mao Zedong
Wikipedia - Antisemitism in Spain
Wikipedia - Anti-smoking campaign
Wikipedia - Anti-sweatshop movement -- Campaigns to improve the conditions of workers in abusive workplaces
Wikipedia - Anto Carte -- Belgian painter
Wikipedia - Antoine-Alphonse Montfort -- French painter
Wikipedia - Antoine Bouzonnet-Stella -- French painter
Wikipedia - Antoine-Claude Fleury -- French painter
Wikipedia - Antoine Dorsaz -- Swiss pair skater
Wikipedia - Antoine Dumas -- Canadian painter
Wikipedia - Antoine Louis Francois Sergent dit Sergent-Marceau -- French printmaker and painter
Wikipedia - Antoine Watteau -- French painter
Wikipedia - Anton Altmann -- Austrian painter
Wikipedia - Anton Braith -- German painter
Wikipedia - Anton Domenico Bamberini -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Antonello da Messina -- 15th-century Italian painter
Wikipedia - Antonello Spadafora -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Anton Georg Zwengauer -- German painter
Wikipedia - Anton Gogiashvili -- 20th-century Georgian painter
Wikipedia - Anton Goubau -- Flemish Baroque painter
Wikipedia - Anton Hansch -- Austrian painter
Wikipedia - Anton Hansen -- Danish cartoonist and painter
Wikipedia - Anton Hirschig -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Antonia Matos -- Guatemalan painter
Wikipedia - Antonieta Figueroa -- Mexican painter
Wikipedia - Antoni Kozakiewicz -- Polish painter
Wikipedia - Antonin Chittussi -- Czech painter
Wikipedia - Antonin HudeM-DM-^Mek -- Czech painter
Wikipedia - Antonin Landa -- Czech painter
Wikipedia - Antonin Langweil -- Bohemian lithographer, librarian, painter, and model maker
Wikipedia - Antonin Machek -- Czech painter
Wikipedia - Antonin Manes -- Czech painter and draftsman
Wikipedia - Antonino Calcagnadoro -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Antonino Gandolfo -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Antonino Grano -- Italian painter and engraver
Wikipedia - Antonin Prochazka (painter) -- Czech artist
Wikipedia - Antonio Aleotti -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Antonio Alice -- Argentine painter
Wikipedia - Antonio Asis -- Argentine painter, an exponent of Op Art
Wikipedia - Antonio Bacci (painter) -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Antonio Baldi -- Italian painter and engraver
Wikipedia - Antonio Bamboccio -- Italian painter and sculptor
Wikipedia - Antonio Baruffaldi -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Antonio Bassi -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Antonio Beduschi -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Antonio Bernieri -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Antonio Bisquert -- Spanish painter
Wikipedia - Antonio Bonetti -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Antonio Bottazzi -- An Italian painter
Wikipedia - Antonio Brugada -- Spanish painter
Wikipedia - Antonio Bueno -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Antonio Buonfigli -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Antonio Cabral Bejarano -- 19th-century Spanish painter
Wikipedia - Antonio Corpora -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Antonio Costa (painter) -- Italian painter (1847-1915)
Wikipedia - Antonio da Correggio -- Italian painter of the Parma school of the Italian Renaissance (1489-1534)
Wikipedia - Antonio de Arfian -- Spanish painter
Wikipedia - Antonio de Lanchares -- Spanish painter
Wikipedia - Antonio della Cornia -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Antonio Diziani -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Antonio Elenetti -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Antonio Ferrigno -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Antonio Fillol Granell -- Spanish painter
Wikipedia - Antonio Franchi -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Antonio Giarola -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Antonio L'Horfelin -- Spanish painter
Wikipedia - Antonio Malchiodi -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Antonio Mancini -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Antonio Maria Esquivel -- Spanish painter
Wikipedia - Antonio Mattei Lluberas -- Puerto Rican mayor in 1897 who led a revolt against Spain
Wikipedia - Antonio Melchioni -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Antonio Molinari (painter) -- Italian painter (1655-1704)
Wikipedia - Antonio Pachera -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Antonio Peracchi -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Antonio Porcelli -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Antonio Raffaele Calliano -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Antonio Richarte -- Spanish painter
Wikipedia - Antonio Rodriguez Luna -- Spanish painter
Wikipedia - Antonio Servillo -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Antonio Solario -- Italian Renaissance painter
Wikipedia - Antonio Veneziano (painter) -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Antonio Vidaurre -- Spanish painter, poet and writer
Wikipedia - Antonio Viviani -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Antonio Xavier Trindade -- Bombay School painter
Wikipedia - Anton Paulsen -- Swedish baroque portrait painter
Wikipedia - Anton Peschka -- Austrian painter
Wikipedia - Anton Raphael Mengs -- German-Bohemian painter active in Dresden, Rome and Madrid (1728-1779)
Wikipedia - Anton van Anrooy -- British painter
Wikipedia - Anton Velim -- Austrian painter
Wikipedia - Anton Versluijs -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Anton von Werner -- German painter (1843-1915)
Wikipedia - Anton Zilzer -- Hungarian painter
Wikipedia - Anton Zwengauer -- German painter
Wikipedia - Antoon Derkinderen -- Dutch painter and autobiographer (1859-1925)
Wikipedia - An Yang -- Chinese pair skater
Wikipedia - Aortic valve repair -- A treatment of aortic regurgitation
Wikipedia - Apaidia barbarica -- Species of moth
Wikipedia - Apaidia mesogona -- Species of moth
Wikipedia - Apaidia rufeola -- Species of moth
Wikipedia - A Pain That I'm Used To -- 2005 single by Depeche Mode
Wikipedia - A Pair of Cupids -- 1918 silent film directed by Charles Brabin
Wikipedia - A Pair of Hellions -- 1924 film
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Wikipedia - A Palace Concert -- Tang Dynasty silk painting
Wikipedia - A Panel of Experts -- Painting by Jean-Michel Basquiat
Wikipedia - A Philosopher Lecturing on the Orrery -- 1766 painting by Joseph Wright of Derby
Wikipedia - Ap Lei Pai -- An uninhabited island in Hong Kong, linked to the south of Ap Lei Chau by a tombolo
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Wikipedia - Apollo and Daphne (Pollaiolo) -- Painting attributed to Piero del Pollaiolo
Wikipedia - Apollo and Diana -- 1628 painting by Gerrit van Honthorst
Wikipedia - Apollon Kutateladze -- Georgian painter
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Wikipedia - Apotropaic magic
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Wikipedia - Apparition of the Virgin to St Bernard (Filippino Lippi) -- Painting by Filippino Lippi in the Badia Fiorentina, a church in Florence
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Wikipedia - Arab Baths (Ceuta) -- Cultural property in Ceuta, Spain
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Wikipedia - Arab Horses Fighting in a Stable -- 1860 painting by Eugene Delacroix
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Wikipedia - Araceli Sanchez Urquijo -- First female civil engineer practitioner in Spain
Wikipedia - Aragonese Crusade -- 13th-century military campaign
Wikipedia - Aragonese Party -- Regionalist political party in Spain
Wikipedia - Aragon -- Autonomous community of Spain
Wikipedia - A Rake's Progress, 3: The Tavern Scene -- Painting by William Hogarth from the series A Rake's Progress
Wikipedia - A Rake's Progress -- Painting series by William Hogarth
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Wikipedia - Arcangelo Guglielmelli -- Italian architect and painter
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Wikipedia - Archaeological site of Atapuerca -- Archaeological site in northern Spain, rich in human fossils
Wikipedia - Archita Ricci -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Arch of Nero (painting) -- Painting by Thomas Cole
Wikipedia - Arctic Star -- UK military campaign medal for WW2
Wikipedia - Arearea no varua ino -- Painting by Paul Gauguin
Wikipedia - Areeta (Metro Bilbao) -- Metro station in Bilbao, Spain
Wikipedia - Areg Elibekyan -- Armenian painter
Wikipedia - Arenas Blancas Lighthouse -- Lighthouse on La Palma, Spain
Wikipedia - Argenteuil (Manet) -- 1874 painting by Edouard Manet
Wikipedia - Argentines in Spain -- Immigration from Argentina to Spain
Wikipedia - Argimiro EspaM-CM-1a -- Spanish painter
Wikipedia - Ariadne (Giorgio de Chirico) -- 20th century painting by Giorgio de Chirico
Wikipedia - Arie Pais -- Dutch politician and economist
Wikipedia - Arii Matamoe -- Painting by Paul Gauguin
Wikipedia - Arik Brauer -- Austrian painter, printmaker, poet, dancer, singer, and stage designer
Wikipedia - Arina Cherniavskaia -- Russian pair skater
Wikipedia - Aristotle with a Bust of Homer -- 1653 painting by Rembrandt
Wikipedia - Arjona, Spain
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Wikipedia - Armando Barabino -- Italian painter
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Wikipedia - Armed Forces Expeditionary Medal -- American campaign medal
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Wikipedia - Arnold Wiltz -- American painter
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Wikipedia - Arthur Burgess -- British painter
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Wikipedia - Arthur Freedlander -- American painter
Wikipedia - Arthur Grover Rider -- American painter
Wikipedia - Arthur Henry Knighton-Hammond -- English watercolour painter
Wikipedia - Arthur Millier -- American painter, etcher, printmaker, and art critic
Wikipedia - Arthur Milton Robins -- American painter and sculptor
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Wikipedia - Arthur R. M. Spaid -- American educator, school administrator, lecturer, and writer
Wikipedia - Arthur Schlageter -- Swiss sculptor and painter
Wikipedia - Arthur Studd -- English cricketer, painter and art collector
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Wikipedia - Artistic roller skating at the 2001 World Games - Pairs -- Artistic roller skating at the 2001 World Games in Akita
Wikipedia - Artists of the Tudor court -- painters and limners engaged by the Tudor dynasty between 1485 and 1603
Wikipedia - Art Madrid (Spain)
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Wikipedia - Arturo Roman -- Character in M-BM-+ Money Heist M-BM-;, a hostage and the Director of the Royal Mint of Spain.
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Wikipedia - Arvydas BagdM-EM->ius -- Lithuanian painter
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Wikipedia - Asaji Kobayashi -- Japanese painter
Wikipedia - Ascanio Magnanini -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Ashes (Munch) -- Painting by Edvard Munch
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Wikipedia - Ashley Collins -- American Contemporary Painting Icon
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Wikipedia - Asiatic-Pacific Campaign Medal -- American campaign medal
Wikipedia - Asit Kumar Haldar -- Indian painter of Bengal school (1890-1964)
Wikipedia - Asolo Altarpiece -- 1506 painting by Lorenzo Lotto
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Wikipedia - Assault of Thieves -- C. 1794 painting by Francisco de Goya
Wikipedia - Assumption Altarpiece -- C. 1530 painting by Moretto da Brescia
Wikipedia - Assumption of the Virgin (Carracci) -- Painting by Annibale Carracci, Prado
Wikipedia - Assumption of the Virgin (Cerasi Chapel) -- Painting by Annibale Carracci (Santa Maria del Popolo, Cappella Cerasi)
Wikipedia - Assumption of the Virgin Mary (Rubens, 1637) -- C. 1637 painting by Peter Paul Rubens
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Wikipedia - A Statue of Ceres -- Painting by Peter Paul Rubens
Wikipedia - As the Old Sang, So the Young Pipe (Jordaens, Antwerp) -- Painting by Jacob Jordaens
Wikipedia - Astorga Cathedral -- Roman Catholic church in Astorga, Spain
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Wikipedia - A Storm in the Rocky Mountains, Mt. Rosalie -- painting by Albert Bierstadt
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Wikipedia - Astri Welhaven Heiberg -- Norwegian painter (1881-1967)
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Wikipedia - Asturias -- Autonomous community and province of Spain
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Wikipedia - A Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte -- Painting by Georges Seurat
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Wikipedia - Ataxia -- Neurological impairment of voluntary muscle movement
Wikipedia - At Eternity's Gate -- Oil painting by Vincent van Gogh
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Wikipedia - Athenion of Maroneia -- 3rd-century BC Greek painter
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Wikipedia - A Treatise on Painting
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Wikipedia - Audrey Eyton -- English animal welfare campaigner and writer
Wikipedia - Audrius Dzikaras -- Lithuanian painter
Wikipedia - Augmentative and alternative communication -- Techniques used for those with communication impairments
Wikipedia - Augusta Metcalfe -- American painter
Wikipedia - August Babberger -- German painter
Wikipedia - August Bausch -- German painter
Wikipedia - August Becker (painter) -- German painter
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Wikipedia - Auguste Baillayre -- French painter
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Wikipedia - Auguste-Emile Pinchart -- French painter and designer
Wikipedia - Auguste-Louis de Rossel de Cercy -- French navy officer and painter
Wikipedia - Auguste Mambour -- Belgian painter
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Wikipedia - Auguste Philippe Marocco -- Monegasque painter
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Wikipedia - August Friedrich Schenck -- German painter
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Wikipedia - Automatic painting (robotic)
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Wikipedia - Autonomous communities of Spain -- First-level political and administrative division of Spain
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Wikipedia - Autonomy Charter of Puerto Rico -- Statute of Autonomy granted by Spain to Puerto Rico in 1897
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Wikipedia - Autumn (Manet) -- 1882 painting by Edouard Manet
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Wikipedia - Avenue of Poplars in Autumn -- Painting by Vincent van Gogh
Wikipedia - Aviaco Flight 118 -- 1973 plane crash in Spain
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Wikipedia - Axel Salzmann -- German pair skater
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Wikipedia - A Young Girl Reading -- Painting by Jean-Honore Fragonard
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Wikipedia - Azure (painting) -- 1928 painting by Gustave Van De Woestyne
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Wikipedia - Babeli Giezendanner -- Swiss painter
Wikipedia - Bacchanalia (painting) -- Painting by Peter Paul Rubens
Wikipedia - Bacchic Cassone -- Painting by Cima da Conegliano
Wikipedia - Bacchus (Rubens) -- Painting by Peter Paul Rubens
Wikipedia - Bacchus, Venus and Ariadne (Tintoretto) -- Painting by Tintoretto
Wikipedia - Bacino di San Marco from the Puntana della Dogana -- Painting by Canaletto (Pinacoteca di Brera)
Wikipedia - BackoffIndia -- Social media campaign
Wikipedia - Badia Polyptych -- painting by Giotto
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Wikipedia - Baeza, Spain
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Wikipedia - Baimaguan Fort -- Fort in the village of Fanzipai, north of Beijing
Wikipedia - Baku Carriage Repair Factory -- Azerbaijani company
Wikipedia - Bakumpai language -- Austronesian language spoken in Kalimantan, Indonesia
Wikipedia - Balazs Dioszegi -- Hungarian painter
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Wikipedia - Balearic Islands -- Archipelago in the Mediterranean, autonomous community, and province of Spain
Wikipedia - Ballistic foam -- Foam used in the manufacture and repair of aircraft
Wikipedia - Balraj Khanna -- Indian author and painter
Wikipedia - Balthasar Denner -- German painter
Wikipedia - Balthasar van den Bossche -- Belgian painter
Wikipedia - Balthasar van der Veen -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Balthasar van Meurs -- Flemish painter and draughtsman
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Wikipedia - Bank of Spain Building -- Historic building in Madrid, Spain
Wikipedia - Banksy -- Pseudonymous England-based graffiti artist, political activist, and painter
Wikipedia - Banned Books Week -- Annual awareness campaign
Wikipedia - Banquet in Silence (Marsden Hartley) -- Painting by Marsden Hartley
Wikipedia - Ba Nyan -- Burmese painter
Wikipedia - Baptism in Kansas -- Painting by John Steuart Curry
Wikipedia - Baptism of Christ (Annibale Carracci) -- Painting by Annibale Carracci
Wikipedia - Baptism of Christ (Bellini) -- Painting by Giovanni Bellini
Wikipedia - Barack Obama 2008 presidential campaign -- Campaign for the presidency of the United States
Wikipedia - Barack Obama 2012 presidential campaign
Wikipedia - Barack Obama presidential campaign, 2012
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Wikipedia - Barcelona Guitar Orchestra -- Classical guitar orchestra in Barcelona, Spain
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Wikipedia - Barcelona Metro line 10 -- Rapid transit line in Barcelona, Spain
Wikipedia - Barcelona Metro line 11 -- Rapid transit line in Barcelona, Spain
Wikipedia - Barcelona Metro line 1 -- Rapid transit line in Barcelona, Spain
Wikipedia - Barcelona Metro line 2 -- Rapid transit line in Barcelona, Spain
Wikipedia - Barcelona Metro line 3 -- Rapid transit line in Barcelona, Spain
Wikipedia - Barcelona Metro line 4 -- Rapid transit line in Barcelona, Spain
Wikipedia - Barcelona Metro line 5 -- Rapid transit line in Barcelona, Spain
Wikipedia - Barcelona Metro line 8 -- Rapid transit line in Barcelona, Spain
Wikipedia - Barcelona Metro line 9 -- Rapid transit line in Barcelona, Spain
Wikipedia - Barcelona Metro -- Rapid transit system in Barcelona, Spain
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Wikipedia - Bardi Madonna -- Painting by Sandro Botticelli
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Wikipedia - Barnstar -- Painted object or image, often in the shape of a five-pointed star but occasionally in a circular "wagon wheel" style, used to decorate a barn in some parts of the United States
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Wikipedia - Baroness Annetta Radovska -- Italian painter
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Wikipedia - Barrio Chino de Salamanca -- Former red-light district in Salamanca, Spain
Wikipedia - Barrio -- Neighborhood or district in Spain and in several Latin American countries
Wikipedia - Barse Miller -- American painter and art professor
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Wikipedia - BartholomM-CM-$us Zeitblom -- German painter
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Wikipedia - Bathers at Asnieres -- Painting by Georges Seurat
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Wikipedia - Battle of Boyaca -- Decisive battle in Bolivar's campaign to liberate New Granada
Wikipedia - Battle of Cabezon -- 1808 battle of the Pininsular War in Spain
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Wikipedia - Battle of Chamdo -- Military campaign by China to retake region in Tibet
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Wikipedia - Battle of Kampar -- Battle of the Malayan Campaign in World War II
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Wikipedia - Battle of Savo Island -- Naval battle of the Pacific Campaign of World War II
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Wikipedia - Ben Enwonwu -- Nigerian painter and sculptor (1917-1994)
Wikipedia - Ben Essers -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Benevides Juan Ramirez -- Spanish painter
Wikipedia - Bengt Tandberg -- Swedish painter
Wikipedia - Benidorm Island -- Islet and nature reserve of Spain
Wikipedia - Benjamin Okolski -- American pair skater
Wikipedia - Benjamin West -- 18th and 19th-century American painter
Wikipedia - Benny Carter (painter) -- American artist
Wikipedia - BenoM-CM-.t Alhoste -- French painter
Wikipedia - Benozzo Gozzoli -- Italian painter (c.1421-1497)
Wikipedia - Benvenuto Benvenuti -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Benvenuto di Giovanni -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Beohar Rammanohar Sinha -- Indian painter
Wikipedia - Berard-Jordana Agreement -- 1939 treaty between France and Spain
Wikipedia - Berbegal -- Municipality in Aragon, Spain
Wikipedia - Berberis gagnepainii -- Species of plant
Wikipedia - Berenson Madonna -- Painting by Domenico Veneziano
Wikipedia - Berger Paints -- Paint company
Wikipedia - Berlin Crucifixion -- Painting by Giotto di Bondone
Wikipedia - Bernard Cohen (painter) -- British painter
Wikipedia - Bernardino Bergognone -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Bernardino Bono -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Bernardino Brozzi -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Bernardino de Rossi -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Bernardino di Mariotto -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Bernardino Fasolo -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Bernardino Fergioni -- Dutch landscape painter and engraver ( c. 1629 - 1682)
Wikipedia - Bernardino Ferrari -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Bernardino Luini -- 16th century Italian painter (1475-1532)
Wikipedia - Bernard Lens I -- Dutch painter and writer of religious treatises
Wikipedia - Bernardo Cavallino -- Italian painter and draughtsman
Wikipedia - Bernardo Daddi -- 14th-century Italian Renaissance painter
Wikipedia - Bernardo de Iriarte (Goya) -- Painting by Francisco Goya
Wikipedia - Bernardo di Stefano Rosselli -- Italian painter (1450-1526)
Wikipedia - Bernardo Martorana -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Bernardo Polo -- Spanish painter
Wikipedia - Bernardo Regoliron -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Bernard Schultze -- German painter
Wikipedia - Bernard van Beek -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Bernard van Vlijmen -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Bernd Fasching -- Austrian painter and sculptor
Wikipedia - Bernhard Buhmann -- Austrian painter
Wikipedia - Bernhard Strigel -- German painter
Wikipedia - Bernhard von Neher -- German painter
Wikipedia - Bernie Bro -- Activist allegedly acting abusively in support of the Bernie Sanders campaign
Wikipedia - Bernie Sanders 2016 presidential campaign -- campaign by the Vermont Senator to become the 45th President of the United States
Wikipedia - Bernie Sanders 2020 presidential campaign -- Second presidential campaign of Bernie Sanders
Wikipedia - Bertha Fanning Taylor -- American painter
Wikipedia - Bertha Valerius -- Swedish photographer and painter
Wikipedia - Bertha van Hasselt -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Berthe Morisot with a Fan -- C, 1870 painting by Edouard Manet
Wikipedia - Bertholet Flemalle -- Liege Baroque painter (1614-1675)
Wikipedia - Bertold Loffler -- Austrian painter
Wikipedia - Bessie Davidson -- Australian painter
Wikipedia - Bessie MacNicol -- Scottish painter
Wikipedia - Betanzos -- Municipality in Galicia, Spain
Wikipedia - Betsy Westendorp-Osieck -- Dutch painter who was part of the Amsterdamse Joffers painting group
Wikipedia - Bettina Heinen-Ayech -- German painter
Wikipedia - Bettina Scholl-Sabbatini -- Luxembourgian sculptor, painter and ceramist
Wikipedia - Bettina Somers -- Canadian painter
Wikipedia - Betty Acquah -- Ghanaian feminist painter
Wikipedia - Betty de Courcy Ireland -- Irish campaigner, anti-war activist and socialist
Wikipedia - Betty Taylor (community advocate) -- Australian campaigner against domestic violence
Wikipedia - Bevilacqua-Lazise Altarpiece -- Painting by Paolo Veronese
Wikipedia - Beware of Luxury -- Painting by the Dutch painter Jan Steen
Wikipedia - Beyond Sorrow, Beyond Pain -- 1983 film
Wikipedia - Bhawanrao Shriniwasrao Pant Pratinidhi -- Indian maharaja and painter
Wikipedia - Biagio Martini -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Bianca Butler -- American pair skater
Wikipedia - Bibliography of American Civil War battles and campaigns -- Wikipedia bibliography
Wikipedia - Biblioteca Nacional de EspaM-CM-1a -- Public library in Madrid, Spain
Wikipedia - BiciMAD -- Public bicycle system in Madrid, Spain
Wikipedia - Biddende Maria -- painting by Quentin Matsys
Wikipedia - Bien de Interes Cultural -- Cultural property of Spain
Wikipedia - Bierzo Edict -- The Edict of Augustus from El Bierzo is a controversial document dated to 15 BC found in Spain in 1000 AD
Wikipedia - Big Brother Watch -- British non-profit campaign organisation established in 2009.
Wikipedia - Bigger Trees Near Warter -- Painting by David Hockney
Wikipedia - Bijay Biswaal -- Indian painter
Wikipedia - Biliary colic -- Medical condition in which gallstones cause acute pain
Wikipedia - Bill Alexander (painter) -- German painter and television host
Wikipedia - Billion Tree Tsunami -- Tree-planting campaign in Pakistan
Wikipedia - Binary relation -- Relationship between two sets, defined by a set of ordered pairs
Wikipedia - Binoculars -- Pair of telescopes mounted side-by-side
Wikipedia - Birmingham campaign -- American civil rights campaign in Alabama
Wikipedia - Birth control movement in the United States -- Social reform campaign beginning in 1914
Wikipedia - Birth of John the Baptist (Signorelli) -- tempera on panel painting
Wikipedia - Birthright Campaign Setting
Wikipedia - Birthright (campaign setting) -- Dungeons & Dragons fictional campaign setting
Wikipedia - Biruta Baumane -- Latvian painter
Wikipedia - Biscay -- Province of Spain
Wikipedia - Bitter Daisies -- Spanish actress a television dramatic series produced in Spain
Wikipedia - Bittino da Faenza -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Bjarne Ness -- Norwegian painter
Wikipedia - Bjarne Rise -- Norwegian painter
Wikipedia - B. K. S. Varma -- Indian painter
Wikipedia - Black Birders Week -- Campaign for diversity in birding, conservation, and the natural sciences
Wikipedia - Black-figure pottery -- Style of painting on ancient Greek vases
Wikipedia - BlackinChem -- Campaign for diversity in the chemical sciences
Wikipedia - Black Iris (painting) -- painting by Georgia O'Keeffe
Wikipedia - Black legend (Spain) -- Supposed anti-Spanish historiographical tendency
Wikipedia - Blackmoor (campaign setting) -- Dungeons & Dragons fictional campaign setting
Wikipedia - Black Night -- Original song written and composed by Deep Purple (Blackmore-Gillan-Glover-Lord-Paice)
Wikipedia - Blackout Day -- Digital social campaign occurring on a seasonal basis
Wikipedia - Black Square (painting) -- Painting by Kazimir Malevich
Wikipedia - Blackwall Tunnel -- Pair of road tunnels underneath the River Thames in London
Wikipedia - Blame It -- 2009 single by Jamie Foxx featuring T-Pain
Wikipedia - Blanche Baker (painter) -- English artist
Wikipedia - Blanche Hennebutte-Feillet -- French lithographer and painter
Wikipedia - Blas de Ledesma -- Spanish painter
Wikipedia - Blessed Jacopone da Todi (painting) -- 1436 painting by Paolo Uccello
Wikipedia - Blest Pair of Sirens -- Choral composition by Hubert Parry
Wikipedia - Blind Man's Bluff (Fragonard, 1750) -- Painting by Jean-Honore Fragonard
Wikipedia - Blindness and education -- Education of students with vision impairment
Wikipedia - Blonde Bather -- Two paintings (1881, 1882) by Auguste Renoir
Wikipedia - Blue Lab -- Campaign consulting company
Wikipedia - Blue Nude (Souvenir de Biskra) -- Painting by Henri Matisse
Wikipedia - Blue Pacific (Streeton) -- Painting by Arthur Streeton
Wikipedia - Blue Ribbon Pairs
Wikipedia - Blue Waters -- Supercomputer at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, United States
Wikipedia - Blunts Wood and Paiges Meadow -- Nature reserve in West Sussex
Wikipedia - BM-EM-^Yetislav BartoM-EM-! -- Czech painter
Wikipedia - Boadilla Centro (Madrid Metro) -- Spain station
Wikipedia - Bobby Goldsboro -- Singer-songwriter, guitarist, painter, television producer
Wikipedia - Bob Walls -- New Zealand painter
Wikipedia - Bocca Baciata -- 1859 painting by Dante Gabriel Rossetti
Wikipedia - Bogna KrasnodM-DM-^Ybska-Gardowska -- Polish painter
Wikipedia - Boleslaw Surallo -- Polish painter
Wikipedia - Boleslovas Klova -- Lithuanian painter
Wikipedia - Bolognini Madonna -- Painting by Antonio da Correggio
Wikipedia - Bombing of Singapore (1944-1945) -- Military campaign conducted by the Allied air forces during World War II
Wikipedia - Bonaparte Crossing the Alps -- 1850 painting by Paul Delaroche
Wikipedia - Bonaparte Visiting the Plague Victims of Jaffa -- 1804 painting by Antoine-Jean Gros
Wikipedia - Bonaria Manca -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Bonaventura Genelli -- German painter
Wikipedia - Books for the Blind -- United States program that provides audiobooks to the visually impaired
Wikipedia - Books in Spain -- Overview of books in Spain
Wikipedia - Borghese di Piero Borghese -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Boris Kustodiev -- Russian painter and stage designer
Wikipedia - Boris Lavrenko -- Russian realist painter
Wikipedia - Boris Zernikow -- German pediatrician specialiced in pain management
Wikipedia - Borneo campaign -- Last major Allied campaign in the South West Pacific Area during World War II
Wikipedia - Borys Buryak -- Ukrainian painter
Wikipedia - Bought and Paid For (1916 film) -- 1916 silent film
Wikipedia - Bought and Paid For -- 1922 film by William C. deMille
Wikipedia - Bourmond Byron -- Haitian painter
Wikipedia - Bowline on a bight -- Knot that makes a pair of fixed-size loops in the middle of a rope
Wikipedia - Boyan (bard) -- Bard mentioned in the Rus' epic The Lay of Igor's Campaign
Wikipedia - Boy Bitten by a Crayfish -- copy of a lost painting by Caravaggio
Wikipedia - Boycott Russian Films -- Ukrainian civic campaign
Wikipedia - Boycotts of Chinese products -- Campaigns that advocates a boycott of products sourced from China
Wikipedia - Boyd Elder -- American painter
Wikipedia - Boy with a Dog -- Painting by Bartolome Esteban Murillo
Wikipedia - Bracha L. Ettinger -- Israeli artist, painter, photographer, theorist and psychoanalyst
Wikipedia - Brad Paisley -- American country music singer
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Wikipedia - Bradshaw rock paintings
Wikipedia - Braille -- Tactile writing system for blind and visually impaired people
Wikipedia - Brand Israel -- Israeli government public relations campaign
Wikipedia - Brandon Frazier -- American pair skater
Wikipedia - Brasil Sem Homophobia -- Pro-LGBT campaign established by the Brazilian government
Wikipedia - Brazilian Western -- 2013 film directed by Rene Sampaio
Wikipedia - Breaking Home Ties -- painting by Norman Rockwell
Wikipedia - Breaking the News (painting) -- 1887 painting by John Longstaff
Wikipedia - Bree Despain -- American author
Wikipedia - Breezing Up (A Fair Wind) -- Painting by Winslow Homer
Wikipedia - Brenda Boardman -- British academic and policy campaigner
Wikipedia - Brenda Bury -- English painter
Wikipedia - Brenda Kamino -- Canadian actress, writer, director, teacher and painter
Wikipedia - Breton Peasant Women -- Painting by Paul Gauguin
Wikipedia - Brian Clarke -- British architectural artist and painter
Wikipedia - Brian Dunlop -- Australian painter
Wikipedia - Brian Johnson (figure skater) -- American pair skater
Wikipedia - Brian Wilson is a genius -- Promotional campaign for the Beach Boys' leader
Wikipedia - Bridal Procession on the Hardangerfjord -- Norwegian painting by Hans Gude and Adolph Tidemand
Wikipedia - Bride price -- Money or other form of wealth paid by a groom or his family to the family of the bride
Wikipedia - Bridget Flannery -- Irish painter
Wikipedia - Bridget Riley -- British painter
Wikipedia - Brigette Lundy-Paine -- American actor
Wikipedia - Brigid Ganly -- Irish painter and sculptor
Wikipedia - Brigitta Westphal -- German painter
Wikipedia - Brindavanam (2010 film) -- 2010 film by Vamshi Paidipally
Wikipedia - Bristoe campaign -- Military campaign in Virginia during the U.S. Civil War
Wikipedia - Britain Stronger in Europe -- Lobbying group that campaigned for the United Kingdom to remain in the European Union in the 2016 British referendum
Wikipedia - British Auxiliary Legion -- British military force sent to Spain in the First Carlist War
Wikipedia - British logistics in the Normandy campaign -- British logistics during the WWII campaign
Wikipedia - Britomart Redeems Faire Amoret -- Oil painting on canvas by William Etty
Wikipedia - Brittany Jones -- Canadian pair skater
Wikipedia - Brittany Vise -- American pair skater
Wikipedia - Broadway Boogie Woogie -- Painting by Piet Mondrian
Wikipedia - Broken heart -- Metaphor for intense emotional/physical stress or pain one feels at experiencing longing
Wikipedia - Bronwyn King -- Australian oncologist and anti-tobacco campaigner
Wikipedia - Bronzino -- Italian Mannerist painter (1503-1572)
Wikipedia - Brooke Castile -- American former competitive pair skater
Wikipedia - Brothel Scene -- Painting by Frans van Mieris the Elder
Wikipedia - Bruno Ceccobelli -- Italian painter and sculptor
Wikipedia - Bruno Dutot -- Australian painter
Wikipedia - Bruno Lenz -- German painter and violinist
Wikipedia - Bruno Pais -- Portuguese triathlete
Wikipedia - Bryan Organ -- English portrait painter
Wikipedia - Bryce Chudak -- Canadian pair skater
Wikipedia - Bryce Davison -- American-Canadian pair skater
Wikipedia - Brynn Carman -- American pair skater
Wikipedia - Buddy film -- Film genre in which two people of the same sex (historically men) are non-romantically paired.
Wikipedia - Buenavista Lighthouse -- Lighthouse on Tenerife, Spain
Wikipedia - Bueno de Paiva -- Former Vice President of Brazil
Wikipedia - Bulb Fields -- Painting by Vincent van Gogh
Wikipedia - Bullfight - Death of the Bull -- Painting by Edouard Manet
Wikipedia - Bullfight (Manet) -- Painting by Edouard Manet
Wikipedia - Bunji Miura -- Japanese painter
Wikipedia - Buono de' Buoni -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Buprenorphine -- Opioid used to treat opioid addiction and dependence, acute pain, and chronic pain
Wikipedia - Buqajeh-ye Pain -- Village in Golestan, Iran
Wikipedia - Burguillos de Toledo -- Municipality in Castile-La Mancha, Spain
Wikipedia - Burma campaign -- Series of battles fought in the British colony of Burma, South-East Asian theatre of World War II
Wikipedia - Burma Star -- Military campaign medal for subjects of the British Commonwealth who served in the Burma Campaign
Wikipedia - Burnt Candlemas -- English military campaign
Wikipedia - Burt Lancon -- American pair skater
Wikipedia - Burt Procter -- American painter
Wikipedia - Butcher's Shop -- Painting by Annibale Carracci in Christ Church, Oxford
Wikipedia - Byrd Mock -- American painter
Wikipedia - Byte pair encoding -- Data compression
Wikipedia - Cabaret Scene -- Painting by Salvador Dali
Wikipedia - Cabo Prior Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Spain
Wikipedia - Cadiz -- Municipality in Andalusia, Spain
Wikipedia - Caeretan hydria -- Ancient Greek painted vase, belonging to the black-figure style
Wikipedia - Caesar van Everdingen -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Cafe del Mar -- Bar in Ibiza, Spain
Wikipedia - Cafe Neon (Night) -- Painting by Yannis Tsarouchis
Wikipedia - Cafe Terrace at Night -- Painting by Vincent van Gogh
Wikipedia - Cai Jin -- Chinese painter
Wikipedia - Caitlin Connolly -- American painter and sculptor
Wikipedia - Caitlin Fields -- American pair skater
Wikipedia - Caitlin Keogh -- American painter
Wikipedia - Caitlin Yankowskas -- American pair skater
Wikipedia - Caldo galego -- Soup dish from Galicia, Spain
Wikipedia - Caldoveiro Peak -- Mountain in Asturias, Northern Spain
Wikipedia - Calella Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Catalonia, Spain
Wikipedia - California Scene Painting -- American regionalist art movement
Wikipedia - California Spring (painting) -- 1875 oil painting by Albert Bierstadt
Wikipedia - Caliphal Baths -- Historic site in Cordoba, Spain
Wikipedia - Callao affair -- Series of naval incidents between Spain and the U.S. during the Peruvian War of Independence
Wikipedia - Calla Urbanski -- American pair skater
Wikipedia - Calle Mayor (Madrid) -- Street in Madrid, Spain
Wikipedia - Calpain -- Protease enzyme present in mammals and other organisms
Wikipedia - Calvary (Amstel) -- Painting by Jan van Amstel
Wikipedia - Calvary (Antonello da Messina) -- Painting by Antonello da Messina
Wikipedia - Calvary of Hendrik van Rijn -- 14th c. panel painting
Wikipedia - Camarillas Formation -- Geological formation in Teruel and La Rioja, Spain
Wikipedia - CaM-CM-1on del Rio Lobos Natural Park -- Natural park in Spain
Wikipedia - Camel (in rhythmic landscape with trees) -- Painting by Paul Klee
Wikipedia - Camila Soato -- Brazilian painter
Wikipedia - Camil Bofill -- Spanish Catalan painter and sculptor
Wikipedia - Camille Flers -- French painter
Wikipedia - Camille Graeser -- Swiss painter
Wikipedia - Camille Lemonnier in the Artist's Studio -- Painting by Alfred Stevens
Wikipedia - Camille Pissarro -- French painter
Wikipedia - Camille Roqueplan -- French painter
Wikipedia - Camille van Mulders -- Belgian painter
Wikipedia - Camillo Berlinghieri -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Camillo Boccaccino -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Camillo Gabrielli -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Camillo Gioja Barbera -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Camillo Guerra -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Camillo Innocenti -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Camillo Miola -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Camino de Santiago -- Pilgrimage routes to Santiago de Compostela, Spain
Wikipedia - Cammell Laird -- British shipbuilding & repair company
Wikipedia - Campaign Against Home and Water Taxes
Wikipedia - Campaign Against Living Miserably
Wikipedia - Campaign Against Moral Persecution -- LGBT activism group
Wikipedia - Campaign Against Psychiatric Abuse
Wikipedia - Campaign button
Wikipedia - Campaign for a More Prosperous Britain -- Defunct political party in the United Kingdom
Wikipedia - Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament -- British organisation advocating unilateral nuclear disarmament
Wikipedia - Campaign for Real Ale -- British consumer organisation promoting traditional pubs, real ale and real cider
Wikipedia - Campaign for Science and Engineering -- Organization
Wikipedia - Campaign for the neologism "santorum" -- Campaign to create the neologism "santorum" started in 2003 by LGBT rights activist Dan Savage
Wikipedia - Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids -- American anti-tobacco organization
Wikipedia - Campaign hat -- Broad-brimmed felt or straw hat, with a high crown, pinched symmetrically at the four corners
Wikipedia - Campaign history of the Roman military
Wikipedia - Campaign Life Coalition -- Canadian political lobbyist organization
Wikipedia - Campaign (magazine) -- Global business magazine
Wikipedia - Campaign medal
Wikipedia - Campaign of Danture -- Portuguese military campaign against the Kingdom of Kandy
Wikipedia - Campaign of the Carolinas -- Military campaign during the American Civil War
Wikipedia - Campaign setting -- Fictional environment setting for a role-playing game
Wikipedia - Campaign shields (Wehrmacht) -- German World War II campaign award
Wikipedia - Campaigns of 1792 in the French Revolutionary Wars
Wikipedia - Campaigns of 1793 in the French Revolutionary Wars
Wikipedia - Campaigns of 1794 in the French Revolutionary Wars
Wikipedia - Campaigns of 1795 in the French Revolutionary Wars
Wikipedia - Campaigns of 1796 in the French Revolutionary Wars
Wikipedia - Campaigns of 1797 in the French Revolutionary Wars
Wikipedia - Campaigns of 1798 in the French Revolutionary Wars
Wikipedia - Campaigns of 1799 in the French Revolutionary Wars
Wikipedia - Campaigns of 1800 in the French Revolutionary Wars
Wikipedia - Campaigns of 1801 in the French Revolutionary Wars
Wikipedia - Campaign streamer
Wikipedia - Campaign to Bring Back British Rail -- Advocacy group for Transport and Public ownership, based in the United Kingdom
Wikipedia - Campaign to Suppress Counterrevolutionaries -- Chinese political campaign
Wikipedia - Campaign Zero -- American police reform campaign
Wikipedia - Campillo de DueM-CM-1as -- Place in Guadalajara, Spain
Wikipedia - Campo de Rugby Las Terrazas -- Rugby union stadium in Madrid, Spain
Wikipedia - Canadian Xtreme Paintball League -- X-Ball league
Wikipedia - Canal 4 Navarra -- Former TV channel in Navarra, Spain
Wikipedia - Canaletto -- Italian painter of landscapes (1697-1768)
Wikipedia - Canal Hollywood -- Television channel in Spain and Portugal
Wikipedia - Canal Sur 2 -- Public television channel of Andalucia, Spain
Wikipedia - Canberra distance -- A numerical measure of the distance between pairs of points in a vector space
Wikipedia - Canchal de la Ceja -- Mountain in Spain
Wikipedia - Cancho Roano -- Cultural property in Zalamea de la Serena, Spain
Wikipedia - Candace Jones -- Canadian pair skater
Wikipedia - Candaules, King of Lydia, Shews his Wife by Stealth to Gyges, One of his Ministers, as She Goes to Bed -- 1830 painting by William Etty
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Spain -- Use of cannabis in Spain
Wikipedia - Cannabis use disorder -- Continued use of cannabis despite clinically significant impairment
Wikipedia - Cannon Rock (painting) -- Painting by Winslow Homer
Wikipedia - Cantabrian cream cheese -- Cheese made from the milk of Friesian cows in Cantabria, in northern Spain
Wikipedia - Cantabrian Mountains -- Mountain range in Spain
Wikipedia - Cantabrian Sea -- Sea in the southern Bay of Biscay off the coast of Spain
Wikipedia - Cantabria -- Autonomous community and province of Spain
Wikipedia - Canto Collection -- Series of paintings
Wikipedia - Canyelles (neighbourhood) -- In Barcelona, Spain
Wikipedia - Caoutchouc (Picabia) -- 1909 painting by Francis Picabia
Wikipedia - Cap d'Artrutx Lighthouse -- Lighthouse on Menorca, Spain
Wikipedia - Cape Higuer Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Gipuzkoa, Basque Country, Spain
Wikipedia - Capilla del Cristo de la Alameda (Algeciras) -- Church building in Cadiz Province, Spain
Wikipedia - Capitulations of Santa Fe -- Signed document between Christopher Columbus and the rulers of Spain
Wikipedia - Carabanchel Bajo -- Former municipality of Spain
Wikipedia - Cardinal del Portogallo Altarpiece -- Painting by Piero and Antonio del Pollaiolo
Wikipedia - Carel Fabritius -- Painter from the Northern Netherlands
Wikipedia - Carel van Falens -- Flemish painter, (b. 1683, d. 1733)
Wikipedia - Cares -- River in Spain
Wikipedia - Carey Clarke -- Irish academic figurative painter
Wikipedia - Caritas (Lucas Cranach the Elder) -- Painting by Lucas Cranach the Elder
Wikipedia - Caritas Romana (de Crayer, 1645) -- Painting by Gaspar de Crayer
Wikipedia - Caritas Romana (de Crayer) -- Painting by Gaspar de Crayer
Wikipedia - Carl Abrahams -- Jamaican painter
Wikipedia - Carl Andreas August Goos -- German-Danish painter
Wikipedia - Carl Arp -- German landscape painter
Wikipedia - Carl Baagoe -- Danish painter
Wikipedia - Carl Bloch -- Danish painter (1834-1890)
Wikipedia - Carl Breitbach -- German painter
Wikipedia - Carl Conjola -- German landscape painter
Wikipedia - Carl Eggers -- German painter
Wikipedia - Carle Hessay -- German-Canadian painter
Wikipedia - Carles Puigdemont -- Politician from Catalonia, Spain
Wikipedia - Carl Eugen Keel -- Swiss painter
Wikipedia - Carl Georg Christian Schumacher -- German painter
Wikipedia - Carl Georg Enslen -- German painter
Wikipedia - Carl Gunne -- Swedish painter
Wikipedia - Carlist Wars -- Series of civil wars in 19th-century Spain.
Wikipedia - Carl Moll -- Austrian painter
Wikipedia - Carlo Allegretti -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Carlo Antonio Buffagnotti -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Carlo Arienti -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Carlo Ascenzi -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Carlo Balestrini -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Carlo Braccesco -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Carlo Canella -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Carlo Cornara -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Carlo Cozza -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Carlo Crivelli -- Italian Renaissance painter
Wikipedia - Carlo Dolci -- Italian painter (1616-1686)
Wikipedia - Carlo E. Lischetti -- Swiss painter
Wikipedia - Carlo Ernesto Liverati -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Carl Offterdinger -- German painter
Wikipedia - Carlo Jotti -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Carlo Landriani -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Carlo Mancini -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Carlo Maratta -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Carlo Martini -- Italian painter and academician
Wikipedia - Carlo Mazza -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Carlo Natali -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Carlo Pellegrini (19th-century painter) -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Carlo Romagnoli -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Carlo Rosa -- Italian painter (1613-1678)
Wikipedia - Carlos Botelho -- Portuguese painter and cartoonist (1899-1982)
Wikipedia - Carlos de Haes -- Spanish painter from Belgium
Wikipedia - Carlos Luis de Ribera y Fieve -- Spanish painter
Wikipedia - Carlos Schwabe -- Swiss painter and printmaker
Wikipedia - Carlos Sotomayor -- Chilean painter
Wikipedia - Carlota Joaquina of Spain
Wikipedia - Carlo Testi -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Carl Otto Muller -- German painter
Wikipedia - Carlo Vitale -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Carl Reiser -- German painter
Wikipedia - Carl Rochling -- German painter and illustrator
Wikipedia - Carl Schindler -- Austrian painter
Wikipedia - Carl SkM-CM-%nberg -- Swedish painter
Wikipedia - Carl Sprinchorn -- American painter
Wikipedia - Carl Walter Liner -- Swiss painter
Wikipedia - Carly Fiorina 2016 presidential campaign -- Campaign for US presidency
Wikipedia - Carmel McConnell -- British author and campaigner
Wikipedia - Carmelo de Arzadun -- Uruguayan painter
Wikipedia - Carmelo Palomino Kayser -- Spanish poet and painter
Wikipedia - Carmen Selves -- Spanish painter
Wikipedia - Carmignano Visitation -- C. 1530 painting by Pontormo
Wikipedia - Carole Dekeijser -- Belgian painter
Wikipedia - Carole Ormaca -- American pair skater
Wikipedia - Caroline Armington -- Canadian painter
Wikipedia - Caroline Friederike Friedrich -- German painter
Wikipedia - Caroline Osborne, Duchess of Leeds -- British painter and the last Duchess of Leeds
Wikipedia - Caroline Peart -- American portrait painter
Wikipedia - Caroline Pounds -- Irish botanical painter in Australia
Wikipedia - Caroline Swagers -- French painter
Wikipedia - Caroline Sylvia Gabriel -- British artist and painter
Wikipedia - Carol Rhodes -- British painter
Wikipedia - Carriage Repair Workshop, Harnaut -- Indian rail repair facility
Wikipedia - Carrizozo Malpais -- Large lava flow west of Carrizozo, New Mexico
Wikipedia - Carsten Eggers -- German sculptor and painter
Wikipedia - Cartagena (Spain)
Wikipedia - Cartagena, Spain
Wikipedia - Car Talk -- Long-running NPR talk show about cars and automotive repair
Wikipedia - Cartan pair -- A technical condition on a reductive Lie algebra and a subalgebra
Wikipedia - Cart with Black Ox -- Painting by Vincent van Gogh
Wikipedia - Cart with Red and White Ox -- Painting by Vincent van Gogh
Wikipedia - Casa Batllo -- Building by Antoni Gaudi in Barcelona, Spain
Wikipedia - Casa Bonet (Barcelona) -- House in Barcelona, Spain
Wikipedia - Casa de Campo (Madrid) -- Ward of Madrid in Spain
Wikipedia - Casa de Campo -- Cultural property in Madrid y Pozuelo de Alarcon, Spain
Wikipedia - Casa de Velazquez -- French cultural institution in Madrid, Spain
Wikipedia - Casa Mila -- Building in Barcelona, Spain
Wikipedia - Casa Mulleras -- House in Barcelona, Spain
Wikipedia - Casa Sindical -- Building in Madrid, Spain
Wikipedia - Case Concerning Barcelona Traction, Light, and Power Company, Ltd -- International law case between the nations of Belgium and Spain
Wikipedia - Caspar David Friedrich -- German Romantic landscape painter (1774-1840)
Wikipedia - Caspar Wolf -- Swiss painter
Wikipedia - Cassandre -- Ukrainian-French painter and designer
Wikipedia - Cassie Andrews -- American pair skater
Wikipedia - Castelar e Nelson Dantas no Pais dos Generais -- 2007 film directed by Carlos Alberto Prates Correia
Wikipedia - Castelfiorentino Madonna -- C. 1283 painting by Cimabue
Wikipedia - Castera Bazile -- Haitian painter
Wikipedia - Castile and Leon -- Autonomous community of Spain
Wikipedia - Castilla-La Mancha -- Autonomous community of Spain
Wikipedia - Castillo de Alba (Quiros) -- Spanish fortress in Quiros, Asturias, Spain
Wikipedia - Castle of Arnedo -- Castle in La Rioja, Spain
Wikipedia - Castle of Ayora -- Cultural property in Ayora, Spain
Wikipedia - Castle of Cornago -- Castle in La Rioja, Spain
Wikipedia - Castle of Quel -- Castle in La Rioja, Spain
Wikipedia - Castle of Santa Catalina (Jaen) -- Cultural property in Jaen, Spain
Wikipedia - Castle of Zafra (Guadalajara) -- Castle in Guadalajara, Spain
Wikipedia - Castle of Zahara de los Atunes and Palace of Jadraza -- Medieval castle in Barbate, Spain
Wikipedia - Castles in Spain (film) -- 1920 film
Wikipedia - Catalan declaration of independence -- Internationally unrecognised October 2017 announcement by which the Parliament of Catalonia unilaterally declared the independence of Catalonia from Spain
Wikipedia - Catalan Institute of Nanotechnology -- Research center in Spain
Wikipedia - Catalans -- People from Catalonia, Spain
Wikipedia - Catalonia Offensive -- 1938-1939 campaign in the Spanish Civil War
Wikipedia - Catalonia, Spain
Wikipedia - Catalonia -- Autonomous community in northeastern Spain
Wikipedia - Catatumbo campaign -- War between militia groups in Colombia's Catatumbo region over drug trade
Wikipedia - Category:12th-century painters
Wikipedia - Category:14th-century painters
Wikipedia - Category:15th-century Italian painters
Wikipedia - Category:15th-century painters
Wikipedia - Category:18th-century German painters
Wikipedia - Category:19th-century English painters
Wikipedia - Category:19th-century German painters
Wikipedia - Category:19th-century Indian painters
Wikipedia - Category:20th-century American painters
Wikipedia - Category:20th-century English painters
Wikipedia - Category:20th-century Finnish painters
Wikipedia - Category:20th-century German painters
Wikipedia - Category:20th-century Indian painters
Wikipedia - Category:20th-century Lebanese painters
Wikipedia - Category:20th-century painters of the Ottoman Empire
Wikipedia - Category:20th-century Tibetan painters
Wikipedia - Category:21st-century American painters
Wikipedia - Category:21st century in Galicia (Spain)
Wikipedia - Category:21st century in La Rioja (Spain)
Wikipedia - Category:21st century in Spain
Wikipedia - Category 4 cable -- Unshielded twisted pair cable used in telephone wiring, designed to reliably carry data up to 16 Mbit/s
Wikipedia - Category:8th-century Chinese painters
Wikipedia - Category:American male painters
Wikipedia - Category:Art Nouveau painters
Wikipedia - Category:Burials in Spain
Wikipedia - Category:Catholic Church in Spain
Wikipedia - Category:Chinese portrait painters
Wikipedia - Category:Cultural history of Spain
Wikipedia - Category:Drug-related suicides in Spain
Wikipedia - Category:English male painters
Wikipedia - Category:English romantic painters
Wikipedia - Category:Female saints of medieval Spain
Wikipedia - Category:German expatriates in Spain
Wikipedia - Category:German landscape painters
Wikipedia - Category:German male painters
Wikipedia - Category:German romantic painters
Wikipedia - Category:Hungarian expatriates in Spain
Wikipedia - Category:Indian male painters
Wikipedia - Category:Indian portrait painters
Wikipedia - Category:Italian male painters
Wikipedia - Category:Italian Renaissance painters
Wikipedia - Category:Japanese painting
Wikipedia - Category:Knights of the Golden Fleece of Spain
Wikipedia - Category:Languages of Spain
Wikipedia - Category:Medieval Russian painters
Wikipedia - Category:Painters from Shanxi
Wikipedia - Category:Painters from West Bengal
Wikipedia - Category:Paintings depicting Agatha of Sicily
Wikipedia - Category:Paintings of Benedict of Nursia
Wikipedia - Category:Painting techniques
Wikipedia - Category:Pain
Wikipedia - Category:People executed by New Spain
Wikipedia - Category:People from Cartagena, Spain
Wikipedia - Category:People from Crdoba, Spain
Wikipedia - Category:People from Painesville, Ohio
Wikipedia - Category:People of New Spain
Wikipedia - Category:Romanian painters
Wikipedia - Category:Russian icon painters
Wikipedia - Category:Russian male painters
Wikipedia - Category:Russian painters
Wikipedia - Category:Spain stubs
Wikipedia - Category:Swiss painters
Wikipedia - Category:Symbolist painters
Wikipedia - Category:Tang dynasty painters
Wikipedia - Category:Tibetan painters
Wikipedia - Category:Victims of anti-religious campaign in the Soviet Union
Wikipedia - Category:Wikipedia articles with undisclosed paid content from January 2021
Wikipedia - Cathedrals in Spain -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - Catherine Brass Yates -- Painting by Gilbert Stuart
Wikipedia - Catherine da Costa -- English miniature painter
Wikipedia - Catherine Engelhart Amyot -- Danish painter
Wikipedia - Catherine Everett (painter) -- Canadian abstract painter
Wikipedia - Catholic Church in Spain
Wikipedia - Catholic Monarchs of Spain -- Title for Queen Isabella I of Castile and King Ferdinand II of Aragon
Wikipedia - Caucasus Army (Russian Empire, 1914-1917) -- Russian field army that fought in the Caucasus Campaign and Persian Campaign of World War I
Wikipedia - Caucasus Campaign (1735) -- Part of the Ottoman-Persian war (1730-35)
Wikipedia - Cavalcade Painter -- Ancient Greek vase painter
Wikipedia - Cave del Valle (Cantabria) -- Cave and archaeological site in Spain
Wikipedia - Cave of Altamira -- Cave and archaeological site with prehistoric paintings in Spain
Wikipedia - Cave of Altxerri -- Cave and archaeological site with prehistoric paintings in Spain
Wikipedia - Cave of Bacinete -- Cave and archaeological site in Spain
Wikipedia - Cave of Bedmar -- Cave and archaeological site in Spain
Wikipedia - Cave of Chufin -- Cave and archaeological site with prehistoric paintings in Spain
Wikipedia - Cave of El Castillo -- Cave and archaeological site with prehistoric paintings in Spain
Wikipedia - Cave of El Toro -- Cave and archaeological site in Spain
Wikipedia - Cave of La Pasiega -- Cave and archaeological site with prehistoric paintings in Spain
Wikipedia - Cave of Los Aviones -- Cave and archaeological site in Spain
Wikipedia - Cave of Maltravieso -- Cave and archaeological site in Spain
Wikipedia - Cave of NiM-CM-1o -- Cave and archaeological site in Spain
Wikipedia - Cave of the Angel -- Cave and archaeological site in Spain
Wikipedia - Cave of the Barranc del Migdia -- Cave and archaeological site in Spain
Wikipedia - Cave painting -- Paintings, often prehistoric, on cave walls and ceilings
Wikipedia - Caves in Cantabria -- Caves with prehistoric paintings in Spain
Wikipedia - Caves of Monte Castillo -- Caves with prehistoric art in Spain
Wikipedia - Caves of Nerja -- Cave and archaeological site in Spain
Wikipedia - Caydee Denney -- American pair skater
Wikipedia - CBF Malaga Costa del Sol -- Women's handball team from Malaga, Spain
Wikipedia - CBS Cares -- Television public service announcement campaign
Wikipedia - Cecil Aldin -- British painter and illustrator
Wikipedia - Cecile Bart -- French painter and visual artist
Wikipedia - Cecilia Seghizzi -- Italian painter and composer
Wikipedia - Cecil King (British painter) -- British painter
Wikipedia - Cecil King (Irish painter) -- Irish artist
Wikipedia - Cecil Maguire -- Irish landscape and figure painter
Wikipedia - Cecil Ross Burnett -- British painter
Wikipedia - Cecily Brennan -- Irish painter and sculptor
Wikipedia - Cecily Briant -- British painter
Wikipedia - Cedric Blanpain -- Belgian physician
Wikipedia - Cedric Monod -- Swiss pair skater
Wikipedia - Cees Bolding -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Cega (river) -- River in Spain
Wikipedia - Celebrity branding -- Form of advertising campaign or marketing strategy
Wikipedia - Celeste Dupuy-Spencer -- American painter
Wikipedia - Celina Runeborg -- Swedish painter and map engraver
Wikipedia - Celtiberian Range -- Area of Spain
Wikipedia - Celtic settlement of Southeast Europe -- Military campaign by Celtic peoples in southeastern Europe
Wikipedia - Cementerio de la Almudena -- Cemetery in Madrid, Spain
Wikipedia - Cementerio de San Justo -- Cemetery in Madrid, Spain
Wikipedia - Cenia (river) -- River in Spain
Wikipedia - CenM-DM-^[k DobiaM-EM-! -- Czech painter
Wikipedia - Censorship in Spain -- Suppression of speech in the southwestern European country
Wikipedia - Centenario Bridge -- Bridge in Spain
Wikipedia - Central Syria campaign (2017)
Wikipedia - Centre Independent Aragonese Candidacy -- Defunct regionalist party in Aragon, Spain
Wikipedia - Centro district (Cordoba) -- Administrative district in Cordoba, Spain
Wikipedia - Centro (Madrid) -- District of Madrid in Spain
Wikipedia - Cephalus and Procris (Veronese) -- Painting by Paolo Veronese
Wikipedia - Cercanias Madrid -- Commuter rail service serving Madrid, Spain
Wikipedia - Cercanias San Sebastian -- Commuter railway in San Sebastian, Basque Country, Spain
Wikipedia - Cerdanyola Art Museum -- Art museum in Cerdanyola del Valles, Spain
Wikipedia - Cerro de Gorria -- Mountain in Spain
Wikipedia - Cerro del Bu -- Cultural property in Toledo, Spain
Wikipedia - Cerro del Lucero -- Mountain in Spain
Wikipedia - Cesare Arbasia -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Cesare Aretusi -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Cesare Balbi di Robecco -- Italian painter (1854-1939)
Wikipedia - Cesare Bassano -- Italian painter and engraver
Wikipedia - Cesare Bertolotti -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Cesare Gennari -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Cesare Maccari -- Italian painter and sculptor
Wikipedia - Cesare Maffei -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Cesare Maggi -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Cesare Mariani -- Italian painter (1826-1901)
Wikipedia - Cesare Monti (painter) -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Cesare Rossetti -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Cesare Viazzi -- Italian painter (1857-1943)
Wikipedia - Cesina Bermudes -- Obstetrics pioneer and anti-authoritarian campaigner in Portugal
Wikipedia - Chabad mitzvah campaigns -- Chabad mitzvah campaign
Wikipedia - Chadpai Wildlife Sanctuary -- Wildlife sanctuary in Bangladesh
Wikipedia - Chak-pur -- Traditional tools used in Tibetan sandpainting to produce mandalas
Wikipedia - ChallengeAccepted -- Instagram tagged challenge, awareness campaign
Wikipedia - Champaign County Courthouse (Ohio) -- local government building in the United States
Wikipedia - Champaign County, Ohio -- County in Ohio, US
Wikipedia - Champaign, Illinois
Wikipedia - Champaign-Urbana Community Wireless Network
Wikipedia - Champaign-Urbana Courier -- American newspaper serving Champaign County, Illinois
Wikipedia - Champaign-Urbana Metropolitan Area
Wikipedia - Champai Soren -- Cabinet Minister in Government of Jharkhand
Wikipedia - Chamras Kietkong -- Thai portrait painter
Wikipedia - Chana Kowalska -- Jewish Polish painter
Wikipedia - Chancel repair liability -- Legal obligation on some property owners in England and Wales
Wikipedia - Changi Murals -- A series of five WWII paintings by Stanley Warren
Wikipedia - Changkya Rolpai Dorje
Wikipedia - Chanoir -- French-Colombian painter
Wikipedia - Chapai Nawabganj-1 -- Constituency of Bangladesh's Jatiya Sangsad
Wikipedia - Chapai Nawabganj-2 -- Constituency of Bangladesh's Jatiya Sangsad
Wikipedia - Chapai Nawabganj-3 -- Constituency of Bangladesh's Jatiya Sangsad
Wikipedia - Chappie Angulo -- American-Mexican painter and illustrator
Wikipedia - Charalampos Papaioannou -- Greek judoka
Wikipedia - Charity (Piero del Pollaiolo) -- Painting by Piero del Pollaiuolo
Wikipedia - Charity (Reni, New York) -- Painting by Guido Reni (Metropolitan Museum of Art)
Wikipedia - Charles Alphonse du Fresnoy -- 17th-century French painter
Wikipedia - Charles-Antoine Clevenbergh -- Flemish painter
Wikipedia - Charles Austen-Leigh -- English cricketer, painter and art collector
Wikipedia - Charles Bernard (figure skater) -- American pair skater
Wikipedia - Charles Berninghaus -- American painter
Wikipedia - Charles Blair Leighton -- English painter
Wikipedia - Charles Camille Chazal -- French painter (1825-1875)
Wikipedia - Charles Carson (painter) -- Canadian painter
Wikipedia - Charles Chapel Judson -- American painter
Wikipedia - Charles Church (artist) -- British painter
Wikipedia - Charles Clough (artist) -- American painter
Wikipedia - Charles Cornelisz. de Hooch -- Dutch painter (c. 1600-1638)
Wikipedia - Charles Crodel -- German painter and stained glass artist
Wikipedia - Charles d'Agar -- French painter
Wikipedia - Charles Edouard Armand-Dumaresq -- French painter and illustrator
Wikipedia - Charles Exshaw -- Irish painter and engraver
Wikipedia - Charles Fortin -- French painter
Wikipedia - Charles Fouqueray -- French painter
Wikipedia - Charles-Francois Daubigny -- 19th-century French painter
Wikipedia - Charles Garabed Atamian -- French painter of Ottoman origin
Wikipedia - Charles Hancock (painter) -- British painter
Wikipedia - Charles Harold Davis -- American landscape painter
Wikipedia - Charles III of Spain
Wikipedia - Charles III's Departure for Spain, Seen from the Land -- Painting by Antonio Joli in the National Museum of Capodimonte, Naples
Wikipedia - Charles III's Departure for Spain, Seen from the Sea -- Painting by Antonio Joli in the National Museum of Capodimonte, Naples
Wikipedia - Charles I Insulted by Cromwell's Soldiers -- 1836 painting by Paul Delaroche
Wikipedia - Charles II of Spain -- King of Spain; last Habsburg ruler of the Spanish Empire
Wikipedia - Charles in a Striped Jersey -- Painting of Henri Evenepoel
Wikipedia - Charles Ingram -- English novelist, computer repairman, army major, and fraudster
Wikipedia - Charles IV of Spain and His Family -- Oil painting by Francisco Goya
Wikipedia - Charles IV of Spain -- King of Spain and the Spanish Empire from 1788 to 1808
Wikipedia - Charles J. A. Wilson -- 20th-century American marine artist, painter, etcher, and illustrator
Wikipedia - Charles J. Bensco -- Hungarian-born American painter
Wikipedia - Charles Jervas -- Irish painter and translator
Wikipedia - Charles Kiffer-Porte -- French painter
Wikipedia - Charles Kuwasseg -- French painter
Wikipedia - Charles Lamb (painter) -- Irish painter
Wikipedia - Charles Le Brun -- 17th-century French painter and art theorist
Wikipedia - Charles Lees (painter) -- Scottish painter
Wikipedia - Charles Leickert -- Belgian painter
Wikipedia - Charles L'Eplattenier -- Swiss painter and architect
Wikipedia - Charles Martin-Sauvaigo -- French painter
Wikipedia - Charles Mennegand -- Eminent French luthier and a distinguished repairer of violins, violas, and cellos
Wikipedia - Charles Meynier -- Late 18th and early 19th century French painter
Wikipedia - Charles Morris Young -- American painter
Wikipedia - Charles P. Austin -- American painter
Wikipedia - Charles Pearce (calligrapher) -- British calligrapher and painter
Wikipedia - Charles "Chaz" Bojorquez -- American painter
Wikipedia - Charles Reiffel -- American painter
Wikipedia - Charles Sims (painter) -- English painter
Wikipedia - Charles Vezin -- American painter
Wikipedia - Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor -- 16th-century Holy Roman Emperor, King of Spain, Archduke of Austria, and Duke of Burgundy
Wikipedia - Charles Wellington Furse -- English painter
Wikipedia - Charles Wheeler (painter) -- Australian painter
Wikipedia - Charles Willson Peale -- 18th and 19th-century American painter
Wikipedia - Charley horse -- Painful involuntary cramp in the legs
Wikipedia - Charley Toorop -- Dutch painter and lithographer
Wikipedia - Charlie Bilodeau -- Canadian pair skater
Wikipedia - Charlie Bynar -- American painter
Wikipedia - Charlotte Berend-Corinth -- German painter
Wikipedia - Charlotte Carmichael Stopes -- 19th/20th-century British scholar, author, and campaigner for women's rights
Wikipedia - Charlotte Christiane von Krogh -- Danish painter
Wikipedia - Charlotte Johnson Wahl -- British painter (b. 1942)
Wikipedia - Charlotte Pothuis -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Charlotte Salomon -- German painter (1917-1943)
Wikipedia - Charpai -- Traditional woven bed used in the South Asia
Wikipedia - C. Harrie Gooden -- Australian painter
Wikipedia - Chattanooga Campaign
Wikipedia - Chauvet Cave -- French cave with prehistoric paintings
Wikipedia - Chavalit Soemprungsuk -- Thai painter
Wikipedia - Chaz Guest -- American painter and sculptor (born 1961)
Wikipedia - Chemical Agent Resistant Coating -- Paint commonly applied to military vehicles
Wikipedia - Chemical Industries of Ethylene Oxide explosion -- Explosion in Tarragona, Spain
Wikipedia - Chemin de la Machine, Louveciennes -- 1873 painting by Alfred Sisley
Wikipedia - Cheng Haw-Chien -- Malaysian painter
Wikipedia - Cheng Wu-fei -- Chinese painter
Wikipedia - Chen Hsiao-nan -- Chinese painter
Wikipedia - Chennai-New Jalpaiguri SF Express -- Train in India
Wikipedia - Chen Peiqiu -- Chinese painter
Wikipedia - Chen Shizeng -- Chinese painter
Wikipedia - Chen Xiaofeng -- Chinese painter
Wikipedia - Chen Yanning -- Chinese-American oil painter
Wikipedia - Cherubino Cornienti -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Cherubino Kirchmayr -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Chest pain -- Discomfort or pain in the chest as a medical symptom
Wikipedia - Chez Tortoni -- stolen painting by Edouard Manet
Wikipedia - Chhan Dina -- Cambodian painter and sculptor
Wikipedia - Chiara Fiorini -- Swiss painter and object artist
Wikipedia - Chibougamau/Chapais Airport -- Airport in Chibougamau, Quebec, Canada
Wikipedia - Chichester Canal (painting) -- Painting by J. M. W. Turner
Wikipedia - Chido Govera -- farmer, campaigner, and educator based in Zimbabwe
Wikipedia - Chief of the Defence Staff (Spain) -- Head of the Spanish Armed Forces
Wikipedia - Chien-Ying Chang -- British painter
Wikipedia - Chiesa di San Giovanni Evangelista Organ Case -- C.1535 painting by Moretto da Brescia
Wikipedia - Chikatoshi Enomoto -- Japanese painter
Wikipedia - Chike Aniakor -- Nigerian painter
Wikipedia - Children in Need 2018 -- UK charity campaign and telethon
Wikipedia - Children's Games (Bruegel) -- Painting by Pieter Bruegel the Elder
Wikipedia - Children Teaching a Cat to Dance -- c.1660-1679 oil on panel painting by Jan Steen
Wikipedia - Children Under a Palm -- Painting by Winslow Homer
Wikipedia - Chincha Islands War -- War in South America between 1864 and 1866 with Spain fighting against Chile, Peru, Ecuador and Bolivia
Wikipedia - Chinese Girl -- 1952 painting by Vladimir Tretchikoff
Wikipedia - Chinese Land Reform -- Chinese campaign led by Mao Zedong
Wikipedia - Chinese painting
Wikipedia - Chloe Katz -- American pair skater
Wikipedia - Chng Seok Tin -- Visually-impaired artist from Singapore
Wikipedia - Cholmeley Austen-Leigh -- English cricketer, painter and art collector
Wikipedia - Choosing Wisely -- U.S.-based educational campaign
Wikipedia - Chopsticks -- Shaped pairs of sticks used as kitchen and eating utensils
Wikipedia - Chosei Kawakami -- Japanese painter
Wikipedia - Chris Berens -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Chris Disspain -- Australian lawyer
Wikipedia - Chris Gollon -- Painter (1953-2017)
Wikipedia - Chris Huidekooper -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Chris Knierim -- American pair figure skater
Wikipedia - Chris Paisley -- English golfer
Wikipedia - Chris Rock: Bring the Pain -- 1996 US television special
Wikipedia - Christ among the Doctors (Veronese) -- Painting by Paolo Veronese
Wikipedia - Christ and the Angel -- Painting by Moretto da Brescia
Wikipedia - Christ and the Canaanite Woman -- Painting by Annibale Carracci
Wikipedia - Christ and the Samaritan Woman (Carracci) -- Painting by Annibale Carracci in the Pinacoteca di Brera
Wikipedia - Christ and the Virgin Mary Interceding for Humanity -- C.1490 painting by Gherardo di Giovanni del Fora
Wikipedia - Christ and the Woman Taken in Adultery (Beckmann) -- Painting by Max Beckmann
Wikipedia - Christ and the Woman Taken in Adultery (Bruegel) -- Painting by Pieter Bruegel the Elder
Wikipedia - Christ Appearing to Saint Anthony Abbot -- Painting by Annibale Carracci
Wikipedia - Christ Before the High Priest -- Painting by Gerard van Honthorst
Wikipedia - Christ Blessing (Bellini, 1460) -- Painting by Giovanni Bellini
Wikipedia - Christ Blessing (Bellini, 1500) -- Painting by Giovanni Bellini
Wikipedia - Christ Carrying the Cross (Lotto) -- 1526 painting by Lorenzo Lotto
Wikipedia - Christ Crowned with Thorns (Annibale Carracci) -- Painting by Annibale Carracci
Wikipedia - Christ Crowned with Thorns (Bosch, El Escorial) -- Painting by a follower of Hieronymus Bosch
Wikipedia - Christ Crowned with Thorns (Bosch, London) -- Painting by Hieronymus Bosch
Wikipedia - Christ Crucified (Goya) -- Painting by Francisco de Goya
Wikipedia - Christ Crucified (Velazquez) -- Painting by Diego Velazquez
Wikipedia - Christen Dalsgaard -- Danish painter
Wikipedia - Christiana Mary Demain Hammond -- 19thC English painter and illustrator
Wikipedia - Christian Asmussen -- Danish painter
Wikipedia - Christiane Kubrick -- German actress, dancer, painter, singer
Wikipedia - Christiane Schreiber -- Norwegian painter
Wikipedia - Christian Franzen (photographer) -- Danish photographer active in Spain
Wikipedia - Christian Friedrich Zincke -- German painter
Wikipedia - Christian Furr -- English painter
Wikipedia - Christian Gottlob Fechhelm -- German painter
Wikipedia - Christianity in Spain
Wikipedia - Christian Kunzle -- Swiss pair skater
Wikipedia - Christian Nikolaus Eberlein -- German painter
Wikipedia - Christian Otte -- Belgian painter
Wikipedia - Christian Wilberg -- German painter
Wikipedia - Christine Corday -- American painter and sculptor
Wikipedia - Christine Hough -- Canadian pair skater
Wikipedia - Christine Pai -- |Chinese actress from Hong Kong
Wikipedia - Christ in Glory with Saint Peter and Saint Paul -- C. 1540 painting by Moretto da Brescia
Wikipedia - Christ in Glory with Saints and Odoardo Farnese -- Painting by Annibale Carracci
Wikipedia - Christ in the Desert -- painting by Ivan Kramskoy
Wikipedia - Christ in the House of His Parents -- Painting by John Everett Millais
Wikipedia - Christ Mocked -- Painting by Cimabue
Wikipedia - Christoffel van den Berghe -- Painter from the Northern Netherlands (1590-1645)
Wikipedia - Christoffer Wilhelm Eckersberg -- Danish painter (1783-1853)
Wikipedia - Christ on the Cross (Delacroix) -- 1835 painting by Eugene Delacroix
Wikipedia - Christopher Boyadji -- French pair skater
Wikipedia - Christopher Campbell (painter) -- Irish painter
Wikipedia - Christopher Cook (artist) -- British painter
Wikipedia - Christopher Elias Heiss -- German painter
Wikipedia - Christopher M. Grimes -- Bermudian painter
Wikipedia - Christopher Wood (painter) -- English painter
Wikipedia - Christ Pantocrator (Sinai) -- Oldest painting of Christ
Wikipedia - Christ's Entry Into Brussels in 1889 -- Painting by James Ensor
Wikipedia - Christ Taking Leave of his Mother (Lotto) -- 1521 painting by Lorenzo Lotto
Wikipedia - Christ the Gardener -- Painting by Edouard Manet
Wikipedia - Christ Triumphant over Sin and Death (Rubens) -- Painting by Peter Paul Rubens
Wikipedia - Christ with Moses and Solomon -- C. 1542 painting by Moretto da Brescia
Wikipedia - Christ with the Cross -- 1518 painting by Moretto da Brescia
Wikipedia - Christ with the Eucharist and Saints Bartholomew and Roch -- Painting by Moretto da Brescia
Wikipedia - Christ with the Eucharist and Saints Cosmas and Damian -- Painting by Moretto da Brescia
Wikipedia - Chromosome 12 -- One of the 23 pairs of chromosomes in Homo sapiens
Wikipedia - Chromosome 15 -- 101 million base pairs (the building material of DNA) and represents between 3% and 3.5% of the total DNA in cells. The human leukocyte antigen gene for M-NM-22-m
Wikipedia - Chronica Gothorum Pseudoisidoriana -- Medieval chronicle of the history of Spain.
Wikipedia - Chronic pain -- Acute pain extending beyond the usual healing process; >3-12+ months
Wikipedia - Chua Mia Tee -- Chinese-born Singaporean painter
Wikipedia - Chucrallah Fattouh -- Lebanese painter
Wikipedia - Churchill Ettinger -- American painter
Wikipedia - Church of el Carmen (Madrid) -- Cultural property in Madrid, Spain
Wikipedia - Church of las Calatravas (Madrid) -- Cultural property in Madrid, Spain
Wikipedia - Church of San Agustin (Madrid) -- Roman Catholic church located in Madrid, Spain
Wikipedia - Church of San Andres (Madrid) -- Cultural property in Madrid, Spain
Wikipedia - Church of San Juan Bautista, BaM-CM-1os de Cerrato -- Medieval church in BaM-CM-1os de Cerrato, Spain
Wikipedia - Church of San Roman (Sariego) -- Medieval church in Asturias, Spain
Wikipedia - Church of Santa Maria la Mayor (Talavera de la Reina) -- Church building in Talavera de la Reina, Spain
Wikipedia - Church of Santiago (Carrion de los Condes) -- Church in Carrion de los Condes, Spain
Wikipedia - Churrigueresque -- Baroque architecture style in Spain
Wikipedia - Ciaran Clear -- Irish painter
Wikipedia - Cigar makers strike of 1877 -- American campaign
Wikipedia - Cigoli -- Italian painter and architect
Wikipedia - Cindy Wright -- Belgian-American painter
Wikipedia - Cinema (Elaine Paige album) -- 1984 album
Wikipedia - Cinema of Spain -- Overview of the cinema of Spain
Wikipedia - Cinema Paithiyam -- 1975 film
Wikipedia - Cipriano Efisio Oppo -- Italian painter (1890-1962)
Wikipedia - Circe Invidiosa -- Painting by John William Waterhouse
Wikipedia - Circe Offering the Cup to Ulysses -- Painting by John William Waterhouse
Wikipedia - Circuito de Jerez -- Race track in Andalusia, Spain
Wikipedia - Ciro da Conegliano -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Ciro Pavisa -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Cislunar Explorers -- Pair of spacecraft
Wikipedia - City Council of Seville -- Local government body in Seville, Spain
Wikipedia - City of Arts and Sciences -- Cultural and architectural complex in the city of Valencia, Spain
Wikipedia - City of Washington from Beyond the Navy Yard -- 1833 painting by George Cooke
Wikipedia - Ciudad Jardin (Madrid) -- Ward of Madrid in Madrid, Spain
Wikipedia - Ciutadella de Menorca -- Municipality in the Balearic Islands, Spain
Wikipedia - Ciutadella Lighthouse -- Lighthouse on Menorca, Spain
Wikipedia - Civil Guard (Spain) -- Gendarmerie branch of Spain's armed forces
Wikipedia - Civilian Service Medal (Afghanistan) -- British campaign medal
Wikipedia - Civil list -- List of individuals to whom money is paid by the government
Wikipedia - Claes Corneliszoon Moeyaert -- Catholic Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Claire Falconer -- Irish actress and painter
Wikipedia - Clara Elsene Peck -- 20th-century American illustrator and painter
Wikipedia - Clarence Gagnon -- Canadian painter (1881-1942)
Wikipedia - Clarence Hinkle -- American painter
Wikipedia - Clarence Mattei -- American painter
Wikipedia - Clark Hobart -- American painter
Wikipedia - Classical conditioning -- Learning procedure in which biologically potent stimulus is paired with a neutral stimulus
Wikipedia - Claude Chauchetiere -- French Jesuit missionary and painter
Wikipedia - Claude Dambreville -- Haitian writer and painter
Wikipedia - Claude Lorrain -- French painter, draughtsman and etcher
Wikipedia - Claude Monet Painting in his Studio -- 1874 painting by Edouard Manet
Wikipedia - Claude Monet -- French painter
Wikipedia - Claude Moraes -- British Labour politician and campaigner
Wikipedia - Claudine Loquen -- French painter and sculptor
Wikipedia - Claudio Baccala -- Swiss painter
Wikipedia - Claudio Taddei -- Uruguayan-Swiss singer-songwriter and painter
Wikipedia - Claudius Herr -- Austrian painter
Wikipedia - Claudius Proclaimed Emperor -- Painting by Charles Lebayle
Wikipedia - Claudius Schraudolph the Elder -- German painter and lithographer
Wikipedia - Claudius Schraudolph the Younger -- German painter and illustrator
Wikipedia - Clay Ketter -- American painter, sculptor and photographer
Wikipedia - Clearing the Channel Coast -- World War II campaign to liberate northern France
Wikipedia - Clelia Bompiani -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Clemens von Zimmermann -- German painter
Wikipedia - Clementina Marcovigi -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Clementine-Helene Dufau -- French painter
Wikipedia - Cleveland, Painesville and Ashtabula Railroad (1848-1869) -- 19th-century American railroad
Wikipedia - Cliff Eyland -- Canadian painter, writer and curator
Wikipedia - Cliff Holden -- British painter
Wikipedia - Clifford Hall (painter) -- British painter
Wikipedia - Climate Counts -- Non-profit climate change campaign
Wikipedia - Climate of Spain -- Overview of the climate of Spain
Wikipedia - Clockmaker -- Artisan who makes and repairs clocks
Wikipedia - Closest pair of points problem
Wikipedia - Closest pair of points
Wikipedia - Closest pair problem
Wikipedia - Close the Gap -- Australian social justice campaign about Indigenous health inequality
Wikipedia - Clotilde Elizabeth Brielmaier -- German-American religious painter
Wikipedia - Clotilde Garcia del Castillo (painting) -- 1890 painting by Joaquin Sorolla
Wikipedia - Clytemnestra (Collier) -- Painting by John Collier
Wikipedia - Coagulopathy -- Condition in which the bloodM-bM-^@M-^Ys ability to coagulate (form clots) is impaired
Wikipedia - Coast Guard Station, Two Lights, Maine -- 1927 painting by Edward Hopper
Wikipedia - Coastline FM -- Radio station in Spain
Wikipedia - Coca-Cola (3) -- Painting by Andy Warhol
Wikipedia - Coca-Cola (4) -- 1962 painting by Andy Warhol
Wikipedia - Co-Cathedral of LogroM-CM-1o -- Cathedral in LogroM-CM-1o, Spain
Wikipedia - Cochinchina campaign -- 19th-century French/Spanish naval expedition into Vietnam
Wikipedia - Cocoliztli epidemics -- 16th century epidemics in New Spain
Wikipedia - Codeine -- Opiate used to treat pain
Wikipedia - Coffee and doughnuts -- Common food and drink pairing in the United States and Canada
Wikipedia - Cognitive impairment
Wikipedia - Cola wars -- Marketing campaigns of rival soft drink producers The Coca-Cola Company and PepsiCo
Wikipedia - Colette Appel -- American pair skater
Wikipedia - Coline Keriven -- French pair skater
Wikipedia - Colin Lovell-Smith -- New Zealand painter
Wikipedia - College of Media -- A college at The University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Wikipedia - Colonel Konigsfels Teaching Prince Poniatowski to Ride -- Painting by Bernardo Bellotto (National Museum in Warsaw)
Wikipedia - Color field painting
Wikipedia - Comanche campaign -- Military operations by the United States government against the Comanche tribe
Wikipedia - Comarcas of Spain
Wikipedia - Combine painting
Wikipedia - Common Sense -- Pamphlet by Thomas Paine
Wikipedia - Communaute de communes de Mirecourt Dompaire -- Federation of municipalities in France
Wikipedia - Communist Party of Spain (main)
Wikipedia - Communist Party of Spain -- Communist party of Spain founded in 1921
Wikipedia - Communist Party of the Canary Islands (provisional) -- Defunct political party in the Canary Islands, Spain
Wikipedia - Communist Party of the Peoples of Spain -- Political party in Spain
Wikipedia - Community of Madrid -- Autonomous community of Spain
Wikipedia - Community service -- unpaid work to benefit a community
Wikipedia - Companion statues: Kashyapa and Ananda -- Pair of Tang Dynasty sculptures, depicting Buddhist figures
Wikipedia - Complutense University of Madrid -- Public research university in Madrid, Spain
Wikipedia - Composition (Peeters) -- Painting by Jozef Peeters
Wikipedia - Composition VI -- Painting by Wassily Kandinsky
Wikipedia - Composition with Red Blue and Yellow -- Painting by Piet Mondrian
Wikipedia - Compound interest -- A compounding sum paid for the use of money
Wikipedia - Compression arthralgia -- Joint pain caused by fast compression to high ambient pressure
Wikipedia - Comptroller General of the State -- Position in the Ministry of the Treasury of Spain
Wikipedia - Computer repair technician -- Person who repairs and maintains computers and servers
Wikipedia - Concrete Pavement Restoration -- Techniques for repair of concrete pavement surfaces
Wikipedia - Condor Legion Tank Badge -- Nazi German campaign award
Wikipedia - Confederate Heartland Offensive -- Confederate military campaign during the American Civil War
Wikipedia - Confessions of a Republican -- Political ad for Lyndon Johnson's 1964 US presidential campaign
Wikipedia - Congo (chimpanzee) -- Chimpanzee who learned how to draw and paint
Wikipedia - Congostinas -- Parish (parroquia) in Lena, Asturias, Spain
Wikipedia - Congregation Leaving the Reformed Church in Nuenen -- Painting by Vincent van Gogh
Wikipedia - Con Lo Que Cuenta Este Pais -- Puerto Rican comedy sitcom
Wikipedia - Conquest of Murcia (1265-66) -- 13th-century military campaign in Iberia
Wikipedia - Conquest of the Desert -- 1870s-1884 Argentine campaign in Patagonia
Wikipedia - Conrad Fehr -- Danish-German painter, sculptor
Wikipedia - Conrad Fyoll -- German painter
Wikipedia - Conrad von Soest -- Westphalian painter
Wikipedia - Consortium of Academic and Research Libraries in Illinois -- Other organization in Champaign, United States
Wikipedia - Cons pair
Wikipedia - Constance Copeman -- British painter, printmaker, and engraver (1864-1953)
Wikipedia - Constant Detre -- French painter
Wikipedia - Constantin Alajalov -- American painter and illustrator
Wikipedia - Constantin BrM-CM-"ncusi -- French-Romanian sculptor, photographer and painter
Wikipedia - Constantine Andreou -- Greek painter and sculptor
Wikipedia - Constantin Le Paige -- Belgian mathematician
Wikipedia - Constant Permeke -- Belgian painter and sculptor
Wikipedia - Constitutional Court of Spain
Wikipedia - Constitution of Spain -- Current constitution of Spain
Wikipedia - Consuelo Fould -- French painter (1862-1927)
Wikipedia - Consumer Cellular -- American postpaid mobile virtual network operator
Wikipedia - Contadina de Asis -- 1888 painting by Joaquin Sorolla
Wikipedia - Contardo Barbieri -- 20th-century Italian painter
Wikipedia - Contarini Madonna -- Painting by Giovanni Bellini
Wikipedia - Contemporary art in Egypt -- Egyptian art scene, videos, paintings, sculptures
Wikipedia - Conversion of Paul (Bruegel) -- Painting by Pieter Bruegel the Elder
Wikipedia - Conversion on the Way to Damascus -- Painting by Caravaggio
Wikipedia - Converso -- Jew who converted to Catholicism in Spain or Portugal
Wikipedia - Conway Griffith -- English-born American painter
Wikipedia - Cooper pair -- Pair of electrons (or other fermions) bound together at low temperatures in a certain manner which is responsible for superconductivity as described in the BCS theory
Wikipedia - Cooper Union speech -- Speech by Abraham Lincoln in New York City during his 1860 campaign for US President
Wikipedia - Coosje van Bruggen -- Dutch and American sculptor and painter
Wikipedia - Copaiba -- Resin and essential oil from South American Copaifera trees
Wikipedia - Copaifera salikounda -- Species of plant
Wikipedia - Copies by Vincent van Gogh -- Series of paintings byM-BM- Vincent van Gogh
Wikipedia - Coppo di Marcovaldo -- 13th-century Florentine painter
Wikipedia - Copy of Lute Player by Frans Hals -- 17th century oil painting by Judith Leyster
Wikipedia - Coralie de Burgh -- British painter
Wikipedia - Cordoba Synagogue -- Historic edifice in Andalusia, Spain
Wikipedia - Corel Painter -- Raster-based digital painting software
Wikipedia - Corel Paint Shop Pro
Wikipedia - Corel Photo-Paint
Wikipedia - Coresus Sacrificing Himself to Save Callirhoe -- Painting by Jean-Honore Fragonard
Wikipedia - Corinna Halke -- German pair skater and sport journalist
Wikipedia - Corinne Melchers -- American painter, humanitarian, and gardener
Wikipedia - Cor Melchers -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Cornard Wood, near Sudbury, Suffolk -- 1748 painting by Thomas Gainsborough
Wikipedia - Corneille Lentz -- Luxembourgian painter
Wikipedia - Cornelia de Rijck -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Cornelia Weihe -- German painter and sculptor
Wikipedia - Cornelis Bisschop -- Dutch Golden Age painter
Wikipedia - Cornelis de Bryer -- Belgian painter
Wikipedia - Cornelis de Heem -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Cornelis Engebrechtsz. -- Dutch painter (c.1462-1527)
Wikipedia - Cornelis Kick -- Painter from the Northern Netherlands
Wikipedia - Cornelis Kloos -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Cornelis Mahu -- Belgian painter
Wikipedia - Cornelis Mension -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Cornelis Saftleven -- 17th-century Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Cornelis van Steenwijk -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Cornelis Vreedenburgh -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Corner of a Cafe-Concert -- 1879 painting by Edouard Manet
Wikipedia - Coronation of the Virgin Altarpiece -- Painting by Moretto da Brescia
Wikipedia - Coronation of the Virgin (Beccafumi) -- Painting by Domenico di Pace Beccafumi
Wikipedia - Coronation of the Virgin (Gentile da Fabriano) -- c. 1420 painting by Gentile da Fabriano
Wikipedia - Coronation of the Virgin (Rubens) -- Painting by Peter Paul Rubens
Wikipedia - Corpse of Christ -- Painting by Annibale Carracci
Wikipedia - Corrado Mancioli -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Corral del Carbon -- Historic monument in Granada, Spain
Wikipedia - Corruption in Spain -- Institutional corruption in the country
Wikipedia - Corry Gallas -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Cortes Generales -- Legislature of Spain
Wikipedia - Corvee -- Form of intermittent, unpaid, unfree labour
Wikipedia - Cory Booker 2020 presidential campaign -- Cory Booker's 2019-2020 efforts to become the 46th President of the United States
Wikipedia - Cosmo Clark -- British painter
Wikipedia - Costantino Pasqualotto -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Costanza Ghilini -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Cotopaxi (painting) -- 1862 painting by Frederic Edwin Church
Wikipedia - Council of Government of the Principality of Asturias -- Government body in Spain
Wikipedia - Council of Wise Men of the plain of Murcia -- Cultural property in Murcia, Spain
Wikipedia - Count Alphonse de Toulouse-Lautrec Driving His Mail-Coach -- Painting by Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec
Wikipedia - Courage -- Choice to confront risk, pain, agony, intimidation or uncertainty
Wikipedia - Courland Cuff Title -- German World War II campaign award
Wikipedia - Courre Merlan (Whiting Chase) -- Painting by Jean Dubuffet
Wikipedia - Court of Accounts (Turkey) -- The supreme governmental accounting body of Spain
Wikipedia - Court of Auditors (Spain) -- The supreme governmental accounting body of Spain
Wikipedia - Court painter
Wikipedia - Covalent bond -- Chemical bond that involves the sharing of electron pairs between atoms
Wikipedia - COVID-19 pandemic in Ceuta -- Ongoing COVID-19 viral pandemic in Ceuta, Spain
Wikipedia - COVID-19 pandemic in Melilla -- Ongoing COVID-19 viral pandemic in Melilla, Spain
Wikipedia - COVID-19 vaccination campaign in Bulgaria -- Plan to immunize against COVID-19
Wikipedia - Cowboys and Herds in the Maremma -- Painting by Giovanni Fattori
Wikipedia - Cowdray engravings -- Paintings
Wikipedia - Cows in the Meadow -- Painting by Vincent van Gogh
Wikipedia - Crab on its Back -- Painting by Vincent van Gogh
Wikipedia - Craig Buntin -- Canadian former pair skater
Wikipedia - Craigie Aitchison (painter) -- Scottish painter
Wikipedia - Cramp -- Pathological, often painful, involuntary muscle contraction
Wikipedia - Cranial nerve disease -- Impaired functioning of one of the twelve cranial nerves
Wikipedia - Crawford expedition -- 1781 campaign in the American Revolutionary War
Wikipedia - Crdoba, Spain
Wikipedia - Crecy campaign -- Military campaign in 1346-1347 during the Hundred Years' War
Wikipedia - Crescenzo della Gamba -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Crete Cuff Title -- German World War II campaign award
Wikipedia - Crevole Madonna -- c. 1283 painting by Duccio di Buoninsegna
Wikipedia - Crimean campaign -- Campaign of the Second World War
Wikipedia - Criminal Code (Spain) -- Law that codifies most criminal offences in Spain
Wikipedia - Criminal: Spain -- 2019 Spanish-language television series
Wikipedia - Cristiano Banti -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Cristobal de Acevedo -- Spanish painter
Wikipedia - Cristobal de Leon -- Spanish painter
Wikipedia - Cristobal Llorens -- Spanish painter
Wikipedia - Cristobal Lopez (18th century) -- Spanish painter
Wikipedia - Cristobal Rojas (artist) -- Venezuelan painter
Wikipedia - Cristofano Allori -- Italian painter of the late Florentine Mannerist school (1577-1621)
Wikipedia - Cristofano dell'Altissimo -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Cristoforo Agosta -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Cristoforo da Bologna -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Critical pair (logic)
Wikipedia - Croce al Tempio Lamentation -- Painting by Fra Angelico
Wikipedia - Cromwell at Windsor Castle -- 1828 painting by Eugene Delacroix
Wikipedia - Cromwellian conquest of Ireland -- Military campaign (1649-53)
Wikipedia - Cross at Sunset -- Painting by Thomas Cole
Wikipedia - Crucifix (Cimabue, Santa Croce) -- Painting by Cimabue
Wikipedia - Crucifixion and Last Judgement diptych -- Two small painted panels attributed to Jan van Eyck
Wikipedia - Crucifixion of Saint Peter (Caravaggio) -- Painting by Caravaggio
Wikipedia - Crucifixion, seen from the Cross -- Watercolor painting by French painter James Tissot
Wikipedia - Crucifixion Standard -- C. 1505 painting by Luca Signorelli
Wikipedia - Crucifixion (Uccello) -- c. 1457 painting by Paolo Uccello
Wikipedia - Crucifixion with Mourners and St Dominic -- c. 1435 painting by Fra Angelico
Wikipedia - Crucifixion with St Mary Magdalene -- Painting by Luca Signorelli
Wikipedia - Crucifixion with Two Angels -- c. 1423 painting by Paolo Uccello
Wikipedia - Crusader invasions of Egypt -- campaigns against Egypt undertaken by the Kingdom of Jerusalem (1154-1169)
Wikipedia - Crying -- Shedding tears in response to emotional stimuli, pain, or irritation of eye
Wikipedia - Crystal Cubism -- Subgenre of the painting style cubism
Wikipedia - Cuenca, Spain
Wikipedia - Cueva Anton -- Cave and archaeological site in Spain
Wikipedia - Cueva de la Pileta -- Cave and archaeological site in Spain
Wikipedia - Cueva de los Casares -- Cave and archaeological site in Spain
Wikipedia - Cueva de los Murcielagos -- Cave and archaeological site in Spain
Wikipedia - Cuevas de la AraM-CM-1a -- Caves and archaeological site in Spain
Wikipedia - Cullen Washington Jr. -- American contemporary abstract painter
Wikipedia - Culture of Spain -- Culture of an area
Wikipedia - Cupid Crowned by Psyche -- Painting by Jean-Baptiste Greuze
Wikipedia - Cupid Untying the Zone of Venus -- painting by Sir Joshua Reynolds
Wikipedia - Curavacas -- Mountain in Spain
Wikipedia - Curricle -- Light two-wheeled chaise or "chariot" with a single axle, usually drawn by a pair of horses
Wikipedia - Curt Lahs -- German painter
Wikipedia - Cynthia Kauffman -- American pair skater
Wikipedia - Cynthia Paige Simon -- American Paralympic judoka
Wikipedia - Cyparissus (Vignali) -- Painting by Jacopo Vignali
Wikipedia - Cyprian Majernik -- Slovak painter
Wikipedia - Cyril Shiner -- British painter
Wikipedia - Dagmar Calais -- German painter and installation artist
Wikipedia - Dagmar Olrik -- Danish painter and tapestry artist
Wikipedia - Daisy (advertisement) -- 1964 campaign advertisement for Lyndon Johnson
Wikipedia - Dali Podiashvili -- Georgian painter
Wikipedia - Damaso Ruano -- Spanish geometric landscape artist, painter and academic
Wikipedia - Dammartin-Marpain -- Commune in Bourgogne-Franche-Comte, France
Wikipedia - DanaM-CM-+ (Correggio) -- Painting by Antonio da Correggio
Wikipedia - DanaM-CM-+ (Klimt painting) -- Painting by Gustav Klimt
Wikipedia - DanaM-CM-+ (Tintoretto) -- Painting by Tintoretto
Wikipedia - Dancer in a Cafe -- Painting by Jean Metzinger
Wikipedia - DanguolM-DM-^W RaudonikienM-DM-^W -- Lithuanian painter
Wikipedia - Daniela Komatovic -- Czech graphic designer, photographer and painter
Wikipedia - Daniele Aron-Rosa -- French ophthalmologist and painter
Wikipedia - Daniele Cudini -- Italian painter and sculptor
Wikipedia - Daniel Fowler -- Canadian watercolour painter
Wikipedia - Daniel-Henry Kahnweiler (Picasso) -- 1910 painting by Pablo Picasso
Wikipedia - Danielle Hartsell -- American pair skater
Wikipedia - Daniello Porri -- Italian painter of the Renaissance from Parma
Wikipedia - Daniel Maclise -- Irish history, literary and portrait painter, and illustrator
Wikipedia - Daniel Octobre -- French painter
Wikipedia - Daniel O'Shea (figure skater) -- American pair skater
Wikipedia - Daniel Solomon -- Canadian abstract painter and sculptor
Wikipedia - Daniel Soreau -- German painter
Wikipedia - Daniel Wende -- German pair skater
Wikipedia - Daniel Woge -- German painter and drawer
Wikipedia - DaniM-CM-+l Mijtens -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Danny Curzon -- American pair skater
Wikipedia - Danny Neudecker -- American pair skater
Wikipedia - Dan Savage -- American sex advice columnist and gay rights campaigner
Wikipedia - Dante Gabriel Rossetti -- British poet, illustrator, painter and translator
Wikipedia - Daoud Corm -- Lebanese painter
Wikipedia - Daraa Governorate campaign -- Syrian Army offensive
Wikipedia - Daria Danilova -- Russian-Dutch pair skater
Wikipedia - Daria Pavliuchenko -- Russian pair skater
Wikipedia - Dario di Giovanni -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Dario Villalba -- Spanish painter and figure skater
Wikipedia - Dark Sun Campaign Setting, Expanded and Revised -- 1995 book by Bill Slavicsek
Wikipedia - Dark Sun -- Dungeons & Dragons fictional campaign setting
Wikipedia - Darren Coffield -- British painter
Wikipedia - Das kaiserliche LustschloM-CM-^_ Schonbrunn, Ehrenhofseite -- 18th century painting
Wikipedia - Datong-Jining Campaign -- Series of battles during Chinese Civil War
Wikipedia - Daughters of Jesus (Spain)
Wikipedia - Daulat (artist) -- Mughal painter
Wikipedia - Dave Despain -- American motorsports journalist
Wikipedia - Dave Pearson (painter) -- British artist (1937-2008)
Wikipedia - Dave Sweeney -- Australian anti-nuclear campaigner
Wikipedia - Davida Allen -- Australian painter
Wikipedia - David Alfaro Siqueiros -- Mexican social realist painter
Wikipedia - David Amland -- American painter and art educator
Wikipedia - David Bellamy -- English professor, botanist, author, broadcaster and environmental campaigner
Wikipedia - David Bolduc -- Canadian abstract painter
Wikipedia - David Budd -- American abstract painter
Wikipedia - David Bueno de Mesquita -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - David Cantine -- Canadian painter
Wikipedia - David Cox (artist) -- English landscape painter, 1783-1859
Wikipedia - David Cromwell -- British campaigner
Wikipedia - David Eduard Steiner -- Swiss painter (1811-1860)
Wikipedia - David Edwards (journalist) -- British media campaigner
Wikipedia - David Fairbairn (artist) -- Australian painter and printmaker
Wikipedia - David Garrick as Richard III -- 1745 painting by William Hogarth
Wikipedia - David Hodgson (artist) -- A professional English painter
Wikipedia - David Keeling -- Australian painter
Wikipedia - David Lorenz -- German painter
Wikipedia - David Medalla -- Filipino painter
Wikipedia - David Morris (actor) -- painter and actor
Wikipedia - David Paisley -- Scottish actor
Wikipedia - David Pelletier (American figure skater) -- American pair skater
Wikipedia - David Roberts (painter) -- Scottish painter
Wikipedia - David Sani -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - David Sawin -- American painter
Wikipedia - David Schulman -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - David Scougall -- Scottish portrait painter
Wikipedia - David S. Painter -- Associate professor of international history
Wikipedia - David T. Alexander -- Canadian painter
Wikipedia - David Tarttelin -- English painter
Wikipedia - David Vera -- Olympic sailor from Spain
Wikipedia - David Wilkie (artist) -- Scottish painter (1785-1841)
Wikipedia - David Wilkie Wynfield -- British painter and photographer
Wikipedia - Davis Guards Medal -- Confederate States campaign medal
Wikipedia - Davis Madonna -- Painting by Gentile da Fabriano
Wikipedia - Day of the Painter -- 1960 film
Wikipedia - Dead Christ Supported by Angels (Bellini, Rimini) -- Painting by Giovanni Bellini in the City Museum of Rimini
Wikipedia - Dead Christ Supported by Two Angels (Bellini, Berlin) -- Painting by Giovanni Bellini in the GemM-CM-$ldegalerie, Berlin
Wikipedia - Deaf education -- Education of the hearing-impaired
Wikipedia - Death and Fire -- Painting by Paul Klee
Wikipedia - Death and the Maiden (Baldung) -- Painting by Hans Baldung
Wikipedia - Death of the Reprobate -- Painting by Hieronymus Bosch
Wikipedia - Death of the Virgin (Caravaggio) -- Painting by Caravaggio
Wikipedia - Debbie Caruana Dingli -- Maltese painter
Wikipedia - Debbie Pain -- Conservation biologist and ecotoxicologist
Wikipedia - Deborah Bell -- South African painter and sculptor
Wikipedia - Deborah Brownson -- British autism campaigner
Wikipedia - Debra Dawes -- Australian contemporary painter
Wikipedia - Deccan Medal -- East India Company medal for campaigns of 1778-84
Wikipedia - Deccan painting -- Form of miniature painting
Wikipedia - Dechko Uzunov -- Bulgarian painter
Wikipedia - Declaration of Indulgence -- Pair of proclamations made by James II in 1687
Wikipedia - Decorating of the Bride -- Painting by Paja Jovanovic
Wikipedia - Dede Eri Supria -- Indonesian Social Realist painter
Wikipedia - Dee Ferris -- British painter
Wikipedia - Defence of the Reich -- Strategic defensive aerial campaign fought by the Luftwaffe over German-occupied Europe and Germany itself during World War II
Wikipedia - Defense of the Great Wall -- Army campaign between China and Japan before the Second Sino-Japanese War
Wikipedia - Defiance Campaign
Wikipedia - DeGoogle -- Campaign to stop using Google products
Wikipedia - Deirdre Henty-Creer -- Australian painter
Wikipedia - Delayed onset muscle soreness -- Pain in muscles after exercise
Wikipedia - Delfina Molina y Vedia -- Argentine chemist, writer and painter
Wikipedia - Delmar Banner -- British painter
Wikipedia - Dementia -- long-term brain disorders causing impaired memory, reasoning, and normal function together with personality changes
Wikipedia - Democratic Coalition (Spain) -- Defunct political coalition in Spain
Wikipedia - Democratic Junta of Spain -- Defunct Anti-Francoist political group in Spain
Wikipedia - Democratic Left Front (Spain) -- Defunct political coalition in Spain
Wikipedia - Democratic Reformist Party -- Defunct political party in Spain
Wikipedia - Demographics of Madrid -- Demographics of Madrid, Spain
Wikipedia - Demographics of Spain -- Overview of the demographics of Spain
Wikipedia - Dempsey and Firpo -- Painting by George Bellows
Wikipedia - Dengvaxia controversy -- A poorly managed vaccination campaign against dengue fever in the Phillipines
Wikipedia - Denis Khodykin -- Russian pair skater
Wikipedia - Denis Pain -- New Zealand jurist
Wikipedia - Denis Petrov -- Russian pair skater
Wikipedia - Denis Riviere -- French painter
Wikipedia - Dennis Burton (artist) -- Canadian modernist painter
Wikipedia - Deo Gracias Fresco -- Fresco painting in Germany
Wikipedia - Deolinda Lopes Vieira -- Portuguese feminist and early-education campaigner
Wikipedia - Department of Computer Science, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Wikipedia - Deposition (Bellini) -- Painting by Giovanni Bellini in the Gallerie dell'Accademia, Venice
Wikipedia - Deposition (Tiepolo) -- 1770 painting by Giambattista Tiepolo
Wikipedia - Deposition (van Dyck, 1635) -- painting by Anthony van Dyck
Wikipedia - Derek Chittock -- British painter
Wikipedia - Derick Baegert -- German painter
Wikipedia - Derrie Fakhoury -- Lebanese painter
Wikipedia - Desastre (12 janvier 2010) -- Painting by Franketienne
Wikipedia - Descent into Limbo (Beccafumi) -- Painting by Domenico Beccafumi
Wikipedia - Desire Acket -- Belgian painter
Wikipedia - Desire Piryns -- Belgian painter
Wikipedia - Desmond Digby -- New Zealand painter, stage designer and children's book illustrator
Wikipedia - Despair (emotion)
Wikipedia - D'espairsRay -- Japanese band
Wikipedia - Despair
Wikipedia - Despenser's Crusade -- 14th-century military campaign
Wikipedia - Detroit Trio -- C. 1500 painting attributed to Giorgione, Titian and Sebastiano del Piombo
Wikipedia - Deux Nus -- Painting by Jean Metzinger
Wikipedia - DeVilbiss Automotive Refinishing -- Maker of spray painting equipment based in Ohio, USA
Wikipedia - Devi Nampiaparampil -- Chronic pain specialist
Wikipedia - Devolved Parliament (Banksy) -- 2009 oil-on-canvas painting by Banksy
Wikipedia - Devon Rodriguez -- American artist and painter
Wikipedia - Dewey Crumpler -- American painter
Wikipedia - DeWitt Parshall -- American painter
Wikipedia - Dexter Brown -- British impressionist painter
Wikipedia - DezsM-EM-^Q Csepai -- Hungarian canoeist
Wikipedia - DezsM-EM-^Q Czigany -- Hungarian painter
Wikipedia - DezsM-EM-^Q Vali -- Hungarian painter
Wikipedia - Diana and Actaeon (Titian) -- 1550s painting by Titian
Wikipedia - Diana and a Nymph Surprised by a Satyr -- C. 1625 painting by Anthony van Dyck
Wikipedia - Diana and Callisto (Bril) -- Painting by Paul Bril
Wikipedia - Diana Conyngham Ellis -- Northern Irish botanical painter
Wikipedia - Diana Hinko -- Austrian pair skater
Wikipedia - Diana Mukhametzianova -- Russian pair skater
Wikipedia - Diana Rennik -- Estonian pair skater
Wikipedia - Diana (Renoir painting) -- 1867 painting by Pierre-Auguste Renoir
Wikipedia - Diccionario geografico-estadistico-historico de EspaM-CM-1a y sus posesiones de Ultramar -- Geographic handbook of Spain
Wikipedia - Dick Brewer, Billy the Kid and the Regulators -- Painting by Andrew Thomas
Wikipedia - Dick Frizzell -- New Zealand painter, print maker, illustrator
Wikipedia - Dick Hart (painter) -- British painter
Wikipedia - Dick Ket -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Diego Bianconi -- Swiss painter
Wikipedia - Diego de Aguilar -- Spanish painter
Wikipedia - Diego de Arroyo -- Spanish miniature painter
Wikipedia - Diego Deza -- Grand Inquisitor of Spain
Wikipedia - Diego Lopez (painter) -- Spanish painter
Wikipedia - Diego Velazquez -- 17th-century Spanish painter
Wikipedia - Dieric Bouts -- 15th-century Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Dieter Goltzsche -- German painter and graphic designer
Wikipedia - Dieter Rex -- German painter and designer
Wikipedia - Dieter Rubsaamen -- German painter
Wikipedia - Dieudonne Cedor -- Haitian painter
Wikipedia - Digi Communications -- Telecommunications company in Romania, Hungary, Spain and Italy
Wikipedia - Digital India -- Campaign to ensure improved online infrastructure,more job opportunities and Internet connectivity in India
Wikipedia - DignidadLiteraria -- Hashtag and grassroots campaign
Wikipedia - Diltiazem -- Medication for high blood pressure, heart related chest pain, and some arrhythmias
Wikipedia - Dilvo Lotti -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Dimitrios Kokotsis -- Greek painter
Wikipedia - Dimitris Papaioannou bibliography -- Wikipedia bibliography
Wikipedia - Dina Aschehoug -- Norwegian painter
Wikipedia - Ding Yang -- Chinese pair skater
Wikipedia - Ding Yu -- Chinese painter, known for her portrait paintings in Western style
Wikipedia - Dinnie Stones -- Pair of lifting stones
Wikipedia - Dino Basaldella -- Italian sculptor and painter
Wikipedia - Dionysus Cup -- Kylix made by potter-painter Exekias; one of the most famous pieces of ancient Greek vase painting
Wikipedia - Diotallevi Madonna -- 1504 painting by Raphael
Wikipedia - Dirck Bleker -- Dutch Golden Age painter
Wikipedia - Dirck Hendricksz -- Dutch-Italian painter
Wikipedia - Dirck Jacobsz. -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Dirck van Delen -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Direct tax -- Tax paid directly to the government by the person on whom it is imposed
Wikipedia - Dirk Dalens III -- Dutch landscape painter
Wikipedia - Dirk van der Aa -- Dutch rococo painter (1731-1809)
Wikipedia - Disability -- Impairments, activity limitations, and participation restrictions
Wikipedia - Disappearance of Paige Renkoski -- Disappeared woman from Michigan
Wikipedia - Discovery Institute intelligent design campaigns -- Campaigns which seek to promote intelligent design creationism
Wikipedia - Diving equipment technician -- Person who maintains, repairs and tests diving and support equipment
Wikipedia - DIY ethic -- Do-It-Yourself: Self-sufficiency by completing tasks without the aid of a paid expert
Wikipedia - Dizziness -- neurological condition causing impairment in spatial perception and stability
Wikipedia - Dmitrii Kozlovskii -- Russian pair skater
Wikipedia - Dmitri Khromin -- Russian-Polish pair skater
Wikipedia - Dmitri Sukhanov -- Russian pair skater
Wikipedia - Dmitry Rylov -- Russian pair skater
Wikipedia - Dmitry Sopot -- Russian pair skater
Wikipedia - DNA repair -- Cellular mechanism
Wikipedia - Doctors' plot -- 1950s antisemitic campaign by Stalin in the Soviet Union
Wikipedia - Dog Barking at the Moon (Miro) -- Painting by Joan Miro
Wikipedia - Dogg's Hamlet, Cahoot's Macbeth -- pair of 1979 plays by Tom Stoppard
Wikipedia - Dogs Playing Poker -- Set of paintings by Cassius Marcellus Coolidge
Wikipedia - Do it yourself -- Building, modifying, or repairing something without the aid of experts or professionals
Wikipedia - Dolgor Ser-Od -- Mongolian-German painter
Wikipedia - Dolichoderus inpai -- Species of ant
Wikipedia - Dolla Richmond -- New Zealand painter
Wikipedia - Dolors Vazquez Aznar -- Spanish painter
Wikipedia - Domenichino -- 17th-century Italian painter
Wikipedia - Domenico Alfani -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Domenico Ammirato -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Domenico Aspari -- Italian painter and engraver
Wikipedia - Domenico Battaglia -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Domenico Caprioli -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Domenico Carpinoni -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Domenico di Bartolo -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Domenico Ghirlandaio -- Italian Renaissance painter from Florence (1448-1494)
Wikipedia - Domenico Induno -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Domenico Luigi Valeri -- Italian painter and architect
Wikipedia - Domenico Morani -- Italian painter and sculptor
Wikipedia - Domenico Pedrini -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Domenico Pellegrini (painter) -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Domenico Purificato -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Domenico Veneziano -- Italian Renaissance painter
Wikipedia - Domine quo vadis? -- painting by Annibale Carracci
Wikipedia - Donald Beauregard -- American painter and charcoal drawer
Wikipedia - Donald Mackay (anti-drugs campaigner) -- 20th-century Australian activist and murder victim
Wikipedia - Donald Paige Frary -- American academic and writer
Wikipedia - Donald Stoltenberg -- American painter
Wikipedia - Donald Teague -- American painter and illustrator
Wikipedia - Donald Trump 2000 presidential campaign -- 2000 U.S. presidential campaign
Wikipedia - Donald Trump 2016 presidential campaign -- Successful 2016 US presidential campaign
Wikipedia - Donald Trump 2020 presidential campaign -- Political campaign
Wikipedia - Donald Trump presidential campaign, 2016
Wikipedia - Donald Wood (painter) -- British painter
Wikipedia - Donatello Stefanucci -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Donatello -- Italian painter and sculptor
Wikipedia - Donat Nonnotte -- French painter (1708-1785)
Wikipedia - Donato da Formello -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Donato Frisia -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Don Baldwin -- American former competitive pair skater
Wikipedia - Donella Meadows -- American environmental scientist, teacher, and writer,painter
Wikipedia - Don Fraser (figure skater) -- Canadian pair skater
Wikipedia - Dong Huibo -- Chinese pair skater
Wikipedia - Donna Bruton -- Painter and RISD faculty member
Wikipedia - Don't Copy That Floppy -- Software anti-piracy campaign
Wikipedia - Dora Boneva -- Bulgarian painter
Wikipedia - Dora Corty-Monkemeyer -- German painter
Wikipedia - Dora Wahlroos -- Finnish painter
Wikipedia - Doris Bloom -- South African painter
Wikipedia - Doris Schubach -- American pair skater
Wikipedia - Doris Zinkeisen -- 20th-century Scottish painter
Wikipedia - Dormition of the Virgin (El Greco) -- Painting by El Greco
Wikipedia - Doron Langberg -- Israeli-American painter
Wikipedia - Dorota Siudek -- Polish pair skater and coach
Wikipedia - Dorothea Schwartz Zimmer -- German painter
Wikipedia - Dorothy Bradford (artist) -- British painter and printmaker
Wikipedia - Dorothy Lockwood -- British artist known for her watercolour paintings
Wikipedia - Dorothy Stevens -- Canadian etcher, portrait painter, print maker, illustrator and teacher
Wikipedia - Dorrit Black -- Australian painter
Wikipedia - Dort or Dordrecht: The Dort packet-boat from Rotterdam becalmed -- 1818 painting by William Turner
Wikipedia - Dorymyrmex paiute -- Species of ant
Wikipedia - Dosso Dossi -- 16th-century Italian painter
Wikipedia - Dosta! -- Council of Europe awareness raising campaign
Wikipedia - Double act -- Pair of comedians whose act is based on their uneven relationship
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Wikipedia - Double V campaign -- Black American campaign to promote democracy
Wikipedia - Doubtful Crumbs -- Painting by Edwin Henry Landseer
Wikipedia - Doug Henderson (artist) -- Paleoartist and painter
Wikipedia - Douglas MacDiarmid -- New Zealand painter
Wikipedia - Douro -- River in Spain and Portugal
Wikipedia - Douwe de Hoop -- Dutch painter and draftsman
Wikipedia - Dovedale by Moonlight -- Painting by Joseph Wright of Derby
Wikipedia - Draft:After the Bath -- 1867 painting by Pierre-Auguste Renoir
Wikipedia - Draft:A Visit to the Nursery -- Oil painting by Jean-Honore Fragonard
Wikipedia - Draft:BlackinX -- Campaign for diversity in the chemical sciences
Wikipedia - Draft:Christian Zeimert -- French painter
Wikipedia - Draft:Evening (painting) -- Painting by Caspar David Friedrich
Wikipedia - Draft:Floatplane (website) -- Paid video-sharing service
Wikipedia - Draft:Foxglove (campaigning organisation) -- Nonprofit limited company in London
Wikipedia - Draft:Henk Krist -- Dutch figurative painter
Wikipedia - Draft:Javier Carcamo Guzman -- Guatemalan novelist and painter
Wikipedia - Draft:Jean Claude Picot -- French painter
Wikipedia - Draft:Jean Cordova -- Italian painter and sculptor
Wikipedia - Draft:Miss Spain America -- national beauty pageant in Spain, started in 1929
Wikipedia - Draft:Neubrandenburg Burning -- Painting by Caspar David Friedrich
Wikipedia - Draft:Paige Stark -- American musician
Wikipedia - Draft:Painworth -- legal technology App
Wikipedia - Draft:Peter Williams (painter) -- Painter
Wikipedia - Draft (politics) -- Campaign to encourage a person to stand for political office.
Wikipedia - Draft:Rene Bernasconi -- Swiss painter
Wikipedia - Draft:Rotsachtige kust van Zuid-Java met de grotten van Karang Bolong -- 1930 painting by Willem Jan Pieter van der Does
Wikipedia - Draft:Shai Azoulay -- Israeli painter
Wikipedia - Draft:Shakila Ahmed -- Shakila Ahmed, singer, songwriter, painter, composer and writer
Wikipedia - Draft:Takato Yamamoto -- Japanese painter
Wikipedia - Draft:The Garden Terrace -- Painting by Caspar David Friedrich
Wikipedia - Draft:Typo FX (Company) -- An Irish second hand and repair shop
Wikipedia - Draft:Warren Heard -- American painter and graphic artist
Wikipedia - Draft:Woman before the Setting Sun -- Painting by Caspar David Friedrich
Wikipedia - Draft:Yori Hatakeyama -- Japanese painter
Wikipedia - Dragan GaM-EM->i -- Croatian painter
Wikipedia - Drago Jurak -- Croatian painter
Wikipedia - Dragonlance -- Dungeons & Dragons fictional campaign setting
Wikipedia - Drawbridge in Nieuw-Amsterdam -- Painting by Vincent van Gogh
Wikipedia - Dresden Triptych -- Painting by Jan van Eyck
Wikipedia - Dressing for the Carnival -- Painting by Winslow Homer
Wikipedia - Drill, baby, drill -- 2008 political campaign slogan of the United States Republican Party
Wikipedia - Drisana Levitzke-Gray -- Australian disability rights campaigner
Wikipedia - Drive on Munda Point -- Battle of the New Georgia campaign during World War II
Wikipedia - Drop the Debt -- Late 1990s campaign for international debt cancellation
Wikipedia - Droving into the light -- painting by Hans Heysen
Wikipedia - Drowning Girl -- Painting by Roy Lichtenstein
Wikipedia - Drowning -- Respiratory impairment resulting from being in or underneath a liquid
Wikipedia - Dr. Pozzi at Home -- Painting by John Singer Sargent
Wikipedia - Drug Recognition Expert -- Law enforcement officer trained to identify people whose driving is impaired by drugs
Wikipedia - Drying Nets -- Painting by Alfred Sisley
Wikipedia - Dsseldorf school of painting
Wikipedia - Duccio -- 13th and 14th-century Italian painter
Wikipedia - Duke of Buckingham series -- Series of nine paintings by Paolo Veronese
Wikipedia - Duke of Hijar -- Hereditary title in the Peerage of Spain, accompanied by the dignity of Grandee
Wikipedia - Duke of la Victoria (title) -- Hereditary title in the Peerage of Spain, accompanied by the dignity of Grandee
Wikipedia - Duke of Victoria de las Amezcoas -- Hereditary title in the Peerage of Spain, accompanied by the dignity of Grandee
Wikipedia - Dulcie Foo Fat -- British-born Canadian landscape painter
Wikipedia - Dull Gret -- Painting by Pieter Bruegel the Elder
Wikipedia - Dumb Ways to Die -- 2012 PSA campaign by Metro Trains of Australia
Wikipedia - Dune Landscape with Travelers and Cattle -- Painting by Joos de Momper
Wikipedia - Dungeon Master Option: High-Level Campaigns
Wikipedia - Dungeons > Dragons campaign settings
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Wikipedia - Dusti Bonge -- American painter
Wikipedia - Dutch conquest of the Banda Islands -- Military campaign of the Dutch East India Company from 1609 to 1621
Wikipedia - Dutch East Indies campaign -- Conquest of Indonesia by Japan, 1941-1942
Wikipedia - Dutch Golden Age painting -- 17th-century form of Dutch painting
Wikipedia - Dutch Ships in a Calm Sea -- 1665 oil painting by Willem van de Velde the Younger
Wikipedia - Dylan Moscovitch -- Canadian pair skater
Wikipedia - Dynamical parallax -- Iterative technique to find the properties of the stars in a binary pair
Wikipedia - Dynamism of a Car (Russolo) -- Painting by Luigi Russolo
Wikipedia - Dynamism of a Cyclist -- 1913 painting by Umberto Boccioni
Wikipedia - Dynamism of a Dog on a Leash -- painting by Giacomo Balla
Wikipedia - Dysmenorrhea -- Pain during menstruation
Wikipedia - Eamon N. Doyle -- Geologist and science promoter, finder of Crepidosoma doyleii, and painter
Wikipedia - Earl Purdy -- American painter
Wikipedia - Early Netherlandish painting -- Work of artists active in the Low Countries during the 15th- and 16th-century Northern Renaissance
Wikipedia - Ear pain -- Pain in the ear
Wikipedia - EASE/ACCESS -- pair of Space Shuttle flight experiments
Wikipedia - East African campaign (World War I) -- Series of battles in East Africa during World War I
Wikipedia - Eastern Medal -- German campaign medal
Wikipedia - Eastern Orthodoxy in Spain
Wikipedia - Eastman Johnson -- 19th-century American painter
Wikipedia - East Sea Campaign -- 1975 US naval operation
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Wikipedia - Eben Comins -- American painter
Wikipedia - Eberhard Emminger -- German lithographer and painter
Wikipedia - Eberron Campaign Setting
Wikipedia - Eberron -- Dungeons & Dragons fictional campaign setting
Wikipedia - Ecce Homo (Andrea Solari) -- 16th c. paintings by Andrea Solari
Wikipedia - Ecce Homo (Daumier) -- Painting by Honore Daumier
Wikipedia - Ecce Homo (Luini) -- Painting by Bernardino Luini
Wikipedia - Ecce Homo (Rubens) -- Painting by Peter Paul Rubens
Wikipedia - Echo and Narcissus (Waterhouse painting) -- Painting by John William Waterhouse
Wikipedia - Economic history of Spain -- Development of Spain's economy in history
Wikipedia - Economy of Galicia -- Regional economy in Spain
Wikipedia - Economy of Madrid -- Overview of the economy of Madrid, Spain
Wikipedia - Economy of Spain -- National economy
Wikipedia - Edgar Carrasco Arteaga -- Ecuadorian painter and sculptor
Wikipedia - Edgard Derouet -- French painter
Wikipedia - Edgard Tytgat -- Belgian painter
Wikipedia - Ed Gerdes -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Edifici de Sindicats -- Monumental building in Barcelona, Spain
Wikipedia - Edita Broglio -- Latvian painter
Wikipedia - Edith Blake -- Irish painter and amateur lepidopterist
Wikipedia - Edith Carr -- China painter and sister of Emily Carr (b. 1856, d. 1919)
Wikipedia - Edith Hollant -- Haitian photographer and painter
Wikipedia - Edith Horle -- American painter
Wikipedia - Edith Hoyt -- American painter
Wikipedia - Edith Kiss -- Hungarian sculptor and concentration camp painter
Wikipedia - Edith Lilla Holmes -- 20th-century Australian painter
Wikipedia - Edith Magonigle -- American painter
Wikipedia - Edith Marion Scales -- British painter
Wikipedia - Edith Pechey -- Doctor, campaigner for women's rights
Wikipedia - Edma Morisot -- French painter
Wikipedia - Edman Ayvazyan -- Iranian-Armenian painter
Wikipedia - Edme Quenedey des Ricets -- French painter and engraver
Wikipedia - Edmond de Belamy -- Painting by AI
Wikipedia - Edmond Dubrunfaut -- Belgian painter
Wikipedia - Edmund Bartlomiejczyk -- Polish painter
Wikipedia - Edmund Leighton -- English painter
Wikipedia - Edmund Marion Ashe -- American illustrator and painter
Wikipedia - Edmund von Worndle -- Austrian landscape painter
Wikipedia - Edna Paisano -- Native American demographer and statistician
Wikipedia - Edna Zyl Modie -- American painter
Wikipedia - Edoardo Gelli -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Edo Murtic -- Croatian painter
Wikipedia - Edouard BM-CM-)liard -- French painter
Wikipedia - Edouard Castres -- Swiss painter
Wikipedia - Edouard CrM-CM-)mieux -- French painter
Wikipedia - Edouard Francois Zier -- French illustrator and painter
Wikipedia - Edouard Manet -- 19th-century French painter
Wikipedia - Edouard Pingret -- French painter
Wikipedia - Edouard Vysekal -- American painter
Wikipedia - Eduard Arakelyan -- Armenian painter
Wikipedia - Eduard Busser -- Swiss painter
Wikipedia - Eduard Ender -- Austrian painter
Wikipedia - Eduard Frankfort -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Eduard Frederich -- German painter
Wikipedia - Eduard Gubler -- Swiss painter
Wikipedia - Eduard Hopf -- German painter
Wikipedia - Eduard Isabekyan -- Armenian painter
Wikipedia - Eduardo Abela -- Cuban painter and comic artist
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Wikipedia - Eduardo Dalbono -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Eduardo Navarro Quelquejeu -- Panamanian artist, painter and sculptor
Wikipedia - Eduardo X Arroyo -- Ecuadorian painter
Wikipedia - Eduard Peithner von Lichtenfels -- Austrian painter
Wikipedia - Eduard Sauer -- German painter
Wikipedia - Eduard von Engerth -- Austrian painter
Wikipedia - Eduard von Gebhardt -- German painter
Wikipedia - Eduard von Grutzner -- German painter and professor of art
Wikipedia - Eduard von Heuss -- German painter and lithographer
Wikipedia - Education in Spain -- Overview of education in Spain
Wikipedia - Education of the Virgin (Wautier) -- c. 1650 painting by Michaelina Wautier
Wikipedia - Edvard Diriks -- Norwegian painter (1855-1930)
Wikipedia - Edvard Isto -- Finnish painter
Wikipedia - Edvard Munch -- Norwegian painter and printmaker
Wikipedia - Edvard Westman -- Swedish painter
Wikipedia - Edward Armitage -- English painter
Wikipedia - Edward Borein -- American etcher and painter
Wikipedia - Edward Calvert (painter)
Wikipedia - Edward Coletti -- American Poet and Painter
Wikipedia - Edward Dufner -- American painter and art teacher
Wikipedia - Edward Edwards (painter) -- English painter
Wikipedia - Edward Henry Corbould -- British painter
Wikipedia - Edward Hopper -- 20th-century American painter
Wikipedia - Edward Jordon -- Campaigner for equal rights in Jamaica
Wikipedia - Edward Louis Lawrenson -- Irish painter
Wikipedia - Edward Okun -- Polish painter
Wikipedia - Edward Stott -- English artist known for rural landscape painting (1855-1918)
Wikipedia - Edward Taylor Snow -- American painter and art collector
Wikipedia - Edward Thomas Daniell -- English landscape painter and etcher
Wikipedia - Edwin Boyd Johnson -- American painter, designer, muralist and photographer
Wikipedia - Edwin Edwards (artist) -- British painter, engraver and lawyer
Wikipedia - Edwin Henry Boddington -- English painter
Wikipedia - Edwin Landseer -- English painter
Wikipedia - Edwin Long -- British painter
Wikipedia - Edwin Pain -- Welsh cricketer and Royal Navy sailor
Wikipedia - Edzard Koning -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - E. E. Cummings -- American poet, painter, essayist, author, and playwright (1894-1962)
Wikipedia - Eero JM-CM-$rnefelt -- Finnish realist painter (1863-1937)
Wikipedia - Effie Gray -- Scottish painter
Wikipedia - Efraim Allsalu -- Estonian painter
Wikipedia - Efrain Andrade Viteri -- Ecuadorian painter
Wikipedia - Egbert Schaap -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Egerton Cooper -- British painter
Wikipedia - Egide Linnig -- Belgian painter, draughtsman and engraver
Wikipedia - EglM-DM-^W KarpaviM-DM-^MiM-EM-+tM-DM-^W -- Lithuanian painter
Wikipedia - Egon Rusina Moroder -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Egon Schiele -- Austrian painter
Wikipedia - Egon Tschirch -- German painter
Wikipedia - Egypt Medal (1801) -- East India Company medal for 1801 Egyptian campaign
Wikipedia - Egyptomania -- Renewed European interest in ancient Egypt during the 19th century due to NapoleonM-bM-^@M-^Ys Egyptian Campaign
Wikipedia - Eiaha Ohipa -- Painting by Paul Gauguin
Wikipedia - Eight Bells (painting) -- Painting by Winslow Homer
Wikipedia - Eight Elvises -- 1963 painting by Andy Warhol
Wikipedia - Eigil Schwab -- Swedish painter
Wikipedia - Eiho Sato -- Japanese painter
Wikipedia - Einar Hein -- Danish painter
Wikipedia - Eino Kaipainen -- Finnish actor
Wikipedia - Eirene Mort -- Australian painter, etcher and illustrator
Wikipedia - Ejnar Hansen (painter) -- American painter
Wikipedia - Ekaterina Alexandrovskaya -- Russian-Australian pairs skater (2000-2020)
Wikipedia - Ekaterina Borisova -- Russian pair skater
Wikipedia - Ekaterine Abuladze -- Georgian painter
Wikipedia - Ekaterinoslav March -- Campaign 1918-19 in the Ukrainian War of Independence
Wikipedia - Ekke Ozlberger -- Austrian painter
Wikipedia - Elaine Anthony -- American mixed media painter
Wikipedia - Elaine Paige Live -- 2009 live album by Elaine Paige
Wikipedia - Elaine Paige -- English singer, actress, and recording artist
Wikipedia - Elaine Stocki -- Photographer, painter and professor
Wikipedia - Elanor Colburn -- American painter
Wikipedia - El Balco del Pirineu -- Human settlement in Montferrer i CastellbM-CM-2, Alt Urgell, Lleida Province, Spain
Wikipedia - El BaM-CM-1uelo -- Historic site in Granada, Spain
Wikipedia - El Bosquet -- Small settlement in Catalonia, Spain
Wikipedia - El Cerro de Andevalo -- Town and municipality of Spain
Wikipedia - El Comercio (Spain) -- Spanish newspaper
Wikipedia - El Correo -- Daily newspaper in Bilbao and the Basque Country of northern Spain
Wikipedia - Eleanor Allen Moore -- Scots-Irish painter
Wikipedia - Eleanor Modrakowska -- American painter
Wikipedia - Eleanor Pairman -- Scottish mathematician
Wikipedia - Elective Affinities (Magritte) -- Painting by Rene Magritte
Wikipedia - Electronics right to repair
Wikipedia - Eleftherios Foulidis -- Greek icon painter
Wikipedia - Elena Bechke -- Russian pair skater
Wikipedia - Elena Berezhnaya -- Russian pair skater
Wikipedia - Elena Brockmann -- Spanish painter
Wikipedia - Elena Efaieva -- Russian former pair skater
Wikipedia - Elena Nikonova -- Russian pair skater
Wikipedia - Elena Valova -- Russian pair skater
Wikipedia - Eleonora Tscherning -- Danish painter
Wikipedia - El Escorial -- Monastery and historical residence of the King of Spain
Wikipedia - Elga Balk -- South African pair skater
Wikipedia - El Greco -- Greek painter, sculptor and architect of the Spanish Renaissance (1541-1614)
Wikipedia - Eliane Sampaio -- Brazilian rhythmic gymnast
Wikipedia - Elias Baeck -- German painter and engraver
Wikipedia - Elias Muukka -- Finnish painter
Wikipedia - Elihu Yale seated at table with the Second Duke of Devonshire and Lord James Cavendish -- c.1708 oil on canvas painting by unknown British artist
Wikipedia - Elin Alfhild Nordlund -- Finnish painter
Wikipedia - Elinor Darwin -- Irish born illustrator, engraver and portrait painter
Wikipedia - Elinor Proby Adams -- English painter
Wikipedia - Eliodoro Forbicini -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Eliot O'Hara -- American painter
Wikipedia - Elisa Beetz-Charpentier -- French sculptor, medallist and painter
Wikipedia - Elisabeth Andrae -- German painter
Wikipedia - Elisabeth Calmes -- Luxembourg painter
Wikipedia - Elisabeth Czapek -- Swedish miniature painter
Wikipedia - Elisabeth Vellacott -- English painter
Wikipedia - Elisabeth VigM-CM-)e Le Brun -- 18th and 19th-century French painter
Wikipedia - Elisabetta Benato-Beltrami -- 19th-century Italian painter and sculptor
Wikipedia - Elisa Rigutini Bulle -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Eliza Anscombe -- English-born painter, emigrant to New Zealand
Wikipedia - Elizabeth Colomba -- French painter of Martinique heritage
Wikipedia - Elizabeth Knight (physician) -- English doctor and campaigner for women's suffrage
Wikipedia - Elizabeth Osborne -- American painter
Wikipedia - Elizabeth Parsons (artist) -- English born painter, lithographer and art teacher who exhibited widely in London and Melbourne
Wikipedia - Elizabeth Putnam (figure skater) -- Canadian pair skater
Wikipedia - Elizabeth Thompson (painter) -- American painter
Wikipedia - Elizabeth Twistington Higgins -- British ballet dancer, painter
Wikipedia - Elizabeth Walker (artist) -- Painter and engraver from Britain
Wikipedia - Elizabeth Warren 2020 presidential campaign -- 2020 presidential campaign of Elizabeth Warren
Wikipedia - Elizabeth Wilson (doctor) -- Doctor active in family planning; right-to-die campaigner
Wikipedia - Eliza Douglas -- American painter
Wikipedia - Elizaveta Levshina -- Russian pair skater
Wikipedia - El Khasne, Petra (painting) -- painting by Frederic Edwin Church
Wikipedia - Ellen Favorin -- Finnish painter
Wikipedia - Ellen Thesleff -- Finnish painter
Wikipedia - Ellen von Meyern -- New Zealand painter
Wikipedia - Ellinor Aiki -- Estonian painter
Wikipedia - Elli Riehl -- Austrian painter
Wikipedia - El Maipes Necropolis -- Cultural property in Agaete, Spain
Wikipedia - El Manresa -- Human settlement in Badalona, Barcelones, Barcelona Province, Spain
Wikipedia - Elmer Plummer -- American water colour painter
Wikipedia - El Miron Cave -- Cave and archaeological site in Spain
Wikipedia - Elmo Gideon -- American painter and sculptor
Wikipedia - El Mundo (Spain)
Wikipedia - El Pais -- Spanish newspaper
Wikipedia - El Rio de Luz -- painting by Frederic Edwin Church
Wikipedia - Elsa Giobel-Oyler -- Swedish painter
Wikipedia - Elsie Vera Cole -- English painter, engraver and art teacher
Wikipedia - El sueM-CM-1o de Calpurnia -- 1861 painting by Luis M-CM-^Alvarez Catala
Wikipedia - Elva Blacker -- English painter
Wikipedia - Elysa Ayala -- Ecuadorian writer and painter
Wikipedia - Emanuel Bachrach-Baree -- German painter
Wikipedia - Emanuel de Witte -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Emanuel Famira -- Czech painter and sculptor
Wikipedia - Embajadores -- Ward of Madrid in Spain
Wikipedia - Embassy of the Philippines, Madrid -- Diplomatic mission of the Philippines in Spain
Wikipedia - Embassy of the United Kingdom, Madrid -- Chief diplomatic mission of the United Kingdom in Spain
Wikipedia - Emil Bartoschek -- German painter
Wikipedia - Emil Ciocoiu -- Romanian painter and photographer
Wikipedia - Emile Appay -- French painter
Wikipedia - Emile Aubry (printer) -- French painter
Wikipedia - Emile Chambon -- Swiss painter and illustrator
Wikipedia - Emile-Florent Lecomte -- Belgian painter
Wikipedia - Emile Gravelle -- French individualist anarchist and naturist activist, writer and painter
Wikipedia - Emile LM-CM-)vy -- French painter (1826-1890)
Wikipedia - Emile Lucien Salkin -- Belgian painter
Wikipedia - Emil Flecken -- German painter
Wikipedia - Emilia CastaM-CM-1eda Martinez -- Spanish painter
Wikipedia - Emilia dos Santos Braga -- Portuguese painter
Wikipedia - Emilia Rotter -- Hungarian pair skater
Wikipedia - Emilie von Buttner -- German painter
Wikipedia - Emilio Amadei -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Emilio Borsa -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Emil Kotrba -- Czech painter
Wikipedia - Emil Ratzenhofer -- Austrian pair skater
Wikipedia - Emily Coonan -- Canadian painter
Wikipedia - Emily Sartain -- 19th and 20th-century American painter
Wikipedia - Emma Bormann -- Austrian painter and graphic designer
Wikipedia - Emma Jones (naturalist) -- New Zealand author, naturalist and painter
Wikipedia - Emma M. Baegl -- American painter and educator
Wikipedia - Emma Thomsen (painter) -- Danish flower painter
Wikipedia - EmM-DM-+lija GruzM-DM-+te -- Latvian painter
Wikipedia - Emperor Taizong's campaign against Xueyantuo
Wikipedia - Emu War -- Nuisance wildlife management campaign in Australia
Wikipedia - Enayat Allah Ibrahim -- Egyptian painter
Wikipedia - En Canot -- Painting by Jean Metzinger
Wikipedia - Enclosed Field with Peasant -- Painting by Vincent van Gogh
Wikipedia - End Conscription Campaign
Wikipedia - End of Basque home rule in Spain -- Final period of the Basque self-government within the Crown of Castile and Spain
Wikipedia - Endovascular aneurysm repair -- Surgery used to treat abdominal aortic aneurysm
Wikipedia - Energy in Spain -- Overview of the production, consumption, import and export of energy and electricity in Spain
Wikipedia - Engelbert Bertel-Nordstrom -- Swedish painter
Wikipedia - Engelina Hameetman-Schlette -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - English Armada -- attack fleet sent against Spain by Queen Elizabeth I of England
Wikipedia - English Collective of Prostitutes -- British sex workers campaigning group
Wikipedia - English expedition to Flanders (1297-98) -- English military campaign
Wikipedia - Enlightenment in Spain -- The enlightenment movement in Spain
Wikipedia - Ennio Morlotti -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - En plein air -- Act of painting outdoors
Wikipedia - Enrico Accatino -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Enrico Bandini -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Enrico Bartezago -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Enrico Castiglioni -- Italian architect, painter and sculptor
Wikipedia - Enrico Pollastrini -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Enrico Prampolini -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Enrico Scotta -- Italian painter and sculptor (b. 1949)
Wikipedia - Enrique Marin -- Spanish painter
Wikipedia - Enrique Simonet -- Spanish painter (1866-1927)
Wikipedia - Enthroned Madonna Adoring the Sleeping Christ Child -- Painting by Giovanni Bellini
Wikipedia - Enthroned Madonna and Child with Saint James the Great and Saint Jerome -- Painting by Moretto da Brescia
Wikipedia - Entrance to the Grand Canal, Venice (Signac) -- Painting by Paul Signac
Wikipedia - Envy -- Pain at the sight of another's good fortune
Wikipedia - Enzo Cucchi -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Equestrian Portrait of Charles of Bourbon -- Painting by Francesco Liani in the National Museum of Capodimonte, Naples
Wikipedia - Equestrian Portrait of Charles V -- Painting by Titian
Wikipedia - Equestrian Portrait of Cornelis and Michiel Pompe van Meerdervoort with Their Tutor and Coachman -- 17th-century painting by Dutch painter Aelbert Cuyp
Wikipedia - Equestrian Portrait of Maria Amalia of Saxony -- Painting by Francesco Liani in the National Museum of Capodimonte, Naples
Wikipedia - Equestrian Portrait of Thomas Francis, Prince of Carignano -- 1634 painting by Anthony van Dyck
Wikipedia - Equianalgesic -- Comparison of equivalent doses of pain medications
Wikipedia - Eraclio Minozzi -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Eradication of suffering -- Permanent absence of pain and suffering
Wikipedia - Ercan Akbay -- Turkish writer, painter, and musician
Wikipedia - ErdM-EM-^Qs-Szemeredi theorem -- For every finite set of real numbers, the pairwise sums or products form a bigger set
Wikipedia - Eremophila paisleyi -- Species of plant
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Wikipedia - Erich Buttner (painter) -- German painter
Wikipedia - Erich Correns -- German painter and lithographer
Wikipedia - Erich Torggler -- Austrian painter
Wikipedia - Eric Jean-Louis -- Haitian painter
Wikipedia - Eric Peters (painter) -- German painter
Wikipedia - Eric Radford -- Canadian pair skater
Wikipedia - Erietta Vordoni -- Greek painter and sculptor
Wikipedia - Erika PetunovienM-DM-^W -- Lithuanian painter
Wikipedia - Erik Pevernagie -- Belgian painter
Wikipedia - Erik Raadal -- Danish painter
Wikipedia - Erle Loran -- American painter and art historian
Wikipedia - Ermenegildo Agazzi -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Ermenegildo Costantini -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Ermita de San Pelayo y San Isidoro -- Ruined Romanesque church, originally in the city of M-CM-^Avila, Spain
Wikipedia - Ernest Bell (activist) -- Publisher and animal welfare campaigner
Wikipedia - Ernest Buckmaster -- Australian painter
Wikipedia - Ernest Greenwood (artist) -- English painter
Wikipedia - Ernest Griset -- Painter and illustrator
Wikipedia - Ernest Hubert -- Swiss painter
Wikipedia - Ernestine Friedrichsen -- German painter
Wikipedia - Ernestine Panckoucke -- French botanical painter (1784-1860)
Wikipedia - Ernest Moore (painter) -- English painter
Wikipedia - Ernesto Allason -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Ernesto Bark -- Writer, journalist and political activist based in Spain
Wikipedia - ErnM-EM-^Q Tibor -- Hungarian painter
Wikipedia - Ernst Anders -- German painter
Wikipedia - Ernst Aufseeser -- German painter
Wikipedia - Ernst Bohm -- German painter
Wikipedia - Ernst Frick (painter) -- Swiss painter
Wikipedia - Ernst Gebauer -- German painter
Wikipedia - Ernst Hampel -- German painter and resistance fighter
Wikipedia - Ernst Hansen -- Danish painter
Wikipedia - Ernst Huber (painter) -- Austrian painter
Wikipedia - Ernst Joachim Forster -- German painter and an art critic
Wikipedia - Ernst Kreidolf -- Swiss painter
Wikipedia - Ernst Ludwig Franke -- Austrian painter
Wikipedia - Ernst Ludwig Kirchner -- 20th-century German painter, sculptor, engraver and printmaker
Wikipedia - Ernst Morgenthaler -- Swiss painter
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Wikipedia - Ernst Zacharias Platner -- German painter and writer
Wikipedia - Error threshold (evolution) -- A limit on the number of base pairs a self-replicating molecule may have before mutation will destroy the information in subsequent generations of the molecule
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Wikipedia - Erwin Lang -- Austrian painter
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Wikipedia - Escalera's bat -- European bat in the family Vespertilionidae found in Spain, Portugal, and southern France.
Wikipedia - Escandon Pass -- A mountain pass in Teruel Province, Aragon, Spain
Wikipedia - Escuela Oficial de Idiomas -- Network of language schools in Spain
Wikipedia - Eskalera Karakola -- Squat in Madrid, Spain
Wikipedia - Espaillat Province -- Province of the Dominican Republic
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Wikipedia - Estadio Colombino -- Multi-use stadium in Huelva, Spain
Wikipedia - Estadio de Linarejos -- Stadium in Linares, Spain
Wikipedia - Estadio de los Juegos Mediterraneos -- Multi-purpose stadium in Spain
Wikipedia - Estadio Escribano Castilla -- Multi-purpose stadium, in Motril, Spain
Wikipedia - Estadio Francisco Artes Carrasco -- Multi-use stadium in Lorca, Spain
Wikipedia - Estadio Los Manantiales -- Stadium in the town of Alhaurin de la Torre, Malaga, Spain
Wikipedia - Estadio Municipal de Altamira -- Sports venue in Spain
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Wikipedia - Eugene Delacroix -- 19th-century French painter
Wikipedia - Eugene Delecluse -- French painter
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Wikipedia - Eugene Viala -- French painter
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Wikipedia - Eugeniusz Arct -- Polish painter
Wikipedia - Eugeniusz Geppert -- Polish painter
Wikipedia - Eugen Neuhaus -- German-born American painter and professor
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Wikipedia - Eugen Weisz -- American painter
Wikipedia - European-African-Middle Eastern Campaign Medal -- American campaign medal
Wikipedia - European Peace Marches -- European peace campaign of the 1980s
Wikipedia - European Union vs. Google -- EU's anti-trust campaign against Google
Wikipedia - European War Office -- Humanitarian office for victims of WWI, established in Spain
Wikipedia - Euskotren Tranbia -- Tram system in Bilbao and Vitoria-Gasteiz, Spain
Wikipedia - Euskotren Trena -- Train operating company in the Basque Country, Spain
Wikipedia - Eustache Le Sueur -- French artist and one of the founders of the French Academy of Painting (1617-1655)
Wikipedia - Euthanasia -- |Practice of intentionally ending a life in order to relieve pain and suffering
Wikipedia - Euthymides -- Late 6th century BC Athenian potter and painter of red-figure vases
Wikipedia - Eva Acke -- Swedish painter
Wikipedia - Eva Anttila -- Finnish painter and textile artist (1894-1993)
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Wikipedia - Evan Bayh 2008 presidential campaign -- 2008 presidential campaign of Evan Bayh
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Wikipedia - Everhardus Koster -- Dutch painter
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Wikipedia - Excursion in the Countryside of Infanta Isabel Clara Eugenia -- Painting by Joos de Momper
Wikipedia - Execution (painting) -- painting by Beijing artist Yue Minjun
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Wikipedia - Expulsion of Jews from Spain -- 15th century expulsion of Jews from Spain
Wikipedia - Expulsion of the Moriscos -- 17th century expulsion of Moriscos from Spain
Wikipedia - Extra-pair copulation -- Non-monogamy in monogamous species
Wikipedia - Extremadurans -- People from Extremadura, Spain
Wikipedia - Extremadura -- Autonomous community of Spain
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Wikipedia - Fantastical Portraits -- Painting series by Jean-Honore Fragonard
Wikipedia - Fantastic War -- War between Spain and Portugal as part of the Seven Years' War
Wikipedia - Fantine (painting)
Wikipedia - Farmhouse in Provence -- Painting by Vincent van Gogh
Wikipedia - Farmhouses Among Trees -- Painting by Vincent van Gogh
Wikipedia - Farmhouses in Loosduinen near The Hague at Twilight -- Painting by Vincent van Gogh
Wikipedia - Farms near Auvers -- Painting by Vincent van Gogh
Wikipedia - Farm with Stacks of Peat -- Painting by Vincent van Gogh
Wikipedia - Fatima Baquiran -- Filipino painter
Wikipedia - Faustina Maratti -- Italian painter (1679-1745)
Wikipedia - Faustino Raineri -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Fausto Eliseo Coppini -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Favaritx Lighthouse -- Lighthouse on Menorca, Spain
Wikipedia - Feast of Herod with the Beheading of St John the Baptist -- Painting by Bartholomeus Strobel the Younger
Wikipedia - Fedayeen -- Military groups willing to sacrifice themselves for a larger campaign
Wikipedia - Fedele Fischetti -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Federation of Christian Democracy -- Defunct political organisation in Spain 1977-1978
Wikipedia - Federico Barocci -- Italian painter (1535-1612)
Wikipedia - Federico Bernagozzi -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Federico Brandt -- Venezuelan painter
Wikipedia - Federico Cervelli -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Federico de Madrazo y Ochoa -- Spanish painter
Wikipedia - Federico Faruffini -- Italian painter and engraver (1833-1869)
Wikipedia - Federico Maldarelli -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Federigo Brunori -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Federigo Pedulli -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Fedor Klimov -- Russian pair skater
Wikipedia - Felice Abrami -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Felice Boscaratti -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Felice Carena -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Felice Ludovisi -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Felice Vinelli -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Felicia Donceanu -- Romanian painter, sculptor and composer
Wikipedia - Felicie Howell -- American painter
Wikipedia - Felim Egan -- Irish painter
Wikipedia - Felipe Checa -- Spanish painter
Wikipedia - Felipe Ehrenberg -- Mexican artist and publisher who worked in painting, drawing, printmaking and performance
Wikipedia - Felipe Ramirez -- Spanish baroque painter
Wikipedia - Felipe VI of Spain
Wikipedia - Felipe VI -- Incumbent King of Spain
Wikipedia - Felix Auvray -- French painter
Wikipedia - Felix Boisselier -- French painter
Wikipedia - Felix Cottrau -- French painter
Wikipedia - Felix-Henri Giacomotti -- French painter (1828-1909)
Wikipedia - Felix Hess -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Felix-Joseph Barrias -- French painter
Wikipedia - Felix Maria Diogg -- Swiss painter
Wikipedia - Felix Meyer -- Swiss painter and engraver
Wikipedia - Felix Nussbaum -- German painter
Wikipedia - Felix Parra -- Mexican painter
Wikipedia - Felix Trutat -- French painter
Wikipedia - Female Nude (Renoir, 1876) -- 1876 painting by Auguste Renoir
Wikipedia - Feminist movement -- Series of political campaigns for reforms on feminist issues
Wikipedia - Feminist Party of Spain -- Spanish political party, feminist
Wikipedia - Femke Hiemstra -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Femme aux Bras Croises -- Painting by Pablo Picasso
Wikipedia - Feodosiy Tetianych -- Ukrainian painter (1942 - 2007)
Wikipedia - Ferdinand Becker -- German painter
Wikipedia - Ferdinand Bellermann -- German painter
Wikipedia - Ferdinand Bol -- Dutch painter (1616-1680)
Wikipedia - Ferdinand Elle -- French painter
Wikipedia - Ferdinand Gehr -- Swiss painter
Wikipedia - Ferdinand Gueldry -- French painter
Wikipedia - Ferdinand Hodler -- Swiss painter (1853-1918)
Wikipedia - Ferdinand I and His Family -- painting by Angelica Kauffman
Wikipedia - Ferdinand I, Holy Roman Emperor -- 16th century Holy Roman Emperor, Archduke of Austria and Infante of Spain
Wikipedia - Ferdinand Keller (painter) -- German painter
Wikipedia - Ferdinand Kitt -- Austrian painter
Wikipedia - Ferdinand Leenhoff -- Dutch painter and sculptor
Wikipedia - Ferdinando Porcia -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Ferdinand Penker -- Austrian painter
Wikipedia - Ferdinand VII of Spain -- King of Spain (1784-1833) (r. 1808;1813-1833)
Wikipedia - Ferenc Berenyi -- Hungarian painter
Wikipedia - Ferenc M-CM-^Zjhazy -- Hungarian painter
Wikipedia - Fernanda de Paiva Tomas -- Portuguese communist and political prisoner under the Estado Novo
Wikipedia - Fernande Barrey -- French prostitute, model, and painter
Wikipedia - Fernande de Mertens -- Belgian-French painter
Wikipedia - Fernand Leger -- French painter
Wikipedia - Fernando Botero -- Colombian painter and sculptor
Wikipedia - Fernando Lanhas -- Portuguese painter and architect
Wikipedia - Fernand Sabatte -- French painter
Wikipedia - Fernand Verhaegen -- Belgian painter and etcher
Wikipedia - Fernand Wery -- Belgian painter
Wikipedia - Ferrara Cathedral Organ Case -- Painting by Cosimo Tura
Wikipedia - Ferrocarrils de la Generalitat de Catalunya -- Railway company in Catalonia, Spain
Wikipedia - Ferrocarrils de la Generalitat Valenciana -- Transport company in Valencia, Spain
Wikipedia - Ferruccio Pasqui -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - FET y de las JONS -- Political party in Spain between 1937 and 1977
Wikipedia - Fibromyalgia -- Chronic disorder of unknown cause characterized by pain, stiffness, and widespread tenderness in muscles
Wikipedia - Figure skating at the 1908 Summer Olympics - Pairs -- Figure skating at the Olympics
Wikipedia - Figure skating at the 1920 Summer Olympics - Pairs -- Figure skating at the Olympics
Wikipedia - Figure skating at the 1924 Winter Olympics - Pairs -- Figure skating at the Olympics
Wikipedia - Figure skating at the 1928 Winter Olympics - Pairs -- Figure skating at the Olympics
Wikipedia - Figure skating at the 1932 Winter Olympics - Pairs -- Figure skating at the Olympics
Wikipedia - Figure skating at the 1936 Winter Olympics - Pairs -- Figure skating at the Olympics
Wikipedia - Figure skating at the 1948 Winter Olympics - Pairs -- Figure skating at the Olympics
Wikipedia - Figure skating at the 1952 Winter Olympics - Pairs -- Figure skating at the Olympics
Wikipedia - Figure skating at the 1956 Winter Olympics - Pair skating -- Figure skating at the Olympics
Wikipedia - Figure skating at the 1960 Winter Olympics - Pair skating -- Figure skating at the Olympics
Wikipedia - Filippino Lippi -- Italian painter (1457-1504)
Wikipedia - Filippo Agricola -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Filippo Ambrosini -- Italian pair skater
Wikipedia - Filippo Balbi -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Filippo Bellini -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Filippo Bigioli -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Filippo Carcano -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Filippo di Antonio Filippelli -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Filippo Lippi -- 15th-century Italian Renaissance painter
Wikipedia - Filippo Pedrini -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Filippo Randazzo -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Filomena LinM-DM-^MiM-EM-+tM-DM-^W-VaitiekM-EM-+nienM-DM-^W -- Lithuanian set designer and painter
Wikipedia - Final offensive of the Spanish Civil War -- 1939 campaign in the Iberian Peninsula
Wikipedia - Finding of the Body of Saint Mark -- Painting by Tintoretto
Wikipedia - Fingerpaint -- Paint intended to be applied with the fingers
Wikipedia - Finn Christensen (artist) -- Norwegian painter and graphic artist
Wikipedia - Fiona Paisley -- Scottish-born Australian cultural historian
Wikipedia - Fire's on -- Painting by Arthur Streeton
Wikipedia - Firmino Monteiro -- Brazilian painter
Wikipedia - Firoz Ghanty -- Mauritian painter
Wikipedia - First Battle of Amman -- Part of Sinai/Palestine campaign in WWI
Wikipedia - First Carlist War -- Civil war in Spain from 1833 to 1840
Wikipedia - First Lady Michelle Obama (painting) -- Portrait of Michelle Obama by Amy Sherald
Wikipedia - First Persian invasion of Greece -- Retaliatory campaigns by Persia against the Ancient Greeks
Wikipedia - First Spanish Republic -- Political regime that existed in Spain between 11 February 1873 and 29 December 1874
Wikipedia - Fish Magic (Klee) -- Painting by Paul Klee
Wikipedia - Flag of Spain -- National flag
Wikipedia - Flaming June -- Painting by Frederic Leighton
Wikipedia - Flaminio Innocenzo Minozzi -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Flanders campaign -- Campaign in War of the First Coalition
Wikipedia - Flavio Bertelli -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Flavio-Shiro -- Japanese painter
Wikipedia - Flemish Baroque painting -- Painting movement
Wikipedia - Flemish Market and Washing Place -- Painting by Joos de Momper
Wikipedia - Flooding at Port-Marly -- 1872 painting by Alfred Sisley
Wikipedia - Flo (Progressive) -- Fictional salesperson appearing in a marketing campaign for Progressive Corporation
Wikipedia - Florence Engelbach -- English painter (1872-1951)
Wikipedia - Florence Fuller -- South African-born Australian portrait and landscape painter (1867 - 1946)
Wikipedia - Florence Lundborg -- Illustrator and painter
Wikipedia - Florence Sutro -- musician and painter
Wikipedia - Florent Chopin -- French painter
Wikipedia - Flores & Prats -- architectural practice in Barcelona, Spain
Wikipedia - Florian Just -- German pair skater
Wikipedia - Florinda (painting) -- Painting by Franz Xaver Winterhalter
Wikipedia - Flori van Acker -- Belgian painter (1858-1940)
Wikipedia - Flower Garland with Butterfly -- 1650s painting by Michaelina Wautier
Wikipedia - Flowers in a Crystal Vase -- C, 1882 painting by Edouard Manet
Wikipedia - Flowers in a Vase -- Painting by Jan Brueghel I
Wikipedia - Flowers with Two Lizards -- 1603 painting by Roelant Saverij
Wikipedia - Floyd-Warshall algorithm -- Algorithm for finding all-pairs shortest paths in graphs, allowing some edge weights to be negative
Wikipedia - FM-CM-*tes Venitiennes -- 1719 painting by Jean-Antoine Watteau
Wikipedia - Folke Persson -- Swedish painter
Wikipedia - Fomento de Construcciones y Contratas -- Construction company from Barcelona, Spain
Wikipedia - Fondillon -- Alicante-produced wine in Spain
Wikipedia - Fontaron -- Parish (parroquia) in Becerrea, Lugo, Galicia, Spain
Wikipedia - Font de Canaletes -- Fountain in Barcelona, Spain
Wikipedia - Fontes Tamarici -- Three springs in Velilla del Rio Carrion, Spain
Wikipedia - Footbridge across a Ditch -- Painting by Vincent van Gogh
Wikipedia - Forbes' Batteries -- Pair of artillery batteries in Gibraltar
Wikipedia - Forbes' list of the world's highest-paid dead celebrities -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - Forced conversions of Muslims in Spain -- 16th century edicts outlawing Islam in various kingdoms of Spain
Wikipedia - Ford Madox Brown -- 19th-century English painter
Wikipedia - Forgotten Realms Campaign Setting
Wikipedia - Forgotten Realms -- Dungeons & Dragons fictional campaign setting
Wikipedia - Formentor Lighthouse -- Lighthouse on Mallorca, Spain
Wikipedia - Fort of Paimogo -- 17th Century fort in Portugal
Wikipedia - Fortunato Gatti -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Fortunato Ventura -- Chilean painter
Wikipedia - Four Freedoms (Norman Rockwell) -- A series of four 1943 oil paintings by the American artist Norman Rockwell
Wikipedia - Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse (painting) -- 1887 painting by Viktor Vasnetsov
Wikipedia - Four Motors for Europe -- Cooperative network of regions in France, Germany, Spain, and Italy
Wikipedia - Fourth Transformation -- Campaign promise of Mexican president Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador
Wikipedia - Four Times of the Day -- A series of four paintings by English artist William Hogarth
Wikipedia - Fox Paine & Company -- American private equity firm
Wikipedia - Fra Angelico -- 15th-century early Italian Renaissance painter
Wikipedia - Fra Bartolomeo -- Italian Renaissance painter (1472-1517)
Wikipedia - Fragment of a Crucifixion -- 1950 painting by Francis Bacon
Wikipedia - France and Germany Star -- British Commonwealth military campaign medal
Wikipedia - Frances Borden -- British painter based in Devon
Wikipedia - Francesc Miralles i Galaup -- Spanish painter
Wikipedia - Francesco Alberi -- Italian painter (1765-1836)
Wikipedia - Francesco Allegrini da Gubbio -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Francesco Andreini (painter) -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Francesco Ange -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Francesco Antonio Cicalese -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Francesco Arancio -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Francesco Autoriello -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Francesco Aviani -- Italian painter (1662-1715)
Wikipedia - Francesco Barbieri -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Francesco Bernardi (painter) -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Francesco Biondo -- Italian painter (1735-1805)
Wikipedia - Francesco Boccaccino -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Francesco Bovini -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Francesco Brina -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Francesco Brizio -- Italian painter and engraver
Wikipedia - Francesco Busti -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Francesco Caccianemici -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Francesco Cairo -- Italian painter (1607-1665)
Wikipedia - Francesco Caldei -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Francesco Capelli -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Francesco Cavazzoni -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Francesco Clemente -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Francesco Colelli -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Francesco Comi -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Francesco del Cossa -- Italian painter (c.1430-c.1477)
Wikipedia - Francesco Duramano -- 18th Century Italian painter
Wikipedia - Francesco Fernandi -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Francesco Fracanzano -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Francesco Gessi -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Francesco Ghittoni -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Francesco Guarino -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Francesco Hayez -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Francesco Jacovacci -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Francesco Mancini-Ardizzone -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Francesco Nenci -- Italian painter (1781-1850)
Wikipedia - Francesco Pio Dotti -- Italian architect, painter and designer
Wikipedia - Francesco Podesti -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Francesco Rosa -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Francesco Saverio Moretti -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Francesco Tito -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Francesco Veau -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Francesco Zuccarelli -- Italian painter (1702-1788)
Wikipedia - Frances Hodgkins -- New Zealand painter
Wikipedia - Frances Lander Spain -- American librarian
Wikipedia - Frances MacDonald -- Painter from the UK (1873-1921)
Wikipedia - Francine Holley -- Belgian painter
Wikipedia - Francis Augustus Silva -- American painter
Wikipedia - Francis Bacon (artist) -- Irish-born British figurative painter, 1909-1992
Wikipedia - Francis Bacon (painter)
Wikipedia - Francis Cleetus -- Indian American cartoonist, creative director and mural painter
Wikipedia - Francisco Agullo -- Spanish painter
Wikipedia - Francisco Barrera -- Spanish painter
Wikipedia - Francisco Bustamante (painter) -- Spanish painter
Wikipedia - Francisco Cornejo -- Mexican painter and sculptor
Wikipedia - Francisco de Aguirre (painter) -- Spanish painter
Wikipedia - Francisco de Artiga -- Spanish landscape and historical painter
Wikipedia - Francisco de Comontes -- Spanish painter
Wikipedia - Francisco de Reyna -- Spanish painter
Wikipedia - Francisco de Solis -- Spanish baroque painter
Wikipedia - Francisco de Zurbaran -- Spanish painter (1598-1664)
Wikipedia - Francisco Gonzalez Gomez -- Spanish caricaturist, painter and sculptor
Wikipedia - Francisco Goya -- 18th and 19th-century Spanish painter and printmaker
Wikipedia - Francisco Javier Matis -- Colombian painter and botanical illustrator
Wikipedia - Francisco Lameyer -- Spanish painter
Wikipedia - Francisco Lopez (painter) -- Spanish painter
Wikipedia - Francisco Lopez y Palomino -- Spanish painter
Wikipedia - Francisco Oller -- Puerto Rican painter
Wikipedia - Francisco Pacheco -- Spanish painter
Wikipedia - Francisco Salmeron -- Spanish painter
Wikipedia - Francisco Sans CastaM-CM-1o -- Spanish painter
Wikipedia - Francisco Soria Aedo -- Spanish painter (1898-1965)
Wikipedia - Francisco Vera Cabeza de Vaca -- Spanish portrait painter
Wikipedia - Francis Cunningham (painter) -- American painter
Wikipedia - Franciscus Hamers -- Flemish painter
Wikipedia - Francis Ernest Jackson -- British painter, draughtsman, poster designer and lithographer
Wikipedia - Francis Holman -- British maritime painter
Wikipedia - Francis H. Rowley -- Baptist minister and animal welfare campaigner
Wikipedia - Francis L. Horspool -- American painter
Wikipedia - Francis Nicholson (painter) -- British artist (1753-1844)
Wikipedia - Francis Paraison -- Haitian painter
Wikipedia - Francis Quirk -- American painter (1907-1974)
Wikipedia - Francis Wheatley (painter) -- 18th-century English painter
Wikipedia - Francis William Topham -- English watercolour-painter and engraver
Wikipedia - Franco Assetto -- Italian sculptor and painter
Wikipedia - Franco Gentilini -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Francois Alexandre Pierre de Garsault -- French botanist, zoologist and painter
Wikipedia - Francois Antoine Leon Fleury -- French painter
Wikipedia - Francois Barraud -- Swiss painter
Wikipedia - Francois Beaucourt -- Canadian painter
Wikipedia - Francois Boucher -- 18th-century French painter
Wikipedia - Francois Bouchot -- French painter
Wikipedia - Francois Chifflart -- French painter, designer and engraver (1825-1901)
Wikipedia - Francoise Gilot -- French painter (b. 1921)
Wikipedia - Francois-Gabriel Lepaulle -- French painter
Wikipedia - Francois Gerard -- French painter
Wikipedia - Francois Guiguet -- French painter
Wikipedia - Francois Hippolyte Lalaisse -- French artist known for painting (1810-1884)
Wikipedia - Francois Kinson -- Flemish painter
Wikipedia - Francois-Leon Benouville -- French painter
Wikipedia - Francois-Louis Francais -- French artist known for painting and printmaking (1814-1897)
Wikipedia - Francois Morellon de La Cave -- French engraver and painter
Wikipedia - Francois Quesnel -- French painter
Wikipedia - Francoist Spain -- Period of Spain from 1939 to 1975
Wikipedia - Frank Barrington Craig -- British painter
Wikipedia - Frank Coburn -- American painter
Wikipedia - Frank Dekkers -- Dutch painter of landscapes
Wikipedia - Franklin C. Watkins -- American painter
Wikipedia - Frank Owen (artist) -- American painter
Wikipedia - Frank Pais -- Cuban revolutionary
Wikipedia - Frank Portelli (artist) -- Maltese artist and mural painter
Wikipedia - Frank Southgate -- British painter (1872-1916)
Wikipedia - Frank Stone (painter) -- English painter
Wikipedia - Frank Vining Smith -- American painter
Wikipedia - Frans Decker -- 18th-century painter
Wikipedia - Frans Denys -- Flemish painter
Wikipedia - Frans Francken the Younger -- Flemish painter (1581-1642)
Wikipedia - Frans Geffels -- Flemish painter
Wikipedia - Frans Greenwood -- Dutch painter and glass engraver
Wikipedia - Frans Hals -- 17th-century painter from the Northern Netherlands
Wikipedia - Frans Langeveld -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - FrantiM-EM-!ek Jakub ProkyM-EM-! -- Bohemian Rococo painter
Wikipedia - FrantiM-EM-!ek Kupka -- Czech painter and graphic artist
Wikipedia - Franz Alt (painter) -- Austrian painter
Wikipedia - Franz Anatol Wyss -- Swiss painter
Wikipedia - Franz Anton Maulbertsch -- Austrian painter and engraver
Wikipedia - Franz Bueb -- German painter
Wikipedia - Franz Courtens -- Belgian painter
Wikipedia - Franz Fedier -- Swiss painter
Wikipedia - Franz Gabriel Fiesinger -- German copperplate engraver and painter
Wikipedia - Franz Gareis -- German painter
Wikipedia - Franz Gertsch -- Swiss painter
Wikipedia - Franz Heckendorf -- German painter
Wikipedia - Franz Hegi -- Swiss painter
Wikipedia - Franz Ignaz Pollinger -- Austrian painter
Wikipedia - Franz Joseph Spiegler -- German painter
Wikipedia - Franz Joseph Zoll -- German painter
Wikipedia - Franz Korwan -- German painter
Wikipedia - Franz Monjau -- German painter
Wikipedia - Franz Niklaus Konig -- Swiss painter
Wikipedia - Franz Ningel -- German pair skater
Wikipedia - Franz Pforr -- German painter
Wikipedia - Franz Rieger -- German painter
Wikipedia - Franz Rumpler -- Austrian painter
Wikipedia - Franz Xaver Eggert -- German glass painter
Wikipedia - Franz Xaver Winterhalter -- German painter and lithographer
Wikipedia - Freda Hands -- British painter
Wikipedia - Freddy Flores Knistoff -- Chilean painter and writer
Wikipedia - Frederic Edwin Church -- American landscape painter
Wikipedia - Frederic Fregevize -- Swiss painter
Wikipedia - Frederick Austin -- British painter
Wikipedia - Frederick Daniel Cornwell -- New Zealand painter and trade unionist
Wikipedia - Frederick Ferdinand Schafer -- German-born American painter
Wikipedia - Frederick Kerseboom -- German painter
Wikipedia - Frederick Nash (painter) -- English painter and draughtsman
Wikipedia - Frederick Sandys -- English Pre-Raphaelite painter
Wikipedia - Frederick Thomas Lines -- English portrait painter
Wikipedia - Frederick William Lawrence -- Canadian airbrush painter
Wikipedia - Frederick W. Watts -- English landscape painter
Wikipedia - Frederic Leighton -- English painter and sculptor
Wikipedia - Frederic Whiting -- English painter
Wikipedia - Frederik Bouttats the Elder -- Flemish painter, engraver, printmaker, and dealer in prints
Wikipedia - Fred Grayson Sayre -- American painter
Wikipedia - Fredrik Ahlstedt -- Finnish painter
Wikipedia - Fred Ross (artist) -- Canadian muralist and painter
Wikipedia - Fredson Paixao -- Brazilian BJJ practitioner and MMA fighter
Wikipedia - Fred Williams (artist) -- Australian painter and printmaker
Wikipedia - Fred Yates -- English painter
Wikipedia - Freedom for Animals -- English charity campaigning to end the use of animals in entertainment
Wikipedia - Freedom from Fear (painting) -- Painting by Norman Rockwell
Wikipedia - Freedom from Want -- Painting by Norman Rockwell
Wikipedia - Freedom of Speech (painting) -- Painting by Norman Rockwell
Wikipedia - Freedom of Worship (painting) -- Painting by Norman Rockwell
Wikipedia - Freedom Summer -- 1964 voter registration campaign in the U.S. state of Mississippi
Wikipedia - Freek Engel -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Free Software Foundation anti-Windows campaigns
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Wikipedia - Free the nipple -- A topfreedom campaign created in 2012
Wikipedia - French campaign in Egypt and Syria -- French campaign against the Ottomans in 1798-1801
Wikipedia - French expedition to Korea -- French military campaign
Wikipedia - Frenzy of Exultations -- 1893 painting by Wladyslaw Podkowinski
Wikipedia - Fresco -- Mural painting upon freshly laid lime plaster
Wikipedia - FreymoM-CM-0ur Johannsson -- Icelandic artist, painter, and composer
Wikipedia - Frida Kahlo -- Mexican painter
Wikipedia - Friedrich Baudri -- German painter
Wikipedia - Friedrich Baur -- Latvian painter
Wikipedia - Friedrich Eibner -- German painter
Wikipedia - Friedrich Gauermann -- Austrian painter
Wikipedia - Friedrich Gustav Schlick -- German painter and engraver
Wikipedia - Friedrich Lange (artist) -- German history painter
Wikipedia - Friedrich Salzer -- German painter
Wikipedia - Friedrich Schaarschmidt -- German painter
Wikipedia - Friedrich Schroder Sonnenstern -- German artist and painter
Wikipedia - Frithjof Schuon -- Swiss philosopher, poet and painter (1907-1998)
Wikipedia - Frits Van den Berghe -- Belgian painter and illustrator
Wikipedia - Frits Vanen -- Dutch painter and sculptor
Wikipedia - Frits van Hall -- Dutch painter and sculptor
Wikipedia - Fritz Ascher -- German painter
Wikipedia - Fritz Bamberger (painter) -- German painter
Wikipedia - Fritz Brandtner -- Canadian painter
Wikipedia - Fritz Glarner -- Swiss-American painter
Wikipedia - Fritz Gohring -- German painter
Wikipedia - Fritz Heinsheimer -- German painter
Wikipedia - Fritz Mackensen -- German painter
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Wikipedia - From Despair to Where -- Song by Manic Street Preachers
Wikipedia - Frost in Louveciennes -- 1873 painting by Alfred Sisley
Wikipedia - Fruela of Cantabria -- 8th-century Count of Spain
Wikipedia - Fruit and a Jug on a Table (Metzinger) -- 1916 painting by Jean Metzinger
Wikipedia - Fuck the Pain Away -- 2000 song by Peaches
Wikipedia - Fuencaliente Lighthouse -- Lighthouse on La Palma, Spain
Wikipedia - Fuente de las Ranas (Albacete) -- Fountain in Spain
Wikipedia - Fuertescusa -- Human settlement in Cuenca Province, Castile-La Mancha, Spain
Wikipedia - Fueter-Polya theorem -- The only quadratic pairing functions are the Cantor polynomials
Wikipedia - Fujishima Takeji -- Japanese painter
Wikipedia - Fu Jow Pai -- Martial art
Wikipedia - Fuku Akino -- Japanese painter
Wikipedia - Fulgenzio Mondini -- 17th-century Italian painter
Wikipedia - Fulvia Bisi -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Fundamental Laws of the Realm -- Set of constitutional laws organizing the powers of the Francoist regime in Spain
Wikipedia - Funicular -- An inclined railway in which a cable (e.g. wire rope) moves a pair of permanently attached cars counterbalancing each other along a steep slope
Wikipedia - Fur Traders Descending the Missouri -- Painting by George Caleb Bingham
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Wikipedia - Fyodor Bogorodsky -- Russian painter
Wikipedia - Gabacho -- Spanish pejorative used in Spain for the French and in Mexico for the Americans
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Wikipedia - Gabriele Caliari -- Italian trader and painter (1568-1631)
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Wikipedia - Gabriel Mexene -- Poet, painter and engraver
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Wikipedia - Gabriel Revel -- French painter
Wikipedia - Gabriel von Hackl -- German painter
Wikipedia - Gad Frederik Clement -- Danish painter
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Wikipedia - Gaetano Astolfoni -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Gaetano Belvederi -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Gaetano Capone -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Gaetano Castelli -- Italian painter and set designer
Wikipedia - Gaetano De Gennaro -- Italian-Brazilian painter
Wikipedia - Gaetano Fasanotti -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Gaetano Gandolfi -- Italian painter
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Wikipedia - Gaganendranath Tagore -- Indian painter and cartoonist of the Bengal school (1867-1938)
Wikipedia - Gail Dines -- Anti-pornography campaigner
Wikipedia - Galacidalacidesoxyribonucleicacid -- 1963 painting by Salvador Dali
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Wikipedia - Galician Literature Day -- Public holiday observed in Galicia, Spain
Wikipedia - Galician rumba -- Music genre from Galicia, Spain.
Wikipedia - Galician Unity (1991) -- Defunct nationalist party in Spain
Wikipedia - Galicia (Spain) -- Autonomous community of Spain
Wikipedia - Galilee campaign (67) -- Roman military campaign during the First Jewish-Roman War
Wikipedia - Galina Galadzheva -- Russian art historian, editor, painter and costume designer
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Wikipedia - Gapapaiwa language -- Austronesian language spoken in Papua New Guinea
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Wikipedia - Gasparo Lopez -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Gasparo Martellini -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Gaston and His Sister -- Painting by Gustave Van de Woestyne
Wikipedia - Gaston Gelibert -- French painter
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Wikipedia - Gather Ye Rosebuds While Ye May (Waterhouse painting 1908) -- 1908 painting by John William Waterhouse
Wikipedia - Gather Ye Rosebuds While Ye May (Waterhouse painting 1909) -- 1909 painting by John William Waterhouse
Wikipedia - Gavin Hamilton (artist) -- 18th-century Scottish painter
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Wikipedia - Gazanfar Khaligov -- Soviet painter (1898-1981)
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Wikipedia - Gediminas Akstinas -- Lithuanian painter
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Wikipedia - GEICO advertising campaigns -- Campaigns known for using surreal scenarios which attempt to be humorous and satirical
Wikipedia - Gelfand pair
Wikipedia - Genealogies of Pain -- Book by Marilyn Manson
Wikipedia - Generalitat -- Form of devolved government in the Kingdom of Spain
Wikipedia - General of the Air (Spain) -- Highest General officer rank in the Spanish Air Force
Wikipedia - General of the Army (Spain) -- Highest General officer rank in the Spanish Army
Wikipedia - General Police Corps -- Law enforcement institution during the Francoist Spain
Wikipedia - Genesee Scenery -- Painting by Thomas Cole
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Wikipedia - Gennadi Krasnitski -- Soviet pair skater
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Wikipedia - Genocidal rape -- Mass sexual assault during wartime as part of a genocidal campaign
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Wikipedia - Geoffrey Tibble -- English painter
Wikipedia - Geography of Spain -- Overview of the geography of Spain
Wikipedia - Geology of the Iberian Peninsula -- The origins, structure use and study of the rock formations of Spain, Portugal, Andorra and Gibraltar
Wikipedia - Georg David Matthieu -- German engraver and painter
Wikipedia - George Agnew Reid -- Canadian painter
Wikipedia - George Appert -- French painter
Wikipedia - George Breck -- American mural painter
Wikipedia - George Catlin -- 19th-century American painter
Wikipedia - George Collie (painter) -- Irish painter
Wikipedia - George Denholm Armour -- British painter
Wikipedia - George D. Painter
Wikipedia - George Duncan (painter) -- Australian painter
Wikipedia - George Edmund Butler -- Landscape and portrait painter (1872-1936)
Wikipedia - George Edozie -- Nigerian painter
Wikipedia - George Elcock -- British painter
Wikipedia - George Eustis Paine -- American politician
Wikipedia - George Folingsby -- Irish-born Australian painter
Wikipedia - George French Angas -- English explorer, naturalist and painter who emigrated to Australia
Wikipedia - George Frost (landscape painter) -- English artist based in Suffolk
Wikipedia - George Grosz -- German artist known especially for his caricatural drawings and paintings of Berlin life in the 1920s.
Wikipedia - George Harcourt (painter) -- British painter
Wikipedia - George Hillyard Swinstead -- British painter and illustrator
Wikipedia - George Housman Thomas -- British engraver, illustrator and painter (1824-1868)
Wikipedia - George H. Taggart -- American genre painter and portraitist
Wikipedia - George Inness -- 19th-century American landscape painter
Wikipedia - Georg Eisler -- Austrian painter
Wikipedia - George K. Brandriff -- American painter
Wikipedia - Georg Emanuel Opiz -- German painter and graphic artist
Wikipedia - George Mosson -- German painter
Wikipedia - George Paine (registrar)
Wikipedia - George Pepper (artist) -- Canadian painter
Wikipedia - George Petrie (artist) -- Irish painter, musician, antiquary and archaeologist
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Wikipedia - George Richmond (painter)
Wikipedia - George Romney (painter) -- 18th-century English painter
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Wikipedia - Georges Akl -- Lebanese painter, born in Damour
Wikipedia - Georges Andrique -- French painter
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Wikipedia - Georges Baltus -- Belgian painter
Wikipedia - Georges Braque -- French painter and sculptor
Wikipedia - Georges Dantu -- French painter
Wikipedia - Georges de La Tour -- 17th-century French painter
Wikipedia - George S. Dibble -- American painter, academic, art critic
Wikipedia - Georges Focus -- French painter, 1641-1708
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Wikipedia - Georges Kars -- Czech painter
Wikipedia - Georges Lebacq -- Belgian painter
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Wikipedia - Georges Maury -- French painter
Wikipedia - George Spencer Watson -- British painter
Wikipedia - Georges Pilley -- French painter
Wikipedia - Georges Rasetti (painter, born 1851) -- French painter
Wikipedia - Georges Rasetti -- French painter
Wikipedia - Georges Scott -- French painter
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Wikipedia - Georges Vantongerloo -- Belgian sculptor and painter
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Wikipedia - Georgette Agutte -- French painter and sculptor
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Wikipedia - George Warner Allen -- British painter
Wikipedia - George Washington (John Trumbull, 1790) -- 1790 painting by John Trumbull
Wikipedia - George Washington (Trumbull) -- Painting by John Trumbull
Wikipedia - George William Russell -- Irish writer, painter, editor, critic, poet, and cooperative organiser
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Wikipedia - Georg Philipp Worlen -- German painter
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Wikipedia - Gerlach Flicke -- German painter
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Wikipedia - Germain Joseph Hallez -- Belgian painter
Wikipedia - German and Sarmatian campaigns of Constantine
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Wikipedia - German invasion of Belgium -- Military campaign of World War I
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Wikipedia - Gerrit Claesz Bleker -- Dutch Golden Age painter
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Wikipedia - Gertraud Stemmler -- German painter
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Wikipedia - Gertrude Ellen Hayes -- British painter and etcher
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Wikipedia - Giacinto Garofalini -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giacinto Gigante -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giacinto Gilioli -- Italian painter
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Wikipedia - Giacomo Argente -- Italian painter
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Wikipedia - Giacomo Cavedone -- Italian painter (1577-1660)
Wikipedia - Giacomo di Castro -- Italian painter
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Wikipedia - Giacomo Vighi -- 16th century Italian painter
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Wikipedia - Giangiacomo Moretti -- Italian painter
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Wikipedia - Gioacchino Giuseppe Serangeli -- Roman painter active during the First French Empire
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Wikipedia - Giorgione -- Italian painter
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Wikipedia - Giovanni Antonio Cucchi -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giovanni Antonio Vanoni -- Swiss painter
Wikipedia - Giovanni Battista Belloti -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giovanni Battista Benaschi -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giovanni Battista Brambilla -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giovanni Battista Brughi -- Italian painter and mosaic artist
Wikipedia - Giovanni Battista Busiri -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giovanni Battista Cimaroli -- Italian painter (1687-1771)
Wikipedia - Giovanni Battista dalla Torre -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giovanni Battista di Giovannofrio -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giovanni Battista Frulli -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giovanni Battista Galliadi -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giovanni Battista Lazzaroni -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giovanni Battista Lucini -- Italian painter (1639-1686)
Wikipedia - Giovanni Battista Maderni -- Italian-Swiss painter
Wikipedia - Giovanni Battista Maganza -- Italian painter (1513-1586)
Wikipedia - Giovanni Battista Magni -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giovanni Battista Marcola -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giovanni Battista Mengardi -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giovanni Battista Salvi da Sassoferrato -- Italian painter (1609-1685)
Wikipedia - Giovanni Battista Tiepolo -- 18th-century Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giovanni Bolla -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giovanni Bonagrazia -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giovanni Bonini -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giovanni Buonconsiglio -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giovanni Carboncino -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giovanni Cariani -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giovanni Carnovali -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giovanni Colmo -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giovanni Colombini (painter) -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giovanni Conti (painter) -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giovanni del Biondo -- 14th century Italian painter mainly known for his panel paintings
Wikipedia - Giovanni Di Giorgio -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giovanni di Paolo -- Italian painter and illustrator of manuscripts (c.1403-1482)
Wikipedia - Giovanni di Piamonte -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giovanni di ser Giovanni Guidi -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giovanni Domenico Ferracuti -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giovanni Filippo Crescione -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giovanni Francesco Bembo -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giovanni Fulco -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giovanni Gaibazzi -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giovanni Gavazzeni -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giovanni Giacometti -- Swiss painter
Wikipedia - Giovanni Girolamo Bonesi -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giovanni Gottardi -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giovanni Intra -- New Zealand painter
Wikipedia - Giovanni Lanfranco -- Italian painter (1582-1647)
Wikipedia - Giovanni Lanza (painter) -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giovanni Maria Baldassini -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giovanni Maria Chiodarolo -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giovanni Maria Galli da Bibiena -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giovanni Maria Luffoli -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giovanni Monti -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giovanni Nepomuceno Della Croce -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giovanni Pallavera -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giovanni Paolo Panini -- Italian painter (1691-1765)
Wikipedia - Giovanni Romagnoli -- Italian painter and sculptor
Wikipedia - Giovanni Scajario -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giovanni Segantini -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giovanni Servi -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giovanni Stradone -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giovanni Vincenzo Corso -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Gioventu -- 1898 painting by Eliseu Visconti
Wikipedia - Giovita Brescianino -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Gipuzkoa -- Province of Spain
Wikipedia - Giralda -- Bell tower of Seville Cathedral in Seville, Spain
Wikipedia - Girl in a Folk Costume -- Painting by Janis TM-DM-+demanis
Wikipedia - Girl in White in the Woods -- Painting by Vincent van Gogh
Wikipedia - Girl on a Ball -- 1905 painting by Pablo Picasso
Wikipedia - Girolamo Brusaferro -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Girolamo Comi -- Italian Renaissance painter
Wikipedia - Girolamo Danti -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Girolamo Gatti -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Girolamo Imparato -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Girolamo Marchesi -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Girolamo Mazzola Bedoli -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Gisela Hochhaltinger -- Austrian pair skater
Wikipedia - Gisele d'Ailly van Waterschoot van der Gracht -- Dutch artist, publisher and painter
Wikipedia - Giulia Centurelli -- Italian painter and poet
Wikipedia - Giuliano di Simone -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giuliano Ghelli -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giulio Anivitti -- Italian born artist, art teacher, portrait painter and gallery curator
Wikipedia - Giulio Camagni -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giulio Campi -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giulio Cesare Ferrari -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giulio Cesare Luini -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giulio Cisari -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giulio Clovio -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giulio Dinarelli -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giulio Parigi -- Italian painter, engraver and architect
Wikipedia - Giulio Tonduzzi -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giulio Turcato -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giulio Versorese -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Abbati -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Agellio -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Andreoli -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Angelini -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Antonio Sorbilli -- Italian painter (1824-1890)
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Arcimboldo -- 16th-century Italian painter of the late Renaissance
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Arrighi -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Avanzi -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Bacigalupo -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Baldini (painter) -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Baldrighi -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Bernardazzi -- Swiss architect and painter
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Bezzuoli -- Italian painter (1784-1855)
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Biasi -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Bonolis -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Boschetto -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Bottero -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Bozzalla -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giuseppe CalM-CM-, -- Maltese painter
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Cammarano -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Capogrossi -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Casciaro -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Cassioli -- Italian painter and sculptor
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Castagnoli -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Cesari -- Italian Mannerist painter (1568-1640)
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Collignon -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Costa -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Crastoni -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Diamantini -- Italian painter and engraver
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Drugman -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Errante -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Fraschieri -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Garinei -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Ghedini -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Gherardi -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Ghezzi -- Italian painter (1634-1721)
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Jarmorini -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Laezza -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Laudati -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Mancinelli -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Mastroleo -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Mazzola -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Molteni -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Monticone -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Penuti -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Raggio -- Italian painter (1823-1916)
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Riccobaldi del Bava -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Soleri Brancaleoni -- Italian painter (1750-1806)
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Tominz -- Italian-Slovenian painter
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Valeriano -- Italian painter and architect
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Zauli -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - G. Kamble -- Painter
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Wikipedia - Glenda Randerson -- New Zealand painter
Wikipedia - Glenn Coleman (painter) -- American painter
Wikipedia - Global Campaign for Education -- Non-governmental organization
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Wikipedia - Global War on Terrorism Expeditionary Medal -- American campaign medal
Wikipedia - Global Zero (campaign) -- Organization dedicated to achieving the elimination of nuclear weapons
Wikipedia - Gloucester Harbor (William Morris Hunt) -- Painting by William Morris Hunt
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Wikipedia - God's Creatures -- Painting by Eugen von Blaas
Wikipedia - Gog and Magog -- Pair of individuals, peoples, or lands in the Bible and the Qur'an
Wikipedia - Golconda (Magritte) -- Painting by Rene Magritte
Wikipedia - Golden age of Jewish culture in Spain
Wikipedia - Golden Raspberry Award for Worst Screen Combo -- Award for worst movie pairing or cast of the past year
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Wikipedia - Gonzalo Amancha -- Ecuadorian master watercolor painter
Wikipedia - Google Spain v AEPD and Mario Costeja Gonzalez -- Decision by the Court of Justice of the European Union
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Wikipedia - Gordon Coutts -- American painter
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Wikipedia - Goswin van der Weyden -- Early Netherlandish painter
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Wikipedia - GOtv Africa -- Paid TV terrestrial service in Africa
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Wikipedia - Goya Awards -- Annual film awards in Spain
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Wikipedia - Great Leap Forward -- Economic and social campaign by the Communist Party of China
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Wikipedia - Hartmuth Pfeil -- German painter
Wikipedia - Harue Koga -- Japanese surrealist painter (1924-2011)
Wikipedia - Haruyoshi Nagae -- Japanese painter
Wikipedia - Harvest Time at Carditello -- 1791 painting by Jacob Philipp Hackert
Wikipedia - Hasan Fuat Sari -- Finnish sculptor and painter
Wikipedia - Hasanlu Lovers -- Pair of human remains found by a team from University of Pennsylvania led by Robert H. Dyson
Wikipedia - Hashimoto Kansetsu -- Japanese painter
Wikipedia - Hassan El Glaoui -- Moroccan figurative painter (1923-2018)
Wikipedia - Hat Kopf, Hand, Fuss und Herz -- Swiss painting
Wikipedia - Haven Denney -- American pair skater
Wikipedia - Hayleigh Bell -- Canadian pair skater
Wikipedia - Haymaking (painting) -- 1877 painting by Jules Bastien-Lepage
Wikipedia - Headache -- Pain in head or neck
Wikipedia - Head of a Boy -- Painting by Rembrandt's studio
Wikipedia - Head of a Catalan Peasant -- Series of paintings by Joan Miro
Wikipedia - Head of a Female Saint -- Painting by Cima da Conegliano
Wikipedia - Head VI -- Painting by Francis Bacon
Wikipedia - Hearing impairment
Wikipedia - Heart valve repair -- Surgical technique used to fix defects in heart valves
Wikipedia - Heather Child -- British painter
Wikipedia - Heaven Peralejo -- Filipina actress, singer, YouTuber, and painter
Wikipedia - Hector-class ironclad -- Pair of Royal Navy armoured frigates built in the 1860s
Wikipedia - Hedi Schoop -- German dancer, cabaret artist, sculptor, painter and manufacturer
Wikipedia - Heiman Dullaart -- Dutch painter and poet
Wikipedia - Heinrich Altherr -- Swiss painter
Wikipedia - Heinrich Beisenherz -- German painter
Wikipedia - Heinrich Christoph Fehling -- German painter
Wikipedia - Heinrich Danioth -- Swiss painter
Wikipedia - Heinrich Dreber -- German painter
Wikipedia - Heinrich Freudweiler -- Swiss painter
Wikipedia - Heinrich Herzig -- Swiss painter
Wikipedia - Heinrich Jansen -- Danish Baroque painter
Wikipedia - Heinrich Kley -- German painter
Wikipedia - Heinrich Krause -- Austrian painter
Wikipedia - Heinrich Ludwig Philippi -- German painter
Wikipedia - Heinrich Rauchinger -- Austrian painter (1858-1942)
Wikipedia - Heinrich Revy -- Austrian painter
Wikipedia - Heinrich Spiess -- German painter
Wikipedia - Heinrich Steiner -- German painter and printmaker
Wikipedia - Heinrich Vogeler -- German painter (1872-1942)
Wikipedia - Heinz Budweg -- German painter
Wikipedia - Heinz Dopfl -- Austrian pair skater
Wikipedia - Heinz Eberhard Struning -- German painter, graphic artist and pastel painter.
Wikipedia - Heizo Kanayama -- Japanese painter
Wikipedia - Helen Andersen -- Canadian painter
Wikipedia - Helene Feillet -- French lithographer and painter
Wikipedia - Helene Funke -- German painter
Wikipedia - Helene Schjerfbeck -- Finnish painter
Wikipedia - Helene Schwab -- French painter
Wikipedia - Helen Hooker -- American sculptor and portrait painter
Wikipedia - Heleni Polichronatou -- Greek painter, sculptor and art historian
Wikipedia - Helen Kimble -- Africanist and campaigner
Wikipedia - Helen Lucas -- Canadian painter and writer
Wikipedia - Helen Mabel Trevor -- Northern Irish landscape and genre painter
Wikipedia - Helen Newlove, Baroness Newlove -- British anti-violence campaigner
Wikipedia - Helen Sampson -- British painter
Wikipedia - Helge Zanden -- Swedish painter
Wikipedia - Hell (Bosch) -- Painting by Hieronymus Bosch
Wikipedia - Helle Thorborg -- Danish painter and graphic designer
Wikipedia - Hell's Kitchen (painting) -- Painting by Henry Perlee Parker
Wikipedia - Helmer Osslund -- Swedish painter
Wikipedia - Helmi Sjostrand -- Finnish painter
Wikipedia - Helmut Ditsch -- Argentine painter
Wikipedia - Helmut Federle -- Swiss painter
Wikipedia - Hemi Bawa -- Indian painter and sculptor
Wikipedia - Hendrick Avercamp -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Hendrick Goltzius -- Painter from the Northern Netherlands
Wikipedia - Hendrick Mommers -- Dutch landscape painter
Wikipedia - Hendrika van der Pek -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Hendrik Claudius -- German painter and apothecary
Wikipedia - Hendrik de Vries -- Dutch poet and painter
Wikipedia - Hendrik Dirk Kruseman van Elten -- Dutch landscape painter
Wikipedia - Hendrik Jan Wolter -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Hendrik Voogd -- Dutch painter and printmaker
Wikipedia - Hendrik Willem Schweickhardt -- German painter
Wikipedia - Henri-Achille Zo -- French painter
Wikipedia - Henri Alphonse Barnoin -- French painter
Wikipedia - Henri Bellery-Desfontaines -- French painter
Wikipedia - Henri Blanc-Fontaine -- French painter
Wikipedia - Henri Buguet -- French painter
Wikipedia - Henri Cueco -- French writer, painter and radio personality (1929-2017)
Wikipedia - Henri Dabadie -- French painter
Wikipedia - Henri de Braekeleer -- Belgian painter
Wikipedia - Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec -- French painter
Wikipedia - Henri Dufaux -- Swiss painter
Wikipedia - Henriette Brossin de Polanska -- French painter
Wikipedia - Henriette Dubois-Damart -- French painter
Wikipedia - Henriette Hahn-Brinckmann -- Danish-German painter and lithographer
Wikipedia - Henriette L'Hardy -- Swiss painter
Wikipedia - Henriette Manigk -- German painter
Wikipedia - Henriette Rath -- Swiss painter
Wikipedia - Henriette Schneider -- German painter
Wikipedia - Henri Fantin-Latour -- French painter
Wikipedia - Henri Gaudier-Brzeska -- French painter and sculptor
Wikipedia - Henri Gervex -- French painter (1852-1929)
Wikipedia - Henri Jean Pontoy -- French painter
Wikipedia - Henrika M-EM- antel -- Slovenian realist painter
Wikipedia - Henrikas Ciparis -- Lithuanian painter
Wikipedia - Henrik Heintz -- Hungarian painter
Wikipedia - Henri Le Sidaner -- French artist known for painting (1862-1939)
Wikipedia - Henri Loux -- French painter (1873-1907)
Wikipedia - Henri-Lucien Cheffer -- French engraver, illustrator, painter, banknote and stamp designer
Wikipedia - Henri MacLean -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Henri Marret -- French painter
Wikipedia - HenriM-CM-+tte Ronner-Knip -- Dutch-Belgian painter (1821-1909)
Wikipedia - Henri Pinguenet -- French painter
Wikipedia - Henri Royer -- French painter
Wikipedia - Henri's Armchair -- Australian painting
Wikipedia - Henry Bainbridge McCarter -- American painter and illustrator
Wikipedia - Henry Barraud (artist) -- English portrait, subject and animal painter
Wikipedia - Henry Clifford de Meillon -- South African painter
Wikipedia - Henry Edward Doyle -- Irish painter, draughtsman and gallery director
Wikipedia - Henry Fitch Taylor -- American painter
Wikipedia - Henry Fuseli -- Swiss born British painter, draughtsman and writer on art (1741-1825)
Wikipedia - Henry Hanke -- Australian painter
Wikipedia - Henry John Boddington -- English landscape painter
Wikipedia - Henry Leonardus van den Houten -- Dutch-Australian painter, lithographer, and teacher
Wikipedia - Henry Luyten -- Belgian painter
Wikipedia - Henry Malfroy -- French painter
Wikipedia - Henry Ninham -- English landscape artist, engraver, and heraldic painter
Wikipedia - Henry Perronet Briggs -- English painter
Wikipedia - Henry Price (painter) -- British musician and painter
Wikipedia - Henry Raeburn Dobson -- Twentieth-century Scottish portrait painter
Wikipedia - Henry-Robert Bresil -- Haitian painter
Wikipedia - Henry R. Paige -- U.S. Marine Corps Major General
Wikipedia - Henry Walton (English painter)
Wikipedia - Henry William Burgess -- English landscape painter
Wikipedia - Henry Ziegler -- American painter
Wikipedia - Herbert Achternbusch -- German writer, painter and filmmaker
Wikipedia - Herbert Dimmel -- Austrian painter
Wikipedia - Herbert Gurschner -- British painter
Wikipedia - Herbert James Draper -- British painter (1863-1920)
Wikipedia - Herbert Menzies Marshall -- English cricketer and watercolour painter/illustrator
Wikipedia - Herbert von Reyl -- Austrian painter
Wikipedia - Herbert Wiesinger -- German former pair skater
Wikipedia - Hercules and Deianira -- C. 1470 painting by Antonio del Pollaiolo
Wikipedia - Hercules and Omphale (Boucher) -- C. 1732 painting by Francois Boucher
Wikipedia - Hercules and the Hydra (Pollaiolo) -- Painting by Antonio del Pollaiolo
Wikipedia - Hercules Seghers -- Dutch painter and engraver (c.1589 - c.1638)
Wikipedia - Hereditary equine regional dermal asthenia -- Genetic disease in Quarter Horses, Appaloosas, and Paint Horses
Wikipedia - Herman Brood -- Dutch musician, painter, actor, poet and media personality
Wikipedia - Hermann Anschutz -- German painter and professor
Wikipedia - Hermann Fenner-Behmer -- German painter (1866-1913)
Wikipedia - Hermann Keimel -- German painter
Wikipedia - Hermann Schmiechen -- German painter
Wikipedia - Hermann Teuber -- German painter
Wikipedia - Hermanus Willem Koekkoek -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Hermenegildo Bustos -- Mexican painter
Wikipedia - Hermia and Lysander (painting)
Wikipedia - Hermine David -- French painter
Wikipedia - Hermitage of Santa Maria de Lara -- Visigothic church near Burgos, Spain
Wikipedia - Hernando Tejada -- Colombian painter (1924-1998)
Wikipedia - Hernan Pico Ribera -- Spanish painter, poster designer, and visual artist
Wikipedia - Herta Ratzenhofer -- Austrian pair skater
Wikipedia - Herve Morvan -- French painter
Wikipedia - Hide Kawanishi -- Japanese painter
Wikipedia - Hieronymus Bosch -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Hieronymus Joachims -- Austrian painter
Wikipedia - High Court of Justice of Catalonia -- Highest judicial power of Catalonia (Spain)
Wikipedia - Higher education in Spain
Wikipedia - High Noon (painting) -- 1949 painting by Edward Hopper
Wikipedia - Highways in Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - Hilary Harkness -- American painter
Wikipedia - Hilda Murrell -- British environmentalist and peace campaigner
Wikipedia - Hilda Rix Nicholas -- Australian painter (1884 - 1961)
Wikipedia - Hilda Roberts -- Irish painter
Wikipedia - Hillary Clinton 2016 presidential campaign -- Political campaign for United States presidency
Wikipedia - Hillary Clinton presidential campaign, 2016
Wikipedia - Hippolyte Ballue -- French painter
Wikipedia - Hippolyte Bellange -- French painter
Wikipedia - Hippolyte Jean-Baptiste Garneray -- French painter
Wikipedia - Hirata ShM-EM-^MdM-EM-^M -- Japanese painter
Wikipedia - Hironobu Kaneko -- Japanese painter
Wikipedia - Hiroshige II -- Japanese painter
Wikipedia - Hispanic and Latino Americans -- Americans of ancestry from Spain and Latin America
Wikipedia - Hispanophone -- Relating to the culture, people, speech of Spain.
Wikipedia - Historic paint analysis -- Scientific analysis of architectural finishes
Wikipedia - History of painting -- Historical development of painting
Wikipedia - History of prepaid mobile phones
Wikipedia - History of Spain (1700-1810) -- Aspect of history
Wikipedia - History of Spain (1810-1873) -- Aspect of history
Wikipedia - History of Spain -- Aspect of history
Wikipedia - History of the Catholic Church in Spain -- Church history in Spain
Wikipedia - History of the Jews in Spain
Wikipedia - History of Toledo, Spain -- Aspect of Spanish history and aspect of Toledo
Wikipedia - History painting -- Genre in painting defined by narrative subjects
Wikipedia - Hitoshi Ikebe -- Japanese painter
Wikipedia - Hjuki and Bil -- Pair of characters in Norse mythology
Wikipedia - Hlwan Paing -- Burmese singer
Wikipedia - Hoang LM-aM-:M--p Ngon -- Vietnamese painter
Wikipedia - Hoang Tich Chu -- Vietnamese painter
Wikipedia - Hojjat Shakiba -- Iranian painter
Wikipedia - Hoka Iwabuchi -- Japanese painter
Wikipedia - Holiday in Spain (song) -- 2004 single by Counting Crows and BLM-CM-^XF
Wikipedia - Holidays with paid time off in the United States -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - Hollow World Campaign Set -- Tabletop role-playing game supplement for Dungeons & Dragons
Wikipedia - Holly Coulis -- Canadian painter (born 1968)
Wikipedia - Holly Farrell -- Canadian painter
Wikipedia - Hollywood Africans -- Painting by Jean-Michel Basquiat
Wikipedia - Holy Child School, Jalpaiguri -- English-medium school in Jalpaiguri City, West Bengal, India
Wikipedia - Holy Cross Standard -- Painting by Moretto da Brescia
Wikipedia - Holy Family (Signorelli) -- C. 1490 painting by Luca Signorelli
Wikipedia - Holy Family under an Oak Tree -- Painting by Raphael
Wikipedia - Holy Family with a Female Saint (Mantegna) -- Painting by Andrea Mantegna
Wikipedia - Holy Family with a Shepherd -- c. 1510 painting by Titian
Wikipedia - Holy Family with Saint Catherine and Saint John the Baptist -- Painting by Paolo Veronese
Wikipedia - Holy Family with St Jerome and St Anne -- 1534 painting by Lorenzo Lotto
Wikipedia - Holy Family with the Family of St John the Baptist -- c. 1536 painting by Lorenzo Lotto
Wikipedia - Holy Family with the Infant Saint John the Baptist (Beccafumi, Alte Pinakothek) -- Painting by Domenico Beccafumi
Wikipedia - Holy Family with the Infant Saint John the Baptist (Beccafumi, Uffizi) -- Painting by Domenico di Pace Beccafumi
Wikipedia - Holy Trinity (Lotto) -- 1519-1520 painting by Lorenzo Lotto
Wikipedia - Holy Week in Spain -- Annual tribute of the Passion of Jesus Christ celebrated by Catholic religious brotherhoods
Wikipedia - Holy Week in Valladolid -- Cultural and religious events of Valladolid and the surrounding province during Holy Week in Spain
Wikipedia - Homeobox -- DNA sequence, around 180 base pairs long, found within genes that are involved in the regulation of patterns of anatomical development
Wikipedia - Homer Boss -- American painter and printmaker
Wikipedia - HomeToVote -- Social media ballot-participation campaign
Wikipedia - Homologous chromosome -- Set of one maternal and one paternal chromosome that pair up with each other inside a cell during meiosis
Wikipedia - Homology (biology) -- Shared ancestry between a pair of structures or genes in different taxa
Wikipedia - Honorary Police -- Unpaid police force in Jersey
Wikipedia - Hope Brooks -- Jamaican painter
Wikipedia - HOPE (Hold On Pain Ends) Charitable Trust -- Humanitarian organisation
Wikipedia - Hope (painting, Pollaiolo) -- 1470 painting by Piero del Pollaiolo
Wikipedia - Hope (painting) -- 1886 painting by George Frederic Watts
Wikipedia - Horace Beevor Love -- English painter
Wikipedia - Horizontes -- Painting by Francisco Antonio Cano Cardona
Wikipedia - Horror on the Orient Express -- Horror tabletop role-playing game campaign
Wikipedia - Horse Frightened by a Thunderstorm -- C. 1824 painting by Eugene Delacroix
Wikipedia - Horses Leaving the Sea -- 1860 painting by Eugene Delacroix
Wikipedia - Hossein Behzad -- Iranian painter (1894-1968)
Wikipedia - Hotel Embrujado -- Ride at Parque Warner Madrid, Spain
Wikipedia - Hotel La Perla -- Hotel in Pamplona, Spain
Wikipedia - Hotel Pez Espada -- Hotel in Torremolinos, Spain
Wikipedia - Hotel Silken Puerta America -- Hotel in Madrid, Spain
Wikipedia - Hotel -- Establishment that provides lodging paid on a short-term basis
Wikipedia - Household hardware -- Equipment used for home repair and other work in the home
Wikipedia - House of Vizarron -- House in El Puerto de Santa Maria, Spain
Wikipedia - House painter and decorator
Wikipedia - Houses at Auvers -- Painting by Vincent van Gogh
Wikipedia - Houses at l'Estaque -- Painting by Georges Braque
Wikipedia - Howard Everett Smith -- American painter
Wikipedia - Howard Hodgkin -- British painter and printmaker (1932-2017)
Wikipedia - Howard Jarvis (painter) -- British painter
Wikipedia - Howie Hawkins 2020 presidential campaign -- Political campaign
Wikipedia - How I Paid for College -- 2004 book by Marc Acito
Wikipedia - H. R. Giger -- Swiss surrealist painter, sculptor, set designer
Wikipedia - Hringur Johannesson -- Icelandic painter
Wikipedia - Huang Banruo -- Chinese painter
Wikipedia - Huang Ding -- Chinese landscape painter and poet
Wikipedia - Hua's identity -- Formula relating pairs of elements in a division ring
Wikipedia - Hubert G. Phipps -- American sculptor and painter (b. 1957)
Wikipedia - Hubert Pair -- American judge
Wikipedia - Hubert Robert -- French painter (1733-1808)
Wikipedia - Hugh Bateman-Champain -- English cricketer and Indian Army officer
Wikipedia - Hugh Fleetwood -- British writer and painter
Wikipedia - Hugh Goldwin Riviere -- British painter
Wikipedia - Huginn and Muninn -- Pair of birds in Norse mythology
Wikipedia - Hugo Alfven -- Swedish composer, conductor, violinist, and painter
Wikipedia - Hugo Karlis Grotuss -- Latvian painter
Wikipedia - Hugo Lous Mohr -- Norwegian painter
Wikipedia - Hugo Nicholson -- American painter
Wikipedia - Hugo Siegmuller -- Czech painter
Wikipedia - Hugo Simberg -- Finnish painter (1873-1917)
Wikipedia - Hugo van der Goes -- 15th-century Flemish painter
Wikipedia - Hugo Winzer -- German pair skater
Wikipedia - Hugues Absil -- French painter
Wikipedia - Hula painted frog -- Species of amphibian endemic to Israel
Wikipedia - HuM-aM-;M-3nh Van GM-aM-:M-%m -- Vietnamese painter
Wikipedia - Humanist Party (Spain) -- Political party in Spain
Wikipedia - Human Rights Campaign -- LGBTQ civil rights advocacy group
Wikipedia - Humphrey Slater -- British writer and painter
Wikipedia - Hundred Days Offensive -- Military campaign during World War I
Wikipedia - Hundred Flowers Campaign -- Period in Chinese history
Wikipedia - Hundred Thousand Sons of Saint Louis -- French loyalist army in the so-called 'Expedition of Spain'
Wikipedia - Hunt Diederich -- American painter
Wikipedia - Hunza-Nagar Campaign -- Military campaign
Wikipedia - Hurvin Anderson -- British painter
Wikipedia - Husband stitch -- Procedure where more stitches then necessary are used to repair the perenium of a woman that has been torn or cut during childbirth, in order to tighten the vagina
Wikipedia - Hussein Madi -- Lebanese painter, sculptor, and printmaker
Wikipedia - Hyacinthe Rigaud -- 17th and 18th-century French Baroque painter
Wikipedia - Hydrocodone/paracetamol -- Opioid based pain medication
Wikipedia - Hydrocodone -- Opioid drug used in pain relief
Wikipedia - Hydromorphone -- Opioid drug used for pain relief
Wikipedia - Hydrotherapy -- Alternative medicine involving the use of water for pain relief and treatment
Wikipedia - Hyperalgesia -- Abnormally increased sensitivity to pain
Wikipedia - Hyperkalemic periodic paralysis (equine) -- Genetic disorder in Quarter Horses, Appaloosas, and Paint Horses
Wikipedia - Hyperrealism (painting)
Wikipedia - Hypogeum of Torre del Ram -- Archaeological site in Ciutadella de Menorca, Spain
Wikipedia - Ia Arsenishvili -- Georgian painter
Wikipedia - I Am Half-Sick of Shadows, Said the Lady of Shalott -- Painting by John William Waterhouse
Wikipedia - Ian Beharry -- Canadian pair skater
Wikipedia - Ian James Scott -- British painter
Wikipedia - Ian Paisley Jr -- Northern Irish politician
Wikipedia - Ian Paisley
Wikipedia - Ia Orana Maria -- Painting by Paul Gauguin
Wikipedia - Iberia Airlines Flight 602 -- 1972 aviation accident in Spain
Wikipedia - Iberia (airline) -- Flag-carrier airline of Spain
Wikipedia - Ibero-America -- Countries in the Americas which were formerly colonies of Spain or Portugal
Wikipedia - Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida University -- State university in Lapai, Niger state
Wikipedia - Ice hockey in Spain -- Overview of ice hockey practiced in Spain
Wikipedia - I chartopaichtra -- 1964 film
Wikipedia - Ictineo I -- Pioneering submarine constructed in Barcelona, Spain in 1858-1859
Wikipedia - Ida Darwin -- British mental deficiency campaigner (1854-1946)
Wikipedia - Ida Gisiko-SpM-CM-$rck -- Finnish painter
Wikipedia - Ida Pulis Lathrop -- American painter
Wikipedia - Ida Silfverberg -- Finnish painter
Wikipedia - Ida von Schulzenheim -- Swedish painter
Wikipedia - Ida Wedel-Jarlsberg -- Norwegian painter
Wikipedia - Idi Papez -- Austrian pair skater
Wikipedia - Idrissou Mora-Kpai -- Beninese filmmaker
Wikipedia - IFixit -- Company aiming to ease repairing of consumer electronics.
Wikipedia - Iglesia de San Emeterio (Sietes) -- Catholic church in Asturias, Spain
Wikipedia - Ignacio Aguirre -- Mexican painter and engraver
Wikipedia - Ignacio de Leon Salcedo -- Spanish painter
Wikipedia - Ignacio Merino -- Peruvian painter
Wikipedia - Ignas Budrys -- Lithuanian painter
Wikipedia - Ignasi Vidal -- Spanish painter and illustrator
Wikipedia - Ignaz Eigner -- Austrian lithographer and painter
Wikipedia - Igor Grabar -- Russian post-impressionist painter, publisher, restorer and historian of art (1871-1960)
Wikipedia - Igor Terentiev -- Soviet painter and poet
Wikipedia - Igualada Cemetery -- Cemetery in Igualada, near Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain
Wikipedia - I Heard You Paint Houses -- 2004 book by Charles Brandt
Wikipedia - Ike no Taiga -- Japanese painter and calligrapher born in Kyoto during the Edo period
Wikipedia - Ilan Baruch -- Israeli plein air landscape painter
Wikipedia - Ilaria Cucchi -- Italian human rights campaigner
Wikipedia - Ildefonsus -- Scholar and theologian and metropolitan Bishop of Toledo, Spain
Wikipedia - I learned it by watching you! -- Anti-drug campaign
Wikipedia - Ilgvars Zalans -- Latvian painter
Wikipedia - Iliza Shlesinger: War Paint -- 2013 film by Jay Chapman
Wikipedia - Illa de l'Aire Lighthouse -- Lighthouse on Menorca, Spain
Wikipedia - Illusionistic ceiling painting -- Artistic tradition
Wikipedia - Ilmari Aalto -- Finnish painter
Wikipedia - Il Penseroso (painting) -- Painting by Thomas Cole
Wikipedia - Il Pordenone -- Italian painter (c.1484-1539)
Wikipedia - Il Tramonto (The Sunset) -- Painting by Giorgione
Wikipedia - Ilya Mironov -- Russian pair skater
Wikipedia - Ilya Repin -- Russian realist painter
Wikipedia - I'm a PC -- Microsoft television advertising campaign
Wikipedia - Immigration to Spain -- Overview of immigration to Spain
Wikipedia - I'm on a Boat -- 2009 single by The Lonely Island featuring T-Pain
Wikipedia - Impression, Sunrise -- Painting by Claude Monet
Wikipedia - Incredible India -- International tourism campaign
Wikipedia - Independence or Death (painting) -- Painting by Pedro Americo
Wikipedia - Independent Group (art movement) -- Group of painters, sculptors, architects, writers and critics in England, active in the 1950s
Wikipedia - Index: Incident in a Museum -- Series of paintings by Art & Language
Wikipedia - Index of painting-related articles -- Wikipedia index
Wikipedia - Index on Censorship -- Campaigning publishing organisation
Wikipedia - India General Service Medal (1936) -- British campaign medal awarded for service on the North-West Frontier of Inidia
Wikipedia - Indian 1-paisa coin -- Indian coin
Wikipedia - Indian campaign of Alexander the Great
Wikipedia - Indians in Council, California -- Painting by Albert Bierstadt
Wikipedia - Indicia (philately) -- Marking on a mail piece showing that postage has been prepaid
Wikipedia - Infanta Beatriz of Spain -- Spanish Infanta
Wikipedia - Infanta Cristina of Spain -- Spanish royal
Wikipedia - Infanta Maria Cristina of Spain
Wikipedia - Infanta Maria del Pilar of Spain -- Spanish Infanta
Wikipedia - Infante Alfonso Carlos, Duke of San Jaime -- Infante of Spain (1849-1936)
Wikipedia - Infante Alfonso of Spain -- Spanish infante
Wikipedia - Infante Carlos Maria Isidro of Spain -- Infante of Spain (1788-1855)
Wikipedia - Infante Carlos of Spain (1607-1632) -- Spanish Prince of the 17th century
Wikipedia - Infante Enrique, Duke of Seville -- Infante of Spain (1823-1870)
Wikipedia - Infante Francisco de Paula of Spain -- Infante of Spain (1794-1865)
Wikipedia - Infante Francisco Javier of Spain -- Infante Francisco Javier of Spain
Wikipedia - Infante Gabriel of Spain -- Spanish infante (1752 - 1788)
Wikipedia - Infante Gonzalo of Spain
Wikipedia - Infante Pedro Carlos of Spain and Portugal -- Portuguese and Spanish infante (1786 - 1812)
Wikipedia - Infante -- title and rank given in the Iberian kingdoms of Spain and Portugal
Wikipedia - In Front of Yorktown -- Painting by Winslow Homer
Wikipedia - Ingenuity (Crespi) -- Painting by Giuseppe Maria Crespi
Wikipedia - Ingo Steuer -- German pair skater and coach
Wikipedia - IngrM-DM-+da Kadaka -- Latvian painter
Wikipedia - Inherent Resolve Campaign Medal -- Award of the United States military
Wikipedia - Inji Aflatoun -- Egyptian painter
Wikipedia - Ink and wash painting
Wikipedia - Inkstick -- A type of solid ink (India ink) used traditionally in several East Asian cultures for [[calligraphy]] and brush painting
Wikipedia - Inland Waterways Association -- Charity campaigning to preserve British canals.
Wikipedia - Inosuke Hazama -- Japanese painter
Wikipedia - Inpainting
Wikipedia - In Repair (Our Lady Peace song) -- 2000 song by Our Lady Peace
Wikipedia - Instant Karma: The Amnesty International Campaign to Save Darfur -- Compilation album by various artists
Wikipedia - Institut Barcelona d'Estudis Internacionals -- Interuniversity Postgraduate Institute for International Studies in Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain
Wikipedia - Institute of Pharmacy, Jalpaiguri -- Pharmacy college in Jalpaiguri, West Bengal, India
Wikipedia - Instituto Nacional de Tecnica Aeroespacial -- Research institute in Madrid, Spain
Wikipedia - Insula dulcamara -- Painting by Paul Klee
Wikipedia - Intel Upgrade Service -- A controversial paid service by Intel
Wikipedia - Intempo -- Residential skyscraper in Benidorm, Spain
Wikipedia - Intensive farming in Almeria -- Greenhouse agriculture in southern Spain.
Wikipedia - Intercostal nerve block -- Procedure for pain relief
Wikipedia - Interest -- A sum paid for the use of money
Wikipedia - Interior of a Restaurant in Arles -- Painting by Vincent van Gogh
Wikipedia - Interior with an Easel, Bredgade 25 -- Painting by Vilhelm Hammershoi
Wikipedia - Interior with an Old Woman and a Young Boy -- Painting by the Dutch painter Jan Steen
Wikipedia - Interior with Portraits -- Painting by Thomas Le Clear
Wikipedia - International Association for the Study of Pain
Wikipedia - International Campaign for Tibet
Wikipedia - International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons
Wikipedia - International Campaign to Ban Landmines
Wikipedia - International Repair Day -- Annual event in October
Wikipedia - International University of La Rioja -- Private university in Spain
Wikipedia - International volunteering -- Paid travel which includes volunteering for a charitable cause
Wikipedia - Internet campaign
Wikipedia - Internet in Spain -- Overview of the Internet in Spain
Wikipedia - Intersindical-CSC -- Pro-independence trade union in Catalonia, Spain
Wikipedia - Interventional pain management -- Medical subspeciality about treating pain
Wikipedia - In the Car -- Painting by Roy Lichtenstein
Wikipedia - In the Land of the Blind the Blue Eye Man is King -- Painting by Deborah Grant
Wikipedia - In the Magic Mirror -- Painting by Paul Klee
Wikipedia - Intimism (art movement) -- Art movement of paintings and drawings of quiet domestic scenes
Wikipedia - Invasion of Georgia (1742) -- Campaign during the War of Jenkins' Ear
Wikipedia - Invisible mending -- Weaving method for repairing fabric
Wikipedia - Ioan Mirea -- Romanian painter and graphic artist
Wikipedia - Ioannis Koutsis -- Greek painter
Wikipedia - Ion Andreescu -- Romanian painter
Wikipedia - Ion Negulici -- Romanian painter
Wikipedia - Ioulia Chtchetinina -- Swiss pair skater
Wikipedia - Iphigenie Decaux-Milet-Moreau -- 19th-century French painter
Wikipedia - Ippolito Andreasi -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Iran-Spain relations -- Bilateral and diplomatic relations between Iran and Spain
Wikipedia - Iraq Campaign Medal -- American campaign medal
Wikipedia - Iraq Medal (United Kingdom) -- British campaign medal
Wikipedia - Irati (river) -- River in Spain
Wikipedia - Irene Becerril -- Mexican painter
Wikipedia - Irene di Spilimbergo -- Italian painter (1540-1559)
Wikipedia - Irina Cherniaeva -- Russian pair skater
Wikipedia - Irina Vorobieva -- Russian pair skater
Wikipedia - Irma von Duczynska -- Polish painter (1869-1932)
Wikipedia - Iron Bridge (Talavera de la Reina) -- Bridge in Spain
Wikipedia - Irreligion in Spain -- Overview of irreligion in Spain
Wikipedia - IruM-CM-1a-Veleia -- Roman town in Hispania (present Basque Country, Spain)
Wikipedia - Isaac Elias -- Dutch Golden Age painter
Wikipedia - Isaac IsraM-CM-+ls -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Isaac Spackman -- English painter
Wikipedia - Isabella II of Spain
Wikipedia - Isabella of Portugal -- 16th-century Holy Roman Empress, Queen of Spain and Infanta of Portugal
Wikipedia - Isabelle Brasseur -- Canadian former competitive pair skater
Wikipedia - Isenheim Altarpiece -- Painting by Mathias Grunewald
Wikipedia - Isidore Verheyden -- Belgian painter (1846-1905)
Wikipedia - Isidoro de Redondillo -- Spanish painter
Wikipedia - Isio De-laVega Wanogho -- Nigerian supermodel, columnist, painter and interior architect
Wikipedia - Isla de Las Palomas -- Island opposite the town of Tarifa, Andalucia, Spain
Wikipedia - Islamic miniature -- Small Islamic paintings on paper
Wikipedia - Islam in Spain -- Islamic religion in Spain
Wikipedia - Israel Covyn -- Dutch Golden Age painter (1582-1665)
Wikipedia - Istvan Burchard-Belavary -- Hungarian painter
Wikipedia - Istvan Farkas (painter) -- Hungarian painter
Wikipedia - Italian campaigns of the French Revolutionary Wars
Wikipedia - Italian Campaign (World War II)
Wikipedia - Italian Campaign (World War I)
Wikipedia - Italian invasion of British Somaliland -- Part of the East African Campaign, 1940-1941
Wikipedia - Italian military intervention in Spain -- Assistance given to the Nationalists during the Spanish Civil War
Wikipedia - Italian Renaissance painting -- Art movement
Wikipedia - Italian Union of Blind and Partially Sighted People -- Italian advocacy organization for the visually impaired
Wikipedia - It's okay to be white -- Slogan based on a poster campaign organized on the American imageboard 4chan's board /pol/ in 2017
Wikipedia - Ituren -- Town and municipality located in the province and autonomous community of Navarre, northern Spain
Wikipedia - Iulia Traducta -- Roman city in Andalusia, Spain
Wikipedia - Iuliia Artemeva -- Russian pair skater
Wikipedia - Iuniarra Sipaia -- Samoan weightlifter
Wikipedia - Ivan Agueli -- 19th and 20th-century Sufi master and painter
Wikipedia - Ivan Aivazovsky -- Russian marine painter
Wikipedia - Ivan Akimov -- Russian painter
Wikipedia - Ivan Balchenko -- Russian pair skater
Wikipedia - Ivan Bich -- Russian pair skater
Wikipedia - Ivan Blinov -- Russian painter
Wikipedia - Ivan Generalic -- Croatian painter
Wikipedia - Ivanhoe Gambini -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Ivan Kirkov -- Bulgarian painter and illustrator
Wikipedia - Ivan Lonnberg -- Swedish painter
Wikipedia - Ivan Milat-Luketa -- Croatian painter and sculptor
Wikipedia - Ivan Shishkin -- Russian landscape painter
Wikipedia - Ivan Tabakovic -- Serbian painter, sculptor
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Wikipedia - Ixion (Ribera) -- Painting by Jusepe de Ribera
Wikipedia - Jaap Weyand -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Jace (artist) -- French graffiti artist and painter
Wikipedia - Jacek Mierzejewski -- Polish painter
Wikipedia - Jacek Yerka -- Polish surrealist painter from Torun
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Wikipedia - Jack Coggins -- English painter
Wikipedia - Jack Courtney (figure skater) -- American pair skater
Wikipedia - Jack Monroe -- British writer, journalist and political campaigner
Wikipedia - Jack P. Hanlon -- Irish painter
Wikipedia - Jack Shadbolt -- Canadian painter
Wikipedia - Jackson Ambroise -- Haitian painter
Wikipedia - Jackson's Valley campaign -- 1862 campaign in the American Civil War
Wikipedia - Jack von Reppert-Bismarck -- German painter
Wikipedia - Jack Wilkinson Smith -- American painter
Wikipedia - Jacoba Surie -- Dutch painter
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Wikipedia - Jacob Biltius -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Jacob Burck -- Polish-born Jewish-American painter & sculptor
Wikipedia - Jacob Cornelisz van Oostsanen -- Dutch painter and designer of woodcuts
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Wikipedia - Jacob George Strutt -- British landscape painter and engraver
Wikipedia - Jacob Gestman Geradts -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Jacob Herreyns the Elder -- Flemish painter
Wikipedia - Jacob Jordaens -- 17th-century Flemish painter
Wikipedia - Jacob Koninck -- Dutch landscape painter
Wikipedia - Jacob Potma -- Dutch Golden Age painter
Wikipedia - Jacob Thompson (painter) -- English landscape painter
Wikipedia - Jacobus Cornelis Gaal -- Dutch painter and etcher
Wikipedia - Jacob van Ruisdael -- Dutch landscape painter and engraver ( c. 1629 - 1682)
Wikipedia - Jacob Weyer -- German painter
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Wikipedia - Jacopo Bambini -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Jacopo Barbello -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Jacopo Bassano -- Italian painter (1510-1591)
Wikipedia - Jacopo Coppi -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Jacopo da Verona -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Jacopo de' Barbari -- Italian painter and engraver (1460-1516)
Wikipedia - Jacopo de' Boateri -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Jacopo di Cione -- 14th century Italian painter
Wikipedia - Jacopo di Mino del Pellicciaio -- Italian painter
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Wikipedia - Jacques-Antoine Beaufort -- French painter
Wikipedia - Jacques Aved -- French painter
Wikipedia - Jacques Benoit -- French painter
Wikipedia - Jacques Bompaire -- 20th-century French Hellenist and scholar of ancient Greek
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Wikipedia - Jacques Van Melkebeke -- Belgian painter, comic strip writer and journalist
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Wikipedia - Jalpaiguri (Lok Sabha constituency) -- Lok Sabha Constituency in West Bengal
Wikipedia - Jalpaiguri Polytechnic Institute -- Government polytechnic in Jalpaiguri, West Bengal, India
Wikipedia - Jalpaiguri -- City in West Bengal, India
Wikipedia - Jalpaiguri Zilla School -- Educational institution in Jalpaiguri, West Bengal, India
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Wikipedia - James Northcote (painter)
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Wikipedia - James Tissot -- 19th-century French painter and illustrator
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Wikipedia - James Waylen (artist) -- 19th-century English painter
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Wikipedia - Jan Baptist van der Hulst -- Flemish painter and lithographer
Wikipedia - Jan Baptist van der Meiren -- Belgian painter
Wikipedia - Jan Brueghel the Elder -- Flemish painter (1568-1625)
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Wikipedia - Jan Claesz -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Jan Cremer -- Dutch author, photographer and painter
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Wikipedia - Jan Goedhart -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Jan Gossaert -- 15th and 16th-century Flemish painter
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Wikipedia - Jan Hendrik Brandon -- Dutch painter
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Wikipedia - Jan Kauzik -- Polish painter
Wikipedia - Jan Kleintjes -- Dutch painter
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Wikipedia - Jan Kotik (artist) -- Czech painter
Wikipedia - Jan Lewicki -- Polish painter
Wikipedia - Jan Mankes -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Jan Mooy -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Jan Mostaert -- Dutch Renaissance painter (c. 1475-1552/53)
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Wikipedia - Janos Thorma -- Hungarian painter
Wikipedia - Janos Vaszary -- Hungarian painter and graphic artist
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Wikipedia - Jan Punt -- 18th-century painter
Wikipedia - Jan Rembowski -- Polish painter
Wikipedia - Jan Riske -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Jan Rombouts the Elder -- 16th century Flemish Renaissance painter
Wikipedia - Jan Sierhuis -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Jan Sluyters -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Jan Steen -- 17th-century Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Jan Strube -- Dutch painter
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Wikipedia - Jan Toorop -- 19th and 20th-century Dutch-Indonesian painter
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Wikipedia - Jan van Buken -- Belgian painter
Wikipedia - Jan van den Bergh -- Dutch painter
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Wikipedia - Jan van Eyck -- 15th century Flemish painter
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Wikipedia - Jan van Noordt -- Dutch painter
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Wikipedia - Jan Wyck -- Dutch painter
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Wikipedia - Jean Aujame -- French painter (1905-1965)
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Wikipedia - Jean-Baptiste Delestre -- Painter, art historian and critic
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Wikipedia - Jean-Baptiste Mallet -- French painter
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Wikipedia - Jean-Baptiste Santerre -- French painter
Wikipedia - Jean-Baptiste-Simeon Chardin -- 18th-century French painter
Wikipedia - Jean Bardin -- French painter
Wikipedia - Jean Barrez -- French painter
Wikipedia - Jean Bassange -- French painter
Wikipedia - Jean Bellette -- Australian modernist painter (1908 - 1991)
Wikipedia - Jean Beraud -- French painter
Wikipedia - Jean Bourdichon -- French miniature painter and manuscript illuminator (c.1457/1459-1521)
Wikipedia - Jean Brenner -- French painter
Wikipedia - Jean Broc -- French painter
Wikipedia - Jean Chalette -- French painter
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Wikipedia - Jean-Claude Garoute -- Haitian painter and sculptor
Wikipedia - Jean-Claude Pirotte -- Belgian writer, painter and poet
Wikipedia - Jean Cortot -- French painter, poet and illustrator
Wikipedia - Jean Crotti -- French painter
Wikipedia - Jean Dallaire -- Canadian painter
Wikipedia - Jean Fernand -- French painter and sculptor
Wikipedia - Jean-Francois Batut -- French painter
Wikipedia - Jean-Francois Millet -- 19th-century French painter
Wikipedia - Jean-Francois Pierre Peyron -- French painter
Wikipedia - Jean-Francois RaffaM-CM-+lli -- French painter
Wikipedia - Jean Gigoux -- French painter
Wikipedia - Jean Guinard -- French painter
Wikipedia - Jean-Hippolyte Flandrin -- French painter
Wikipedia - Jean-Honore Fragonard -- 18th and 19th-century French Rococo painter
Wikipedia - Jean Isherwood -- Australian painter
Wikipedia - Jean-Jacques Henner -- 19th-century French painter
Wikipedia - Jean-Jacques Lagrenee -- French painter
Wikipedia - Jean-Joseph Bellel -- French painter
Wikipedia - Jean-Leon Gerome -- 19th-century French painter and sculptor
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Wikipedia - Jean Marchand (painter)
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Wikipedia - Jean McEwen -- Canadian painter
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Wikipedia - Jeanne Bernard Dabos -- French miniature painter
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Wikipedia - Jeanne Fichel -- French painter
Wikipedia - Jeanne Hebuterne -- 20th-century French painter
Wikipedia - Jeanne Jegou-Cadart -- French painter
Wikipedia - Jeannette Papin -- German painter
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Wikipedia - Jean Piaubert -- French painter
Wikipedia - Jean-Pierre Franque -- French painter
Wikipedia - Jean-Pierre Norblin de La Gourdaine -- French painter (1745-1830)
Wikipedia - Jean-Pierre Pincemin -- French painter and printmaker
Wikipedia - Jean-Pierre Pophillat -- French painter and lithographer
Wikipedia - Jean Raoul Chaurand-Naurac -- French painter
Wikipedia - Jean Raspail -- French writer
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Wikipedia - JenM-EM-^Q Jendrassik -- Hungarian painter
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Wikipedia - Jenni Meno -- American pair skater
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Wikipedia - Jenny Dalenoord -- Dutch painter and illustrator
Wikipedia - Jens Birkholm -- Danish painter
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Wikipedia - Jens Juel (painter)
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Wikipedia - Jerez uprising -- 1892 peasant rebellion in Jerez, Spain
Wikipedia - Jerg Ratgeb -- 16th-century German painter
Wikipedia - Jerome-Francois Chantereau -- French painter
Wikipedia - Jeronimo Navases -- Spanish painter
Wikipedia - Jeronimus Spengler -- Swiss glass painter
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Wikipedia - Jerry Fotheringill -- American pair skater
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Wikipedia - Jerzy Jelowicki -- Polish painter
Wikipedia - Jerzy Mierzejewski -- Polish painter
Wikipedia - Jessica Calalang -- American pair skater
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Wikipedia - Jessie Traill -- Australian painter
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Wikipedia - JM-DM-^Skabs Kazaks -- Latvian painter
Wikipedia - J. M. W. Turner -- 18th and 19th-century British painter, water-colourist, and printmaker
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Wikipedia - Joachim Martin Falbe -- German painter
Wikipedia - Joachim Patinir -- 16th-century Flemish painter
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Wikipedia - Joao Cristino da Silva -- Portuguese painter and illustrator
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Wikipedia - Joao Fragoso -- Portuguese painter
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Wikipedia - Joe Biden 2008 presidential campaign -- 2008 presidential campaign of Delaware Senator Joe Biden
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Wikipedia - Johan Baptist Govaerts -- Flemish painter
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Wikipedia - Johann Daniel Wilhelm Hartmann -- Swiss painter, engraver, and malacologist
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Wikipedia - Johann Heiss -- German painter
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Wikipedia - Johann Jakob Ulrich -- Swiss painter and graphic artist
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Wikipedia - John Bulloch Souter -- British painter
Wikipedia - John Bunion Murray -- African American painter
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Wikipedia - John Dubrow -- American painter
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Wikipedia - John Everett -- English painter
Wikipedia - John Foulger -- British painter
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Wikipedia - John Painter (supercentenarian) -- supercentenarian
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Wikipedia - John Sanderson-Wells -- British painter
Wikipedia - John Scarlett Davis -- English painter
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Wikipedia - Jonquierette Gounon de Loubens -- French painter
Wikipedia - Jordan Casteel -- American figurative painter
Wikipedia - Jordan Daly -- Scottish campaigner and founder of TIE campaign group
Wikipedia - Jordanus Hoorn -- Dutch painter and drawing teacher
Wikipedia - Jorge Figueroa Acosta -- Mexican painter and sculptor
Wikipedia - Jorge Marin -- Mexican sculptor and painter
Wikipedia - Jorgen Aabye -- Danish painter
Wikipedia - Jorge Rando -- Spanish painter and sculptor
Wikipedia - Jorge Sampaio
Wikipedia - Jorge Vinatea Reinoso -- Peruvian painter
Wikipedia - Jorg Ratgeb - Painter -- 1978 film
Wikipedia - Jorg Stocker -- German painter
Wikipedia - Joris Ponse -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Joris van Bredael -- Flemish painter
Wikipedia - Jorma Gallen-Kallela -- Finnish painter
Wikipedia - Jorn Larsen -- Danish painter and sculptor
Wikipedia - Jos Croin -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Jose Antonio Torres Martino -- Puerto Rican painter, journalist and writer
Wikipedia - Jose Antonio Velasquez -- Honduran painter
Wikipedia - Jose Balaca -- Spanish painter
Wikipedia - Jose Casado del Alisal -- Spanish painter
Wikipedia - Jose de Ledesma -- Spanish painter
Wikipedia - Josef Anton Hafner -- German painter
Wikipedia - Josef Block -- German painter
Wikipedia - Josef Bolf -- Czech painter
Wikipedia - Josef Capek -- Czech painter and writer
Wikipedia - Josef Erler -- Austrian painter
Wikipedia - Josef Felix Muller -- Swiss sculptor, graphic artist and painter.
Wikipedia - Josef Fruhmesser -- German painter
Wikipedia - Josef Grassi -- Austrian painter
Wikipedia - Josef Jackerson -- Russian painter
Wikipedia - Josef Kriehuber -- Austrian graphic and painter
Wikipedia - Josef Lopez -- Spanish painter
Wikipedia - Josef Urbach -- German painter
Wikipedia - Josef von Hempel -- Austrian painter and writer
Wikipedia - Josef Wilhelm Wallander -- Swedish artist and painter
Wikipedia - Jose Galofre y Coma -- Spanish historical painter
Wikipedia - Jose Lamiel -- Spanish sculptor and painter
Wikipedia - Jose Lopez de Victoria -- Puerto Rican painter
Wikipedia - Jose Manuel Valades -- Olympic sailor from Spain
Wikipedia - Jose Maria Cruz Novillo -- Spanish painter and sculptor
Wikipedia - Jose Pancetti -- Brazilian painter
Wikipedia - Joseph Amedokpo -- Togolese painter
Wikipedia - Joseph Aubert -- French painter
Wikipedia - Joseph-Auguste Rousselin -- French painter and art collector
Wikipedia - Joseph August Knip -- Dutch painter (1777-1847)
Wikipedia - Joseph Benwell Clark -- British painter (1857-1938)
Wikipedia - Joseph Blanc -- French painter
Wikipedia - Joseph Boze -- French painter
Wikipedia - Joseph Christophe -- French painter
Wikipedia - Joseph Clark (painter) -- English painter
Wikipedia - Joseph Conrardy -- Belgian painter
Wikipedia - Joseph C. Painter -- American politician from the state of Washington
Wikipedia - Joseph Dierickx -- Belgian painter
Wikipedia - Joseph Ducreux -- French portrait painter, pastelist, miniaturist, and engraver
Wikipedia - Joseph Duplessis -- French painter (1725-1802)
Wikipedia - Joseph Egyir-Paintsir -- Ghanaian Evangelist
Wikipedia - Joseph Fiore -- American painter
Wikipedia - Joseph Foxcroft Cole -- American painter
Wikipedia - Joseph Gabriel Imbert -- French painter
Wikipedia - Joseph Garibaldi -- French painter
Wikipedia - Joseph Henry Bush -- American painter
Wikipedia - Joseph Ignaz Appiani -- South-German painter
Wikipedia - Josephine Cheesman -- British painter
Wikipedia - Josephine Haswell Miller -- British painter (1890-1975)
Wikipedia - Joseph Jacobsen -- American pair skater
Wikipedia - Joseph Karl Stieler -- German painter (1781-1858)
Wikipedia - Joseph Lynch (figure skater) -- American pair skater
Wikipedia - Joseph Middeleer -- Belgian painter (1865-1934)
Wikipedia - Joseph Morpain -- French classical pianist
Wikipedia - Joseph Nigg -- Austrian painter
Wikipedia - Joseph Niklaus Butler -- Swiss painter
Wikipedia - Joseph Pairin Kitingan -- Malaysian politician
Wikipedia - Joseph Quinaux -- Belgian painter
Wikipedia - Joseph Simon Volmar -- Swiss painter and sculptor
Wikipedia - Joseph Urie -- Scottish painter
Wikipedia - Josephus Laurentius Dyckmans -- Belgian painter
Wikipedia - Joseph van Bredael -- Flemish painter
Wikipedia - Joseph von Fuhrich -- Austrian painter
Wikipedia - Joseph Whiting Stock -- American painter
Wikipedia - Joseph Willibrord MM-CM-$hler -- German painter (1778-1860)
Wikipedia - Joseph Wright of Derby -- 18th-century English painter
Wikipedia - Jose Rodrigues Nunes -- Brazilian painter
Wikipedia - Jose Roma -- Spanish painter
Wikipedia - Jose Teofilo de Jesus -- Brazilian painter
Wikipedia - Josh Littlejohn -- Scottish philanthropist and homeless campaigner
Wikipedia - Joshua Atherton -- American anti-slavery campaigner (1737-1809)
Wikipedia - Joshua Johnson (painter) -- African American artist
Wikipedia - Joshua Reagan -- American pair skater
Wikipedia - Joshua Reynolds -- 18th-century English painter, specialising in portraits
Wikipedia - Joshua Santillan -- American pair skater
Wikipedia - Joshua Smith (artist) -- Australian painter
Wikipedia - Josie d'Arby -- Welsh actress, Television Presenter, writer, director, painter
Wikipedia - Josip Crnobori -- Croatian painter
Wikipedia - Josip Generalic -- Croatian painter
Wikipedia - Josip Horvat MeM-DM-^Qimurec -- Croatian painter
Wikipedia - Josip RaM-DM-^Mic -- Croatian painter
Wikipedia - Jos Lussenburg -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Joss Garman -- British environmentalist and humanitarian campaigner
Wikipedia - Jovan Isailovic, Jr. -- Serbian painter
Wikipedia - Jovan Isailovic -- Serbian painter
Wikipedia - Jovan Popovic (painter) -- Serbian painter in the 19th century
Wikipedia - Jovan Zonjic -- Serbian modern painter
Wikipedia - Joyce Himsworth -- British painter
Wikipedia - Jozef Belch -- Polish painter
Wikipedia - Jozef Brandt -- 19th and 20th-century Polish painter
Wikipedia - Jozef Chelmonski -- Polish painter (1849-1914)
Wikipedia - Jozef Korolkiewicz -- Polish painter
Wikipedia - Jozef Krasnowolski -- Polish painter
Wikipedia - Jozef OM-EM-:min -- Polish painter
Wikipedia - Jozef Raskin -- Belgian artist, painter, draftsman, and Scheutist missionary
Wikipedia - Jozsef Breznay -- Hungarian painter
Wikipedia - Jozsef M-CM-^Acs (painter) -- Yugoslav painter
Wikipedia - Jrgen Sonne (painter)
Wikipedia - J. Roman Andrus -- American painter
Wikipedia - JS Academy -- Non-profit organization in Karachi, Pakistan, teaching deaf and hearing-impaired children to read and write
Wikipedia - Juana Ines de la Cruz -- Nun, scholar and poet in New Spain
Wikipedia - Juan Antonio de Frias y Escalante -- Spanish Baroque Golden Age painter (1633-1669)
Wikipedia - Juan Bautista Bayuco -- Spanish painter
Wikipedia - Juan Bautista Garcia -- Puerto Rican painter
Wikipedia - Juan Carlos I of Spain
Wikipedia - Juan Carlos I -- Former King of Spain
Wikipedia - Juan Caro de Tavira -- Spanish painter
Wikipedia - Juan CarreM-CM-1o de Miranda -- Spanish painter
Wikipedia - Juan de Flandes -- Flemish painter (c.1460-c.1519)
Wikipedia - Juan de Fuca -- Greek explorer in service of Spain
Wikipedia - Juan de la Corte -- Spanish painter
Wikipedia - Juan del Castillo -- Spanish Baroque painter
Wikipedia - Juan de Licalde -- Spanish painter
Wikipedia - Juan de Loaysa y Giron -- Spanish painter
Wikipedia - Juan de Uceda -- Spanish painter
Wikipedia - Juan de Villoldo -- Spanish painter
Wikipedia - Juan Garcia Postigo -- Spanish actor and model, Mister Spain 2006, Mister World 2007, international male pageant winner, sommelier, hotelier
Wikipedia - Juan Garrido -- African conquistador in the service of Spain
Wikipedia - Juan Genoves -- Spanish painter
Wikipedia - Juan Gonzalez (artist) -- Cuban-American painter
Wikipedia - Juan Jose Calandria -- Uruguayan painter and sculptor
Wikipedia - Juan Luis Wood -- Olympic sailor from Spain
Wikipedia - Juan Manuel Ugarte Elespuru -- Peruvian painter, writer, and historian
Wikipedia - Juan Mochi -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Juan Negrin -- Prime Minister of Spain
Wikipedia - Juan Ramirez de Arellano -- Spanish painter
Wikipedia - Juan Ramirez (painter) -- Spanish portrait painter
Wikipedia - Juan Vicente de Guemes, 2nd Count of Revillagigedo -- Spanish general and viceroy of New Spain
Wikipedia - Juan ZariM-CM-1ena -- Spanish painter
Wikipedia - Judianne Fotheringill -- American pair skater
Wikipedia - Judith and Her Maidservant (Correggio) -- Painting by Antonio da Correggio
Wikipedia - Judith and Her Maidservant (Detroit) -- C. 1625 painting by Artemisia Gentileschi
Wikipedia - Judith and the Head of Holofernes -- Oil painting by Gustav Klimt
Wikipedia - Judith at the Gates of Bethulia -- Painting by Jules-Claude Ziegler
Wikipedia - Judith Berry -- Canadian painter
Wikipedia - Judith Elizabeth Hall -- Welsh professor of anaesthetics, intensive care and pain medicine
Wikipedia - Judith Leyster -- Painter from the Northern Netherlands (1609-1660)
Wikipedia - Judith Ten Bosch -- Dutch painter and illustrator
Wikipedia - Judit Reigl -- Hungarian painter
Wikipedia - Judy Cassab -- Australian painter
Wikipedia - Jules Adler -- French painter
Wikipedia - Jules Bastien-Lepage -- French painter
Wikipedia - Jules-Cyrille Cave -- French painter, 1859-ca. 1940
Wikipedia - Jules De Bruycker -- Belgian artist, graphic designer and painter
Wikipedia - Jules Joseph Lefebvre -- French painter, educator and theorist
Wikipedia - Jules Robert Auguste -- French painter
Wikipedia - Julia Antipova -- Russian pair skater
Wikipedia - Julia Beloglazova -- Ukrainian pair skater
Wikipedia - Julia Charlotte Mengs -- German painter
Wikipedia - Julia Dolgorukova -- Russian painter
Wikipedia - Julia Karbovskaya -- Russian pair skater
Wikipedia - Julia Lavrentieva -- Ukrainian pair skater
Wikipedia - Julian de la Herreria -- Paraguayan painter, engraver, and ceramicist
Wikipedia - Julia Vlassov -- American pair skater
Wikipedia - Julie Fragar -- Australian painter and educator
Wikipedia - Julie Harvey (artist) -- American contemporary art painter, multimedia producer, video director and choreographer
Wikipedia - Julien Dupre -- French painter
Wikipedia - Julio and Marisol -- US public-service advertising campaign
Wikipedia - Julio Romero de Torres -- Spanish painter
Wikipedia - Julius Bloch -- American painter
Wikipedia - Julius Caesar's planned invasion of the Parthian Empire -- Military campaign that Gaius Julius Caesar never executed
Wikipedia - Julius Engelhard -- German painter
Wikipedia - Julius Folkmann -- Danish photographer, cinematographer and painter
Wikipedia - Julius Hatofsky -- American painter
Wikipedia - Julius Rolshoven -- American painter
Wikipedia - Jump Around -- 1992 single by House of Pain
Wikipedia - Junpai A50 -- Chinese compact sedan
Wikipedia - Junpai CX65 -- Chinese compact crossover
Wikipedia - Junpai D60 -- Chinese subcompact crossover
Wikipedia - Junpai D80 -- Chinese subcompact crossover
Wikipedia - Junpei Eto -- Japanese painter
Wikipedia - Juozas Jankus -- Lithuanian painter
Wikipedia - Jupiter and Semele -- Painting by Gustave Moreau
Wikipedia - Juriaen Pool -- 18th century painter
Wikipedia - Jury rigging -- Term for a makeshift repair
Wikipedia - Jusepe de Ribera -- Spanish painter
Wikipedia - Jusepe Martinez -- Spanish painter
Wikipedia - Juste-Aurele Meissonnier -- French goldsmith, sculptor, painter, architect, and furniture designer
Wikipedia - Justice (painting) -- 1470 painting by Piero del Pollaiolo
Wikipedia - Justine Brasseur -- Canadian pair skater
Wikipedia - Justin Pieris Deraniyagala -- Sri Lankan painter
Wikipedia - Just Say No -- Anti-drug ad campaign
Wikipedia - Justus de Verwer -- Dutch painter and illustrator
Wikipedia - Jwan Yosef -- Syrian-born Swedish painter and artist
Wikipedia - Kaash Paige -- American singer-songwriter
Wikipedia - Kaaterskill Falls (painting) -- Painting by Thomas Cole
Wikipedia - Kadir Nelson -- American painter, illustrator, and author
Wikipedia - Kajetan Sosnowski -- Polish abstract painter
Wikipedia - Kalamkari -- Traditional textile decoration technique of Andhra Pradesh combining hand-painting and block-printing on mordanted fabric
Wikipedia - Kali (painter) -- Polish painter
Wikipedia - Kambara Tai -- Japanese painter (1899-1997)
Wikipedia - Kamerun Campaign -- Theatre of WWI that involved the British, French and Belgian invasion of the German colony of Kamerun from August 1914 to March 1916
Wikipedia - Kamil Khanlarov -- Soviet-Azerbaijani painter
Wikipedia - KampM-EM-^M Arai -- Japanese painter
Wikipedia - Kandyan Wars -- British Army expeditionary campaigns
Wikipedia - KanM-EM-^M Hideyori -- Japanese painter
Wikipedia - KanM-EM-^M Yasunobu -- Japanese painter
Wikipedia - Kantokuen -- Planned WWII Japanese military campaign
Wikipedia - Kanuty Rusiecki -- Belarusian and Polish painter
Wikipedia - Kanye West 2020 presidential campaign -- Political campaign for United States presidency
Wikipedia - Kapiton Zelentsov -- Russian painter
Wikipedia - Karanthai -- Pair of villages in Tamil Nadu, India
Wikipedia - Kara-Tur -- Dungeons & Dragons fictional campaign setting
Wikipedia - Karel Appel -- Dutch painter, sculptor, and poet (1921-2006)
Wikipedia - Karel Balcar -- Czech painter
Wikipedia - Karel M-EM- tefl -- Czech pair skater
Wikipedia - Karel Philips Spierincks -- Painter
Wikipedia - Karen Aghamyan -- Armenian painter
Wikipedia - Karina Eibatova -- Painter
Wikipedia - Karine Jean-Pierre -- Haitian-American political campaign organizer
Wikipedia - Karin Kunzle -- Swiss pair skater
Wikipedia - Karin Luts -- Estonian female painter and a graphic artist.
Wikipedia - Karin Spaink
Wikipedia - Karipbek Kuyukov -- Kazakh painter
Wikipedia - Karl Becker (painter) -- German painter
Wikipedia - Karl Borschke -- Austrian painter
Wikipedia - Karl Bryullov -- Russian painter (1799-1852)
Wikipedia - Karl Buesgen -- American painter
Wikipedia - Karl Burman -- Estonian architect and painter
Wikipedia - Karl Dempwolf -- German-American painter
Wikipedia - Karl Ferdinand Wimar -- 19th-century German-American painter
Wikipedia - Karl Friedrich Fries -- German painter
Wikipedia - Karl Friedrich Lessing -- German historical and landscape painter (1808-1880)
Wikipedia - Karl Friedrich Schinkel -- Prussian architect, city planner and painter
Wikipedia - Karl Gussow -- German painter
Wikipedia - Karl Hahn -- German painter
Wikipedia - Karl Hess (painter) -- German painter
Wikipedia - Karl Hubner -- German painter
Wikipedia - Karl Jauslin -- Swiss painter and illustrator
Wikipedia - Karl JM-CM-$ger (artist) -- German painter
Wikipedia - Karl-Maria May -- Austrian painter
Wikipedia - Karl Mediz -- Austrian painter
Wikipedia - Karl Momen -- Swedish architect, painter and sculptor
Wikipedia - Karl O'Lynch von Town -- Austrian painter
Wikipedia - Karl PM-CM-$rsimM-CM-$gi -- Estonian painter
Wikipedia - Karl Postl (painter) -- Czech painter
Wikipedia - Karl Rauber -- Swiss painter
Wikipedia - Karl Schorn -- German painter and chess player
Wikipedia - Karl Stengel -- Painter (b. 1925, d. 2017)
Wikipedia - Karl Zwack -- Austrian pair skater
Wikipedia - Karol Hiller -- Polish painter
Wikipedia - Karol Kennedy -- American pair skater
Wikipedia - Karoly Lotz -- German-Hungarian painter
Wikipedia - Karuna Sukka -- Indian printmaker and painter
Wikipedia - Karuppaiya Muthusamy -- Malaysian politician
Wikipedia - Karwan-e-Mohabbat -- Civilian campaign in India
Wikipedia - Kasak (1992 film) -- 1990 film by K. Bapaiah
Wikipedia - Kasam Paida Karne Wale Ki -- 1984 film by Babbar Subhash
Wikipedia - Kasia Domanska -- Polish painter
Wikipedia - Kasper Heiberg -- Danish painter and sculptor
Wikipedia - Katarzyna Karpowicz -- Polish painter
Wikipedia - Kate Finster -- American pair skater
Wikipedia - Kate Perugini -- English Victorian-era painter and child of Charles Dickens
Wikipedia - Kateryna Kostenko -- Ukrainian pair skater
Wikipedia - Kate Sheppard House -- Historic home of a leader in NZ's women's suffrage campaign, Christchurch, NZ
Wikipedia - Kate Sheppard National Memorial -- Memorial to the women's suffrage campaign, located in Christchurch, New Zealand
Wikipedia - Kate Williams Evans -- Welsh suffragette, activist and campaigner for women's rights
Wikipedia - Katharine Marie Barker -- American painter
Wikipedia - Katherine Bobak -- Canadian pair skater
Wikipedia - Kathleen Bridle -- British painter
Wikipedia - Kathleen Munn -- Canadian modern painter
Wikipedia - Kathleen O'Brennan -- Irish journalist, playwright and campaigner
Wikipedia - Kathleen Shackleton -- Irish portrait painter and journalist
Wikipedia - Kathy Beekman -- American contemporary pastel painter
Wikipedia - Kathy McCarty -- Musician and painter
Wikipedia - Kathy Prendergast -- Irish sculptor, draftsman, and painter (1958-)
Wikipedia - Katie Barnhart -- American pair skater
Wikipedia - Katrin Kanitz -- East German pair skater
Wikipedia - Katsundo Kosaka -- Japanese painter
Wikipedia - Katy Clark -- British Labour Party politician, solicitor, trade unionist, campaigner
Wikipedia - Katy Keeley -- American pair skater
Wikipedia - Kazimieras NaruM-EM-!eviM-DM-^Mius -- Lithuanian painter
Wikipedia - Kazimierz Alchimowicz -- Lithuanian-born Polish romantic painter
Wikipedia - Kazimierz Sichulski -- Polish painter
Wikipedia - Kazimir Malevich -- Russian artist and painter
Wikipedia - Kazu Wakita -- Japanese painter
Wikipedia - Keauna McLaughlin -- American pair skater
Wikipedia - Kebedech Tekleab -- Ethiopian painter and poet
Wikipedia - Keep the Clause campaign -- Unsuccessful campaign against the repeal of Section 28 of the Local Government Act 1988
Wikipedia - Kees Bastiaans -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Kees Bol -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Kees Maks -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Kees Roovers -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Kees van Dongen -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Kees van Waning -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Keith Rocco -- Painter
Wikipedia - Kelly Church -- Odawa-Ojibwe basket weaver, painter, birch bark biter, and educator
Wikipedia - Kelly McLane -- American painter
Wikipedia - Keltie Ferris -- American abstract painter
Wikipedia - Ken Eberts -- American painter
Wikipedia - Ken Kagaya (artist) -- Japanese writer and painter
Wikipedia - Kenneth Barden -- British architect, mural designer and painter
Wikipedia - Kenneth Martin -- English painter
Wikipedia - Kenneth Pai
Wikipedia - Ken Tasaka -- Japanese painter
Wikipedia - Keti Davlianidze -- Georgian painter
Wikipedia - Kevin Paige -- American musician
Wikipedia - Key Sato -- Japanese painter
Wikipedia - K. G. Bopaiah -- Indian politician
Wikipedia - K. G. Subramanyan -- Indian painter, sculptor, muralist, printmaker, writer and academic (1924-2016)
Wikipedia - Khivan campaign of 1873 -- 1873 war
Wikipedia - Khorasan Campaign -- Safavid loyalist campaign led by Nader
Wikipedia - Kialoa -- Maxi yacht campaign
Wikipedia - Kim Anno -- Japanese-American abstract painter
Wikipedia - Kimberly Brooks (artist) -- American painter
Wikipedia - Kimberly Williams-Paisley -- American actress and film director
Wikipedia - Kim Dorland -- Canadian painter
Wikipedia - Kim Ju-sik -- North Korean pair skater
Wikipedia - Kim Kyu-eun -- South Korean pair skater
Wikipedia - King David (Stom) -- Painting by Mathias Stom
Wikipedia - Kingdom of Paiyun -- Former kingdom located in present-day Nepal
Wikipedia - Kingdom of Spain
Wikipedia - Kingdom of the Suebi -- Germanic kingdom in what is today Galicia, Spain, that was established by the Suebi about 410, and existed until 585
Wikipedia - King Ferdinand of Spain
Wikipedia - King Juan Carlos University -- University from Spain
Wikipedia - King of Pain -- 1984 single by The Police
Wikipedia - King of Spain
Wikipedia - King's College, Madrid -- British curriculum school in Spain
Wikipedia - Kinichiro Ishikawa -- Japanese painter
Wikipedia - Kinosuke Ebihara -- Japanese painter
Wikipedia - Kinpai (race) -- Japanese thoroughbred race
Wikipedia - Kintsugi -- Japanese art of repairing broken pottery with lacquer dusted or mixed with powdered gold, silver, or platinum
Wikipedia - Kira Nam Greene -- New York-based painter
Wikipedia - Kirill Lemokh -- Russian painter
Wikipedia - Kirsten Christensen -- Danish painter and ceramist
Wikipedia - Kirsten Moore-Towers -- Canadian pair skater
Wikipedia - Kit Barker -- English painter
Wikipedia - Kitty Kantilla -- Australian Aboriginal painter
Wikipedia - Kitty Lange Kielland -- Norwegian painter
Wikipedia - Kitty Wilmer O'Brien -- Irish painter
Wikipedia - Klaas Gubbels -- Dutch painter and sculptor
Wikipedia - Klaus Bietenholz -- Swiss painter
Wikipedia - Klaus Hartmann -- German painter
Wikipedia - Kleinberger Madonna -- Painting by Bramantino
Wikipedia - Kleophrades Painter -- Athenian vase painter
Wikipedia - Karlis HM-EM-+ns -- Latvian painter
Wikipedia - Knocking on wood -- Apotropaic tradition believed to ward off evil
Wikipedia - Knock-off Nigel -- UK television campaign
Wikipedia - Knud Agger -- Danish painter
Wikipedia - Knud Merrild -- Danish painter
Wikipedia - Knut Schubert -- East German pair skater
Wikipedia - Kobayashi Eitaku -- Japanese painter (1843-1890)
Wikipedia - Kobra Paige -- Canadian singer
Wikipedia - Kojin Kozu -- Japanese painter
Wikipedia - Komuro Suiun -- Japanese painter
Wikipedia - Konrad Cramer -- German-born American painter
Wikipedia - Konrad Grob -- Swiss painter
Wikipedia - Konrad Lienert -- Austrian pair skater
Wikipedia - Konrad Srzednicki -- Polish painter
Wikipedia - Konrad Witz -- German painter
Wikipedia - Konstantin Altunin -- Russian painter from Arkhangelsk, Russia
Wikipedia - Konstantin Bezmaternikh -- Russian pair skater
Wikipedia - Konstantin Gorbatov -- Russian painter
Wikipedia - Konstantin Makovsky -- Russian painter
Wikipedia - Konstantin Shtarkelov -- Bulgarian painter
Wikipedia - Konstantin Yuon -- Russian painter
Wikipedia - KonstantM-DM-+ns Visotskis -- Latvian painter
Wikipedia - Konstanty Mackiewicz -- Polish painter
Wikipedia - Kopai railway station -- Railway Station in West Bengal
Wikipedia - Kopaitic Island -- Island in Antarctica
Wikipedia - Korangal Valley campaign -- Military operations by ISAF against the Taliban
Wikipedia - Korean Hostel in Spain -- South Korean television show
Wikipedia - Korean painting
Wikipedia - Kossa Bokchan -- Serbian painter
Wikipedia - Kosta MiliM-DM-^Mevic -- Serbian painter
Wikipedia - Kotaro Ikeda -- Japanese painter
Wikipedia - Krikor Agopian -- Canadian-Armenian painter
Wikipedia - Krishn Kanhai -- Indian painter (born 1961)
Wikipedia - Kristina Astakhova -- Russian pair skater
Wikipedia - Kristina Kabatova -- Slovak pair skater
Wikipedia - Kristin Nelson -- American actress, painter
Wikipedia - Ksenia Krasilnikova -- Russian pair skater
Wikipedia - Ksenia Stolbova -- Russian pair skater
Wikipedia - Kseniia Akhanteva -- Russian pair skater
Wikipedia - K. S. Kulkarni -- Indian painter
Wikipedia - Kucuk TavM-EM-^_an Adasi -- Pair of adjacent Turkish islands located in the Aegean Sea
Wikipedia - Kun Can -- Chinese painter
Wikipedia - Kuno Veeber -- Estonian painter
Wikipedia - Kunzo Minami -- Japanese painter
Wikipedia - Kuzma Petrov-Vodkin -- Russian painter
Wikipedia - K. Venkatappa -- Indian painter, sculptor and musician (1886-1965)
Wikipedia - Kwigiumpainukamiut, Alaska -- Ghost town in Alaska
Wikipedia - KWLP -- Radio station of the Hualapai Tribe in Peach Springs, Arizona
Wikipedia - Kyee Myint Saw -- Burmese painter
Wikipedia - Kylie Duarte -- American pair skater
Wikipedia - Kyung-ja Chun -- South Korean painter
Wikipedia - La bandera blanca y verde -- Official anthem of Andalusia, Spain
Wikipedia - La Bella Nani -- Painting by Paolo Veronese
Wikipedia - La belle jardiniere -- Painting by Raphael
Wikipedia - La Belle Strasbourgeoise -- Painting by Nicolas de Largilliere
Wikipedia - La Blanchisseuse (Toulouse-Lautrec) -- Painting by Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec
Wikipedia - Labor Pains -- 2009 film by Lara Shapiro
Wikipedia - Labor pain
Wikipedia - Labour Against the Witchhunt -- Campaign for fair UK Labour Party discipline
Wikipedia - Labour Campaign for Electoral Reform -- British political organisation
Wikipedia - Labour Isn't Working -- An advertising campaign in the United Kingdom
Wikipedia - L'Absinthe -- Painting by Edgar Degas
Wikipedia - La Buena Dicha -- Cultural property in Madrid, Spain
Wikipedia - La BulaqueM-CM-1a -- 1895 painting by Juan Luna
Wikipedia - La Cadena -- Mountain in Spain
Wikipedia - La Coiffeuse -- Painting by Pablo Picasso
Wikipedia - La Cueva de Roa -- Municipality in Castile and Leon, Spain
Wikipedia - La cugina Argia -- Painting by Giovanni Fattori
Wikipedia - Lacuna (manuscripts) -- Gap in a manuscript, inscription, text, painting, or musical work
Wikipedia - Ladislav Eugen Petrovits -- Austrian painter and illustrator
Wikipedia - Ladislav Kralj -- Croatian painter and engraver
Wikipedia - La donna gravida -- Painting by Raphael
Wikipedia - Lady Bird Cleveland -- American painter (b. 1926, d. 2015)
Wikipedia - Lady in Blue (CM-CM-)zanne) -- 1904 painting by Paul CM-CM-)zanne
Wikipedia - Lady with an Ermine -- Painting by Leonardo Da Vinci
Wikipedia - Laelia (city) -- Ancient Tartessian city in southern Spain
Wikipedia - La Fornarina -- Painting by Raphael
Wikipedia - La Garma cave complex -- Cave complex and archaeological site with prehistoric paintings in Spain
Wikipedia - La Gomera -- One of Spain's Canary Islands
Wikipedia - La Ingobernable -- Self-managed community space in Spain
Wikipedia - La Isleta Lighthouse -- Lighthouse on Gran Canaria, Spain
Wikipedia - La Japonaise (painting) -- 1876 painting by Claude Monet
Wikipedia - Lajos Kolozsvary -- Hungarian painter
Wikipedia - Lake George (John Frederick Kensett) -- Painting by John Frederick Kensett
Wikipedia - Lakes of Covadonga -- Lake Enol and Lake Ercina in Spain
Wikipedia - Lakhudiyar Caves -- Indian caves decorated with prehistoric paintings
Wikipedia - La Manada rape case -- Gang rape case in Spain, 2016
Wikipedia - La MariM-CM-)e -- Painting by Marc Chagall
Wikipedia - Lamentation (Annibale Carracci) -- Destroyed painting by Annibale Carracci
Wikipedia - Lamentation of Christ (Mantegna) -- Painting by Andrea Mantegna
Wikipedia - Lamentation over the Dead Christ (Signorelli) -- 1502 painting by Luca Signorelli
Wikipedia - Lamentation (The Mourning of Christ) -- painting by Giotto
Wikipedia - Lament over the Dead Christ (Moretto) -- Painting by Moretto da Brescia
Wikipedia - Lament over the Dead Christ (Previtali) -- painting by Andrea Previtali
Wikipedia - Lament over the Dead Christ (Veronese) -- Painting by Paolo Veronese
Wikipedia - Lampugnani's Conspiracy -- Painting by Francesco Hayez
Wikipedia - La Murta Observatory -- Observatory in Murcia, Spain
Wikipedia - Lancaster's chevauchM-CM-)e of 1346 -- Campaign during the Hundred Years' War
Wikipedia - Lancaster's chevauchM-CM-)e of 1356 -- Campaign during the Hundred Years' War
Wikipedia - Landing at Aitape -- Battle of the Western New Guinea campaign of World War II
Wikipedia - Landings on Rendova -- Allied amphibious landing during the New Georgia campaign of World War II
Wikipedia - Landscape (Jan Brueghel the Elder and de Momper) -- Painting by Joos de Momper
Wikipedia - Landscape Near Figueras -- Painting by Salvador Dali
Wikipedia - Landscape painting -- Depiction of landscapes in art
Wikipedia - Landscape with a Church at Twilight -- Painting by Vincent van Gogh
Wikipedia - Landscape with a Mountain Pass -- Painting by Joos de Momper
Wikipedia - Landscape with Animals -- painting by Philip James de Loutherbourg
Wikipedia - Landscape with a Pig and a Horse -- 1903 painting by Paul Gauguin
Wikipedia - Landscape with a View of the Sea at Sunset -- Painting by Joos de Momper
Wikipedia - Landscape with a Windmill -- painting by Jacob van Ruisdael
Wikipedia - Landscape with Dunes -- Painting by Vincent van Gogh
Wikipedia - Landscape with Grotto and a Rider -- Painting by Joos de Momper
Wikipedia - Landscape with Grotto -- Painting by Joos de Momper
Wikipedia - Landscape with Pollard Willows -- Painting by Vincent van Gogh
Wikipedia - Landscape with Sea and Mountains -- Painting by Joos de Momper
Wikipedia - Landscape with Skaters -- Painting by Joos de Momper
Wikipedia - Landscape with Sky -- Painting by Henri-Edmond Cross (Henri-Edmond Delacroix)
Wikipedia - Landscape with Snow -- Painting by Vincent van Gogh
Wikipedia - Landscape with St Paula of Rome Embarking at Ostia -- 1639-1640 painting by Claude Lorrain
Wikipedia - Landscape with the Burial of St Serapia -- 1639-1640 painting by Claude Lorrain
Wikipedia - Landscape with the Fall of Icarus (de Momper) -- Painting by Joos de Momper
Wikipedia - Landscape with the Flight into Egypt (Bruegel) -- Painting by Pieter Bruegel the Elder
Wikipedia - Landscape with the Flight into Egypt (Carracci) -- Painting by Annibale Carracci
Wikipedia - Landscape with the Flight into Egypt (Patinir) -- Painting by Joachim Patinir
Wikipedia - Landscape with the Temptation of Christ -- Painting by Joos de Momper
Wikipedia - Landscape with the Temptation of St Anthony (Savery) -- Painting by Roelandt Savery
Wikipedia - Landscape with Three Figures -- Painting by Nicolas Poussin
Wikipedia - Landscape with Tobias and Raphael -- 1639-40 painting by Claude Lorrain
Wikipedia - Landscape with Tobias and the Angel (Rosa) -- Painting by Salvator Rosa
Wikipedia - Landscape with Trees -- Painting by Vincent van Gogh
Wikipedia - Landscape with Venus and Adonis -- Painting by Paul Bril
Wikipedia - Lane in Autumn -- Painting by Vincent van Gogh
Wikipedia - Languages of Spain -- Overview about the languages spoken in Spain
Wikipedia - Lanuza, Spain -- Populated location in Aragon, Spain
Wikipedia - Lanzarote Independents Party -- Political party in Spain
Wikipedia - Lanzarote -- Island of the Canary Islands, Spain
Wikipedia - La Paix du mM-CM-)nage -- Short story by HonorM-CM-) de Balzac
Wikipedia - La parisienne japonaise -- Painting by Alfred Stevens
Wikipedia - La Pinareja -- Mountain in Spain
Wikipedia - L'Apparition -- 1876 painting by Gustave Moreau
Wikipedia - La Rambla, Barcelona -- Thoroughfare in Barcelona, Spain
Wikipedia - La Raya -- Village in Spain
Wikipedia - Large Mountain Landscape -- Painting by Joos de Momper
Wikipedia - La Rioja (Spain)
Wikipedia - La Rioja -- Autonomous community and province of Spain
Wikipedia - Larisa Selezneva -- Russian pair skater
Wikipedia - Larry Poons -- American abstract painter
Wikipedia - Lars Jorde -- Norwegian painter and illustrator
Wikipedia - Las Abiertas -- Hamlet in Spain
Wikipedia - La Sagrera-Meridiana station -- Metro and commuter rail interchange complex in Barcelona, Spain
Wikipedia - Las Cabezas de San Juan -- Municipality in Andalusia, Spain
Wikipedia - Las Caldas cave -- Cave and archaeological site in Spain
Wikipedia - La Scapigliata -- Painting by Leonardo Da Vinci
Wikipedia - Lascaux -- Cave in southwestern France famous for its Paleolithic cave paintings
Wikipedia - La Schiavona -- Painting by Titian
Wikipedia - Las Meninas -- 1656 painting by Diego Velazquez
Wikipedia - Lastigi -- Ancient Tartessian city in southern Spain
Wikipedia - Last Pair Out -- 1956 film
Wikipedia - Last use of capital punishment in Spain -- Executions carried out in 1975 in Spain
Wikipedia - Las Ventas -- Bullring in Madrid, Spain
Wikipedia - Laszlo Mindszenti -- Hungarian painter
Wikipedia - Laszlo Moholy-Nagy -- Hungarian painter and photographer
Wikipedia - Laszlo Nagy (figure skater) -- Hungarian pair skater
Wikipedia - La Tabacalera de LavapiM-CM-)s -- Cultural and social center in Madrid, Spain
Wikipedia - Lateral sacrococcygeal ligament -- Pair of ligaments in the human torso
Wikipedia - Latif Fayzullayev -- Soviet Azerbaijani painter (b. 1918, d. 1987)
Wikipedia - La Tirana (Goya, 1792) -- C. 1790 painting by Francisco de Goya
Wikipedia - La Tirana (Goya, 1794) -- 1794 painting by Francisco de Goya
Wikipedia - La Toilette (Bazille) -- Painting by FrM-CM-)dM-CM-)ric Bazille
Wikipedia - La Torre -- municipality in Castile and Leon, Spain
Wikipedia - LaToya M. Hobbs -- American painter and printmaker
Wikipedia - Lattanzio Mainardi -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Laugh??? I Nearly Paid My Licence Fee -- British television show
Wikipedia - Laura Barquero -- Spanish pair skater
Wikipedia - Laura Bernasconi -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Laura Handy -- American pair skater
Wikipedia - Laura Lee (sex worker) -- Irish sex worker and campaigner for the rights of sex workers
Wikipedia - Laura M-EM- vilpaitM-DM-^W -- Lithuanian artistic gymnast
Wikipedia - Laura Slobe -- American painter
Wikipedia - Laureano Garcia-Concheso -- Cuban painter and sculptor
Wikipedia - Laureano Ibarra -- American pair skater
Wikipedia - Laureys a Castro -- Belgian painter
Wikipedia - Laurie Hickox -- American pair skater
Wikipedia - LavapiM-CM-)s -- Neighborhood in Madrid, Spain
Wikipedia - LaVerne Nelson Black -- American painter
Wikipedia - La Vie (painting) -- Painting by Pablo Picasso
Wikipedia - La Viga's walk -- Painting by Pedro Villegas
Wikipedia - Law and Gospel (Cranach) -- paintings by Lucas Cranach the Elder
Wikipedia - Law enforcement in Spain -- Overview of law enforcement in Spain
Wikipedia - Law of Spain -- Legislation in force in the Kingdom of Spain
Wikipedia - Lawrence Beall Smith -- 20th-century American painter
Wikipedia - Lawrence Calcagno -- American painter
Wikipedia - Lawrence Daws -- Australian painter and printmaker
Wikipedia - Lawson Wood -- English painter, illustrator, and joke cartoonist
Wikipedia - Laxman Aelay -- Indian painter
Wikipedia - Laxman Pai
Wikipedia - Laying Down the Law -- 1840 painting by Edwin Henry Landseer
Wikipedia - Lazara Altarpiece -- C. 1450 painting by Francesco Squarcione
Wikipedia - Lazare Bruandet -- French landscape painter
Wikipedia - Lazzaro Baldi -- Italian painter and engraver
Wikipedia - Lazzaro Pisani -- Maltese painter
Wikipedia - Lead-based paint in the United States -- Manufacture of banned in 1978 though widely used because of its durability.
Wikipedia - Leagros Group -- Ancient Greek vase painting studio
Wikipedia - Leal Mack -- American painter
Wikipedia - Leaning Tower of Zaragoza -- Former tower in Zaragoza, Spain
Wikipedia - Least squares inference in phylogeny -- Generation of phylogenetic trees based on an observed matrix of pairwise genetic distances
Wikipedia - Leave.EU -- Political campaign group supporting the UK's withdrawal from the European Union
Wikipedia - Lebanese Council for Development and Reconstruction -- Lebanese governmental organisation involved in repairing infrastructure damaged by war
Wikipedia - Le Bateau -- Painting by Henri Matisse
Wikipedia - Lebrija -- Place in Andalusia, Spain
Wikipedia - Leche frita -- Traditional Spanish dessert, Spanish sweet typical of northern Spain
Wikipedia - Lech Rzewuski -- Polish painter
Wikipedia - Le cool -- Publishing company based in Barcelona, Spain
Wikipedia - Le Crime ne paie pas -- 1962 film
Wikipedia - Leda Atomica -- 1949 painting by Salvador Dali
Wikipedia - Led By Donkeys -- British anti-Brexit political campaign group
Wikipedia - Le DM-CM-)jeuner sur l'herbe (Monet, Moscow) -- C. 1867 painting by Claude Monet
Wikipedia - Le DM-CM-)jeuner sur l'herbe (Monet, Paris) -- Painting by Claude Monet
Wikipedia - Le DM-CM-)sespM-CM-)rM-CM-) -- Painting by Gustave Courbet
Wikipedia - Lee Allen (artist) -- American painter, muralist, and medical illustrator
Wikipedia - Lee Krasner -- American abstract expressionist painter (1908-1984)
Wikipedia - Lee Su-chang -- South Korean painter
Wikipedia - Leidy Churchman -- American painter
Wikipedia - Leigh Behnke -- American painter, born 1946
Wikipedia - Lelia Maria Smith Cocke -- American painter
Wikipedia - Le Lit (Toulouse-Lautrec) -- Painting by Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec
Wikipedia - Lemuel Francis Abbott -- Eighteenth-century painter
Wikipedia - Len Clark (countryside campaigner) -- English civil servant
Wikipedia - Len Gridley Everett -- American painter
Wikipedia - Lenia Ruvalcaba -- Visually impaired judoka from Mexico
Wikipedia - Lenigret Mallwitz -- German painter
Wikipedia - Lenny Faustino -- Canadian pair skater
Wikipedia - Len, Spain
Wikipedia - Leo Ayotte -- Canadian painter
Wikipedia - Leo Longanesi -- Italian author, painter, film director, screenwriter (1905-1957)
Wikipedia - Leonaert Bramer -- 17th century Dutch artist known primarily for genre, religious, and history paintings
Wikipedia - Leon Alaric Shafer -- American painter, etcher and illustrator
Wikipedia - Leonard Long -- Australian painter
Wikipedia - Leonardo Borgese -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Leonardo Scaletti -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Leonard Rosoman -- British painter
Wikipedia - Leonard Walker -- British painter
Wikipedia - Leon Aurdal -- Norwegian painter
Wikipedia - Leon DolM-EM- -- Polish painter
Wikipedia - Leonid Efros -- Russian oil painter and enamellist
Wikipedia - Leonid M-EM- ejka -- Serbian painter and architect
Wikipedia - Leonid Solomatkin -- Russian painter
Wikipedia - LeoniM-DM-^E Nadelman -- Polish painter
Wikipedia - Leonor, Princess of Asturias -- Princess of Spain
Wikipedia - Leopold Buczkowski -- Polish writer, poet, painter, graphic artist and sculptor
Wikipedia - Leo von Konig -- German painter
Wikipedia - Leo Whelan -- Irish painter
Wikipedia - Leri Kenchadze -- Bulgarian pair skater
Wikipedia - Le RM-CM-*ve (Picasso) -- 1932 oil painting by Pablo Picasso
Wikipedia - Les Copains du dimanche -- 1958 film
Wikipedia - Les Demoiselles d'Avignon -- Painting by Pablo Picasso
Wikipedia - Le Sentier des Douanes -- Painting by Paul Signac
Wikipedia - Les Femmes d'Alger -- Painting series by Pablo Picasso
Wikipedia - Lesley Fennell -- Irish portrait painter
Wikipedia - Leslie Barlow -- American painter
Wikipedia - Leslie Monod -- Swiss pair skater
Wikipedia - Les Noces de Pierrette -- Painting by Pablo Picasso
Wikipedia - Les VM-CM-)lins du Roi -- Compendium of 6984 plant and animal paintings started in 1631
Wikipedia - Let's Move! -- Public health campaign in the United States
Wikipedia - Let's trim our hair in accordance with the socialist lifestyle -- North Korean government propaganda campaign
Wikipedia - Let Toys Be Toys -- Advocacy campaign
Wikipedia - Let Trump Be Trump -- 2017 memoir about the 2016 Trump presidential campaign
Wikipedia - Levante, Spain
Wikipedia - Levan Tsutskiridze -- Georgian painter
Wikipedia - Levina Teerlinc -- Flemish painter (1510-1576)
Wikipedia - Lewis acids and bases -- Chemical bond theory involving the transfer of an electronic pair from the donor (the base) to the acceptor (the acid)
Wikipedia - Lewis Daniel -- American painter
Wikipedia - Lewis structure -- Diagrams for the bonding between atoms of a molecule and lone pairs of electrons
Wikipedia - LGBT rights in Spain -- Rights of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people in Spain
Wikipedia - Liam Stevenson -- Scottish political activist and founder of TIE campaign group
Wikipedia - Liang Xueqing -- Chinese painter
Wikipedia - Liberal Democratic Party (Spain, 1913) -- Liberal political party in Restoration Spain
Wikipedia - Liberal Democratic Party (Spain, 1982) -- Defunct liberal party in Spain
Wikipedia - Liberalism and radicalism in Spain
Wikipedia - Liberal Progressive Party (Spain) -- Defunct political party in Spain
Wikipedia - Liberation of Peter (Murillo) -- Painting by BartolomM-CM-) Esteban Murillo
Wikipedia - Libertadores -- Principal leaders of the Latin American wars of independence from Spain and Portugal
Wikipedia - Libertarian Party (Spain) -- Spanish political party
Wikipedia - Liborio Coccetti -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Librado Net -- Puerto Rican educator, painter and musician
Wikipedia - Liceu bombing -- 1893 bombing in Spain
Wikipedia - Liceu -- Opera house in Barcelona, Spain
Wikipedia - Lidija Auza -- Latvian painter
Wikipedia - Liesl Ellend -- Austrian pair skater
Wikipedia - Lieven van Lathem -- 15th century Netherlandish painter and manuscript illuminator
Wikipedia - Life. Be in it. -- Australian government fitness campaign
Wikipedia - Life in the Countryside -- Painting by Joos de Momper
Wikipedia - Life of Christ (Giotto) -- series of seven paintings by Giotto
Wikipedia - Life of Washington -- Murals painted by Victor Arnautoff
Wikipedia - Lifestyle drug -- Medication which treats non-life-threatening and non-painful conditions
Wikipedia - Ligeia Siren -- Painting by Dante Gabriel Rossetti
Wikipedia - Li Hua (artist, born 1980) -- Chinese painter
Wikipedia - Liis Koger -- Estonian painter and poet
Wikipedia - Likbez -- Soviet campaign to eradicate illiteracy
Wikipedia - Lilac Bush -- 1889 painting by Vincent van Gogh
Wikipedia - Lilian Westcott Hale -- American impressionist painter
Wikipedia - Lilija Dinere -- Latvian painter
Wikipedia - Lilija Eugenija JasiM-EM-+naitM-DM-^W -- Lithuanian painter
Wikipedia - Lilla Hellesen -- Norwegian painter
Wikipedia - Lilla Vanston -- Irish sculptor and portrait painter
Wikipedia - Lily Anderson (campaigner) -- Irish social and peace campaigner, and communist
Wikipedia - Lily Atkinson -- New Zealand temperance campaigner, suffragist and feminist
Wikipedia - Lily Osman Adams -- Canadian painter
Wikipedia - Limb (anatomy) -- Moved by muscles paired appendages, which consist of different members
Wikipedia - LiM-CM-)bana (wine) -- Wine region in Spain
Wikipedia - LiM-CM-)dena -- Human settlement in Spain
Wikipedia - Li Meiyi -- Chinese pair skater
Wikipedia - Lina Bryans -- Australian modernist painter
Wikipedia - Lina Fedorova -- Russian pair skater
Wikipedia - Lina Kudriavtseva -- Russian pair skater
Wikipedia - Lincoln in Dalivision -- Painting by Salvador Dali
Wikipedia - Linda Tracey Brandon -- American representational painter
Wikipedia - Linea P -- Line of fortifications along the French/Spanish border in the Pyrenees built by Francoist Spain between 1944 and 1948 to prevent an invasion of the Spanish territory.
Wikipedia - Line spectral pairs -- Linear prediction coefficients
Wikipedia - Lint voor Verwonding -- South African military campaign award
Wikipedia - Lin Wenzheng -- Chinese painter
Wikipedia - Lin Xue -- Ming dynasty 17th-century Chinese woman painter
Wikipedia - Lion Devouring a Rabbit -- C. 1855 painting by Eugene Delacroix
Wikipedia - Lionello Balestrieri -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Lippy Lipshitz -- South African sculptor and painter
Wikipedia - Lipstick, Powder and Paint (song) -- 1956 single by Big Joe Turner
Wikipedia - Liquitex -- American acrylic paint manufacturer
Wikipedia - Lisa Adams -- American painter
Wikipedia - Lisa Alvarado -- American painter and harmonium player
Wikipedia - Lisa Bianchini -- Swedish painter
Wikipedia - Lisa Ekedahl -- Swedish lawyer and campaigner for women's suffrage
Wikipedia - Lisa Sigal -- American painter and sculptor (born 1962)
Wikipedia - Lisa Sotilis -- Greek-Italian sculptor, painter and jewelry maker
Wikipedia - Lisa Wenger -- Swiss painter and author
Wikipedia - Liselotte Schramm-Heckmann -- German painter
Wikipedia - Li Shida -- Chinese painter
Wikipedia - Lissajous curve -- Mathematical curve outputted from a specific pair of parametric equations
Wikipedia - List of 2007 box office number-one films in Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of 2008 box office number-one films in Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of 2009 box office number-one films in Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of 2010 box office number-one films in Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of 2011 box office number-one films in Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of 2012 box office number-one films in Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of 2013 box office number-one films in Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of 2014 box office number-one films in Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of 2015 box office number-one films in Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of 2016 box office number-one films in Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of 2017 box office number-one films in Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of 2018 box office number-one films in Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of 2019 box office number-one films in Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of 2020 box office number-one films in Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of 20th-century Russian painters -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of AcadM-CM-)mie des Beaux-Arts members: Painting -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of airlines of Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of airports in Spain -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Allied forces in the Normandy campaign -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of American painters exhibited at the 1893 World's Columbian Exposition -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of archives in Spain
Wikipedia - List of Armenian painters -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of artists who created paintings and drawings for use in films -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of banks in Spain -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Barack Obama 2008 presidential campaign staff members -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of barons in the peerage of Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of battleships of Spain -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of beaches in Spain -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Bernie Sanders 2020 presidential campaign endorsements
Wikipedia - List of birds of Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Black Lives Matter street murals -- list of street murals painted in response to the killing of George Floyd
Wikipedia - List of Blancpain GT World Challenge America circuits -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of bridges in Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of campaign settings -- List article
Wikipedia - List of campaigns of Suleiman the Magnificent -- list of the campaigns carried out by the Ottoman sultan Suleiman I
Wikipedia - List of Canadian painters -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of causes of genital pain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of caves in Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of centenarians (artists, painters and sculptors) -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of chancellors of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Chinese painters
Wikipedia - List of city nicknames in Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of closed pairs of English rhyming words -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of companies of Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of computer magazines in Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of congressional candidates who received campaign money from the National Rifle Association -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Constitutions of Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of cruisers of Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of cultural icons of Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of cycling teams in Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of defunct airlines of Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Democrats who opposed the Hillary Clinton 2016 presidential campaign -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Deputy Prime Ministers of Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Directors General of the Civil Guard (Spain) -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Dirty Pair episodes -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Donald Trump 2016 presidential campaign endorsements -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Donald Trump 2016 presidential campaign primary endorsements -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of earthquakes in Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of ecoregions in Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of exports of Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of extreme temperatures in Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of flag bearers for Spain at the Olympics -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Foreign Ministers of Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of former mosques in Spain -- Spanish mosque
Wikipedia - List of fossiliferous stratigraphic units in Spain -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of futsal clubs in Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of galleons of Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of German painters -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of governors in the Viceroyalty of New Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Growing Pains episodes -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of handball clubs in Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Harper's Bazaar Spain cover models -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of heads of state of Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of highest paid baseball players
Wikipedia - List of highest paid film actors -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of highest paid Indian Bengali actors -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Hillary Clinton 2008 presidential campaign endorsements -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Hillary Clinton 2016 presidential campaign non-political endorsements -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Hillary Clinton 2016 presidential campaign political endorsements -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of honours of Spain awarded to heads of state and royalty -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of hospitals in Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of hotels in Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Howie Hawkins 2020 presidential campaign endorsements -- Political campaign
Wikipedia - List of ice hockey teams in Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of incidents of violence against women in Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of indoor arenas in Spain -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of international cricket centuries at the Paikiasothy Saravanamuttu Stadium -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of international cricket five-wicket hauls at Paikiasothy Saravanamuttu Stadium -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Italian painters
Wikipedia - List of Joe Biden 2020 presidential campaign celebrity endorsements -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Joe Biden 2020 presidential campaign endorsements from organizations -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Joe Biden 2020 presidential campaign endorsements -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Joe Biden 2020 presidential campaign state and territorial legislative endorsements -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of John Kasich 2016 presidential campaign endorsements -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of John McCain 2008 presidential campaign staff members -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Kamala Harris 2020 presidential campaign endorsements -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Lebanese people in Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of libraries in Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lines of miniatures -- Miniatures for role-playing games or figure painting
Wikipedia - List of lords in the peerage of Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of magazines in Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of mammals of Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of massacres in Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Medal of Honor recipients for the Gettysburg Campaign -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of metropolitan areas in Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Michael Bloomberg 2020 presidential campaign endorsements -- List of endorsements for Michael Bloomberg's 2020 presidential campaign.
Wikipedia - List of Ministers of Defence (Spain) -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Ministers of Economy and the Treasury of Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of missing landmarks in Spain -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of most expensive paintings -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of municipalities of Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of mythological pairs -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of national roads in Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of National Treasures of Japan (paintings) -- National painting treasures of Japan
Wikipedia - List of neighborhoods of Madrid -- Madrid, Spain, is divided into 21 districts, which are further subdivided into 131 barrios
Wikipedia - List of non-marine molluscs of Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of number-one albums of 1991 (Spain) -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of number-one singles of 1991 (Spain) -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Olympic female gymnasts for Spain -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Pacific War campaigns -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of painters and architects of Venice -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of painters by name beginning with "A" -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of painters by name beginning with "B" -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of painters by name beginning with "C" -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of painters by name beginning with "D" -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of painters by name beginning with "E" -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of painters by name beginning with "F" -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of painters by name beginning with "G" -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of painters by name beginning with "H" -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of painters by name beginning with "I" -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of painters by name beginning with "J" -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of painters by name beginning with "K" -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of painters by name beginning with "L" -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of painters by name beginning with "M" -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of painters by name beginning with "N" -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of painters by name beginning with "O" -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of painters by name beginning with "P" -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of painters by name beginning with "Q" -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of painters by name beginning with "R" -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of painters by name beginning with "S" -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of painters by name beginning with "T" -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of painters by name beginning with "U" -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of painters by name beginning with "V" -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of painters by name beginning with "W" -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of painters by name beginning with "X" -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of painters by name beginning with "Y" -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of painters by name beginning with "Z" -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of painters by name -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of painters from Georgia (country) -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of painters from Kazakhstan -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of painters from Sweden
Wikipedia - List of painters
Wikipedia - List of paintings by Bernardo Strozzi -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of paintings by Camille Pissarro -- List of paintings by Camille Pissarro
Wikipedia - List of paintings by Caravaggio -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of paintings by Claude Monet -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of paintings by Eugene Boudin -- List of paintings by Eugene Boudin
Wikipedia - List of paintings by Gustave Caillebotte -- List of paintings by Gustave Caillebotte
Wikipedia - List of paintings by Hans Gude -- List of artwork by Hans Fredrik Gude
Wikipedia - List of paintings by James Ensor -- List of paintings by James Ensor
Wikipedia - List of paintings by Paul Gauguin -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of paintings by Thomas Cole -- List article of works by painter Thomas Cole
Wikipedia - List of paintings on Soviet postage stamps -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of paintings
Wikipedia - List of Pair of Kings episodes -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of people associated with the campaign for Scottish devolution -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of people executed by Francoist Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of people on the postage stamps of Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Philippine presidential campaign slogans -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of political parties campaigning for self-government -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of political parties in Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of ports in Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of postal codes in Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of power stations in Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of presidents of the Congress of Deputies of Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Presidents of the Senate of Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of presidents of the Supreme Court of Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of prime ministers of Spain by length of tenure -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of prime ministers of Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of radio stations in Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of rail accidents in Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of rallies for the 2016 Donald Trump presidential campaign -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of registered political parties in Spain (1976-84) -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of registered political parties in Spain (1985-93) -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of registered political parties in Spain by geographic location -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of registered political parties in Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of reptiles of Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Republicans who opposed the Donald Trump 2016 presidential campaign -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Republicans who opposed the Donald Trump 2020 presidential campaign -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of rivers of Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Roman sites in Spain
Wikipedia - List of Royal Pains characters -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Royal Pains episodes -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Serbian painters -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of ships of the line of Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of sibling pairs -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Slovenian painters
Wikipedia - List of Spain Davis Cup team representatives -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Spain Fed Cup team representatives -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Spain Twenty20 International cricketers -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Spanish painters -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of stadiums in Spain -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of strikes in Spain -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of supermarket chains in Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of tallest buildings in Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of television stations in Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of theaters and campaigns of World War II -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of theatres and concert halls in Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of the busiest airports in Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of titles and honours of Felipe VI of Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of titles and honours of Juan Carlos I of Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of titles and honours of Queen Letizia of Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of titles and honours of Queen Sofia of Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of town tramway systems in Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of trolleybus systems in Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of tunnels in Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of twin towns and sister cities in Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of universities in Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign people -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of U.S. presidential campaign slogans -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of viceroys of New Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of video games developed in Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of viscounts in the peerage of Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of volcanoes in Spain -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of volleyball clubs in Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of wars involving Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of World Heritage Sites in Spain
Wikipedia - List of World War II aces from Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - Lists of pairs -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - Lists of rulers of Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - Lithuanian Crusade -- 13th-15th century military campaigns
Wikipedia - Little Girl Observing Lovers on a Train -- Painting by Norman Rockwell
Wikipedia - Little Lange -- C. 1861 painting by Edouard Manet
Wikipedia - Liu Anpai -- Chinese judoka
Wikipedia - Liuboslav Hutsaliuk -- Ukrainian-American painter, graphic artist and cartoonist
Wikipedia - Liu Shouxiang -- Chinese watercolor painter
Wikipedia - Liu Youju -- Art critic and painter (b. 1955)
Wikipedia - Liverpool Telescope -- Telescope at Garafia, La Palma, the Canary Islands, Spain
Wikipedia - Lives of the Most Excellent Painters, Sculptors, and Architects
Wikipedia - Living Still Life -- Painting by Salvador Dali
Wikipedia - Livinus van de Bundt -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Li Yin -- Qing dynasty 17th-century Chinese woman painter
Wikipedia - Liz Carr -- British actor, comedian and disability rights campaigner
Wikipedia - Lizzy Ansingh -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Lladorre -- Municipality in Catalonia, Spain
Wikipedia - Llamachayuq Qaqa -- Archaeological site with rock paintings in Peru
Wikipedia - Llobregat -- Second longest river in Catalonia, Spain
Wikipedia - LM-CM-)o Gausson -- French painter
Wikipedia - LM-CM-)on Abry -- Belgian painter
Wikipedia - LM-CM-)on Auguste Derruau -- French painter
Wikipedia - LM-CM-)on Cogniet -- French painter (1794-1880)
Wikipedia - LM-CM-)on Matthieu Cochereau -- French painter
Wikipedia - LM-CM-)on Printemps -- French painter
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Wikipedia - Madonna and Child (Gentile da Fabriano, Ferrara) -- Painting by Gentile da Fabriano
Wikipedia - Madonna and Child (Gentile da Fabriano, Settignano) -- c. 1425 painting by Gentile da Fabriano
Wikipedia - Madonna and Child (Gentile da Fabriano, Washington) -- C. 1420 painting by Gentile da Fabriano
Wikipedia - Madonna and Child (Gentile da Fabriano, Yale) -- Painting by Gentile da Fabriano
Wikipedia - Madonna and Child in Glory over the City of Bologna -- Painting by Annibale Carracci
Wikipedia - Madonna and Child (Lippi) -- Painting by Filippo Lippi
Wikipedia - Madonna and Child (Signorelli) -- C. 1492 painting by Luca Signorelli
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Wikipedia - Madonna and Child with Cherubs -- Painting by Rosso Fiorentino
Wikipedia - Madonna and Child with Eight Saints -- Painting by Bramantino
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Wikipedia - Madonna and Child with Four Saints -- Painting in the Pinacoteca di Brera
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Wikipedia - Madonna and Child with Saint Jerome and Saint Dorothy -- 1516 painting by Titian
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Wikipedia - Madonna and Child with Saint Roch and Saint Sebastian (Lotto) -- c. 1518 painting by Lorenzo Lotto
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Wikipedia - Madonna and Child with Saints (Annibale Carracci, 1588) -- Painting by Annibale Carracci
Wikipedia - Madonna and Child with Saints Julian and Lawrence -- Painting by Gentile da Fabriano
Wikipedia - Madonna and Child with Saints (Lotto) -- 1505 painting by Lorenzo Lotto
Wikipedia - Madonna and Child with Saints (Marracci) -- C. 1665 painting by Giovanni Marracci
Wikipedia - Madonna and Child with Saints (Moretto) -- 1540 painting by Moretto da Brescia
Wikipedia - Madonna and Child with Saints Polyptych (Duccio) -- Painting by Duccio di Buoninsegna
Wikipedia - Madonna and Child with St Anthony of Padua and St Roch -- Painting by Titian
Wikipedia - Madonna and Child with St. John the Baptist and a Female Saint -- Painting by Giovanni Bellini
Wikipedia - Madonna and Child with St John the Baptist and St Catherine of Alexandria (Perugino) -- Painting by Pietro Perugino
Wikipedia - Madonna and Child with the Holy Trinity and Two Saints -- 1510 painting by Luca Signorelli
Wikipedia - Madonna and Child with the Infant St. John the Baptist (Bellini, Indianapolis) -- Painting by Giovanni Bellini
Wikipedia - Madonna and Child with Two Donors (Lotto) -- 1533-1535 painting by Lorenzo Lotto
Wikipedia - Madonna and Child with Two Saints and a Donor -- Painting by Gentile da Fabriano
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Wikipedia - Madonna and Child with Two Saints (Gentile da Fabriano) -- c. 1395 painting by Gentile da Fabriano
Wikipedia - Madonna and Child with Two Saints (Signorelli) -- c. 1492 painting by Luca Signorelli
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Wikipedia - Mario Bencastro -- Salvadoran novelist and painter
Wikipedia - Mario Chianese -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Mario Comensoli -- Swiss painter
Wikipedia - Mario Cortiello -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Mario Gachet -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Mario Gamero -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Marion Campbell Hawthorne -- American painter
Wikipedia - Marion Wagschal -- Canadian painter
Wikipedia - Mario Paint -- 1992 art tool video game published by Nintendo
Wikipedia - Mario Puccini -- Italian painter
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Wikipedia - Marius Bunescu -- Romanian painter
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Wikipedia - Marja Casparsson -- Swedish painter
Wikipedia - Marja ObrM-DM-^Ybska -- Polish painter
Wikipedia - Marjorie Bloch -- Irish painter
Wikipedia - Mark Bardei -- Ukrainian pair skater
Wikipedia - Mark Bryan (artist) -- American painter
Wikipedia - Mark English (illustrator) -- American illustrator and painter
Wikipedia - Marketing for Deadpool (film) -- Marketing campaign for the 2016 film
Wikipedia - Marketing of Halo 3 -- Marketing campaign for the video game
Wikipedia - Market Place Shopping Center -- Mall in Champaign, Illinois, US
Wikipedia - Mark Fernandez -- Canadian former pair skater
Wikipedia - Markham, Ramu and Finisterre campaigns -- World War II military campaign
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Wikipedia - Mark Rowsom -- Canadian former pair skater
Wikipedia - Mark Tochilkin -- Ukrainian painter and sculptor
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Wikipedia - Markus Zurcher -- Swiss painter
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Wikipedia - Marlon Forrester -- American artist, painter, and educator
Wikipedia - Marquess of Priego -- Hereditary noble title of the Kingdom of Spain
Wikipedia - Marquess of San Damian -- Hereditary title in the Peerage of Spain, granted in 1606
Wikipedia - Marquis de Lafayette (Morse) -- painting by Samuel Morse
Wikipedia - Marriage A-la-Mode: 1. The Marriage Settlement -- Painting by William Hogarth
Wikipedia - Marriage A-la-Mode: 2. The TM-CM-*te a TM-CM-*te -- Painting by William Hogarth
Wikipedia - Marriage A-la-Mode: 3. The Inspection -- Painting by William Hogarth
Wikipedia - Marriage A-la-Mode: 4. The Toilette -- Painting by William Hogarth
Wikipedia - Marriage A-la-Mode: 5. The Bagnio -- Painting by William Hogarth
Wikipedia - Marriage A-la-Mode: 6. The Lady's Death -- Painting by William Hogarth
Wikipedia - Marriage A-la-Mode (Hogarth) -- Series of six paintings by William Hogarth
Wikipedia - Marriage Contract and Country Dancing -- C.1711 painting by Antoine Watteau
Wikipedia - Marriage of the Virgin (Campin) -- C. 1425 painting by Robert Campin
Wikipedia - Marriage of the Virgin (Perugino) -- Painting by Perugino
Wikipedia - Mars and Venus Surprised by Vulcan -- Painting by Tintoretto
Wikipedia - Mars and Venus with Cupid and a Dog -- Painting by Paolo Veronese
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Wikipedia - Martha and Mary Magdalene (Caravaggio) -- Painting by Caravaggio
Wikipedia - Martha Burkhardt -- Swiss painter and photographer
Wikipedia - Martha Diamond -- American artist and painter
Wikipedia - Marthe WM-CM-)ry -- Belgian painter
Wikipedia - Martin Barooshian -- American painter and printmaker
Wikipedia - Martin Beck (painter) -- American painter
Wikipedia - Martin BidaM-EM-^Y -- Czech pair skater
Wikipedia - Martin Bradley (painter) -- British painter
Wikipedia - Martin de Soria -- Spanish Gothic painter
Wikipedia - Martin Disteli -- Swiss painter
Wikipedia - Martine Postma -- Promoter of the Repair CafM-CM-) concept
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Wikipedia - Martin Maingaud -- French painter
Wikipedia - Martin Monnickendam -- Dutch painter and draftsman
Wikipedia - Martin Snape -- English painter
Wikipedia - Martyrdom of Saint Sebastian (Signorelli) -- 1498 painting by Luca Signorelli
Wikipedia - Mary Audsley -- British painter and sculptor
Wikipedia - Mary Baylis Barnard -- English painter
Wikipedia - Mary Beale -- Painter from England
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Wikipedia - Mary DeNeale Morgan -- American painter
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Wikipedia - Mary Lizzie Macomber -- American painter
Wikipedia - Mary Magdalene (Perugino) -- Painting by Pietro Perugino
Wikipedia - Mary Magdalene (Stevens) -- Painting by Alfred Stevens
Wikipedia - Mary Magdalene with Eight Scenes from her Life -- Painting by the Master of the Magdalen
Wikipedia - Mary Rankin Swan -- Irish painter
Wikipedia - Mary Spencer Nay -- American painter and printmaker
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Wikipedia - Mary Swanzy -- Irish painter
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Wikipedia - Maspalomas Station -- Radio antenna ground station in Spain
Wikipedia - Massacre in Korea -- Painting by Pablo Picasso
Wikipedia - Massacre of the Innocents (Bruegel) -- Paintings by Pieter Bruegel the Elder and Pieter Brueghel the Younger
Wikipedia - Massacre of the Innocents (Matteo di Giovanni) -- Painting by Matteo di Giovanni
Wikipedia - Massacre of the Innocents (Moretto) -- Painting by Moretto da Brescia
Wikipedia - Massimo Stanzione -- 17th century Italian Baroque painter
Wikipedia - Master of Delft -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Master of M-CM-^Avila -- Spanish painter
Wikipedia - Master of Riglos -- Spanish Gothic painter
Wikipedia - Master of the AndrM-CM-) Virgin -- Southern-Netherlandish painter
Wikipedia - Master of the Cypresses -- Spanish painter and manuscript illuminator
Wikipedia - Master of the Maddalena -- Anonymous 13th c. Italian painter
Wikipedia - Master of the PM-CM-$hl Altarpiece -- Anonymous 14th/15th-century German painter
Wikipedia - Master of the Tiburtine Sibyl -- Early Netherlandish painter
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Wikipedia - Mataram conquest of Surabaya -- Military campaign in Java
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Wikipedia - Matija Skurjeni -- Croatian painter
Wikipedia - Mati Klarwein -- French painter
Wikipedia - Mato Celestin Medovic -- Croatian painter
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Wikipedia - Matteo Lovatti the younger -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Matte painting -- Painted representation of a location to create the illusion of an environment that is not present at the filming location
Wikipedia - Matterism -- Painting technique
Wikipedia - Mattheus Verheyden -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Matthew Bauer -- American painter, sculptor and musician
Wikipedia - Matthias Gerung -- German painter
Wikipedia - Matthias Grunewald -- German Renaissance painter (c.1470-1528)
Wikipedia - Matthias Schraudolph -- German painter
Wikipedia - Matthias Stom -- 17th century Dutch or Flemish painter
Wikipedia - Matthijs Balen -- Dutch painter
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Wikipedia - Maung Mu Paing Shin (1964 film) -- 1964 Burmese film
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Wikipedia - Maurice E. Brooks -- American sculptor and painter
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Wikipedia - Maurice MacGonigal -- Irish painter
Wikipedia - Maurice MM-CM-)nardeau -- French painter
Wikipedia - Maurice Paige -- South African actor
Wikipedia - Maurice Pellerier -- French painter
Wikipedia - Maurice's Balkan campaigns -- Military expeditions in the Balkans conducted by the Roman emperor Maurice (reigned 582-602) against the Avars and the Antae
Wikipedia - Mauritius Lowe -- British engraver and painter
Wikipedia - Maurizio Delvecchio -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Maurizio Diana -- Italian geologist, physicist and painter
Wikipedia - Mauro Aldrovandini -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Mauro Gandolfi -- Italian painter and engraver
Wikipedia - Mawalan Marika -- Australian Aboriginal painter, ca. 1908-1967
Wikipedia - Max Angus -- Australian painter
Wikipedia - Max Beckmann -- German painter, draftsman, printmaker, sculptor and writer
Wikipedia - Max Ferguson (painter) -- American artist
Wikipedia - Max Frey (Austrian painter) -- Austrian painter
Wikipedia - Max Frey -- German painter
Wikipedia - Maxime Deschamps -- Canadian pair skater
Wikipedia - Maximilian Pirner -- Czech painter
Wikipedia - Maximin Coia -- French former competitive pair skater
Wikipedia - Maxim Kurdyukov -- Russian pair skater
Wikipedia - Maxim Marinin -- Russian pair skater
Wikipedia - Maxim Miroshkin -- Russian pair skater
Wikipedia - Maxim Trankov -- Russian pair skater
Wikipedia - Max Jensen -- German painter
Wikipedia - Max Kaus -- German painter
Wikipedia - Max KM-CM-$mpf -- Swiss painter
Wikipedia - Max Kohler -- Swiss painter
Wikipedia - Max Langer -- German painter
Wikipedia - Max Leenhardt -- French painter
Wikipedia - Max Liebermann -- German painter
Wikipedia - Max Lohde -- German painter
Wikipedia - Max Meldrum -- Australian painter
Wikipedia - Max M-EM- vabinskM-CM-= -- Czech painter and artist
Wikipedia - Max Nauta -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Max Nonnenbruch -- 19th and 20th-century German painter
Wikipedia - Max Oertli -- Swiss painter
Wikipedia - Max Schmidt -- German landscape painter
Wikipedia - Max Settlage -- American pair skater
Wikipedia - Max Uhlig -- German painter
Wikipedia - Max Velthuijs -- Dutch painter, illustrator and writer
Wikipedia - Max Weber (artist) -- Jewish-American painter
Wikipedia - May AimM-CM-)e Smith -- English painter and engraver
Wikipedia - Mayordomo mayor -- High Steward of Spain
Wikipedia - Mayorga, Spain
Wikipedia - Maztica Campaign Set
Wikipedia - McGill Pain Questionnaire
Wikipedia - M-CM-^Alava -- Province of Spain
Wikipedia - M-CM-^Angel Acosta Leon -- Cuban painter
Wikipedia - M-CM-^Angel Zarraga -- Mexican painter
Wikipedia - M-CM-^Arpad Szenes -- Hungarian-Jewish abstract painter
Wikipedia - M-CM-^Asgeir BjarnM-CM->orsson -- Icelandic painter
Wikipedia - M-CM-^Fthelstan's invasion of Scotland -- 10th century military campaign
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Wikipedia - M-CM-^^orvaldur Skulason -- Icelandic painter
Wikipedia - M-CM-^S Pai, M-CM-^S -- 2007 film directed by Monique Gardenberg
Wikipedia - M-CM-^Sscar Dominguez -- Spanish painter
Wikipedia - M-CM-^Sscar QuiM-CM-1ones (artist) -- Peruvian painter and sculptor
Wikipedia - M-DM-^Pao SM-DM-) Chu -- Vietnamese painter
Wikipedia - M-DM-^Puro Seder -- Croatian painter
Wikipedia - Meagan Duhamel -- Canadian pair skater
Wikipedia - Meagre Company -- Painting of Amsterdam schutterij by Frans Hals
Wikipedia - Mean time to repair
Wikipedia - Meatless Monday -- International campaign that encourages people to not eat meat
Wikipedia - Medhi Bouzzine -- French former pair skater
Wikipedia - Medieval City on a River (Schinkel) -- Painting by Karl Friedrich Schinkel
Wikipedia - Medieval stained glass -- Coloured and painted glass of medieval Europe
Wikipedia - Mediterranean campaign of 1798 -- failed French military campaign led by Napoleon Bonaparte to support the Sultanate of Mysore against Britain
Wikipedia - Mediterranean Diet Foundation -- Dietary non-profit organization based in Barcelona, Spain
Wikipedia - Mediterranean diet -- Diet inspired by 1960s eating habits of Spain, Italy, and Greece
Wikipedia - Meer Akselrod -- Belarusian painter
Wikipedia - Meidias Painter -- Athenian pottery painter
Wikipedia - Meiffren Conte -- French painter
Wikipedia - Melancholy (Francesco Hayez) -- Painting by Francesco Hayez
Wikipedia - Melanopais gemmaria -- Genus of beetles
Wikipedia - Melbourne Society of Women Painters and Sculptors -- Australian visual art organisation
Wikipedia - Mel Casas -- American painter
Wikipedia - Melchior Hamers -- Flemish painter
Wikipedia - Melilla Airlines -- Defunct travel agency based in Melilla, Spain
Wikipedia - Melilla border fence -- Part of the Morocco-Spain border at Melilla
Wikipedia - Melissa Pais -- Indian actress
Wikipedia - Melvin Chee -- Singaporean designer, artist and painter
Wikipedia - Mel Zabarsky -- Jewish American painter (b. 1932)
Wikipedia - M-EM-^Aukasz RoM-EM- -- Polish pair skater
Wikipedia - Memory impairment
Wikipedia - Memory of the Garden at Etten (Ladies of Arles) -- Oil painting by Vincent van Gogh
Wikipedia - M-EM- piro Bocaric -- Serb painter killed in Jadovno concentration camp
Wikipedia - M-EM- tefan Bednar -- Slovak painter
Wikipedia - Menno van Meeteren Brouwer -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Menorquin -- Dialect of Catalan spoken in Menorca, Spain
Wikipedia - Mercado Central, Valencia -- Public market located in Valencia, Spain
Wikipedia - Mercury and Argus (Rubens) -- Painting by Peter Paul Rubens
Wikipedia - Mercury Passing Before the Sun -- series of paintings by Giacomo Balla
Wikipedia - Merion Estes -- American painter
Wikipedia - Merry Company (Van Honthorst) -- Painting by Gerard van Honthorst
Wikipedia - Merry-Joseph Blondel -- French painter (1781-1853)
Wikipedia - Mesopotamian campaign -- World War I military campaign
Wikipedia - Metal Gear Solid V: The Phantom Pain -- 2015 open world action-adventure stealth video game
Wikipedia - Metamorphosis of Narcissus -- 1937 painting by Salvador Dali
Wikipedia - Metopoceras albarracina -- Species of moth found in the Sierra de Albarracin, Aragon, Spain
Wikipedia - Metro Bilbao -- Rapid transit system in Bilbao, Spain
Wikipedia - Metropolis (painting) -- Triptych by Otto Dix
Wikipedia - Metrovalencia -- Rapid transit system in Valencia, Spain
Wikipedia - Metz 1944 Cuff Title -- German World War II campaign award
Wikipedia - Meuse-Argonne offensive -- Military campaign during World War I
Wikipedia - M F Pithawalla -- Indian painter
Wikipedia - Mia Araujo -- Argentine-American painter
Wikipedia - Miaopai
Wikipedia - Michael Adamson -- Canadian painter
Wikipedia - Michaela Eichwald -- German painter based in Berlin
Wikipedia - Michael Alford (artist) -- British figurative painter
Wikipedia - Michael Ancher -- Danish painter
Wikipedia - Michael Andrews (artist) -- British painter
Wikipedia - Michael Angelo Immenraet -- Flemish painter
Wikipedia - Michael Bastow -- British painter
Wikipedia - Michael Baxte -- American painter
Wikipedia - Michael Bloomberg 2020 presidential campaign -- Presidential campaign by Michael Bloomberg for the 2020 nomination
Wikipedia - Michael Butterworth (author) -- British author, publisher and campaigner
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Wikipedia - Michael Ignaz Mildorfer -- Austrian painter
Wikipedia - Michaelina Wautier -- 17th-century painter from the Southern Netherlands
Wikipedia - Michael Marinaro -- Canadian pair skater
Wikipedia - Michael Mazur -- American painter
Wikipedia - Michael Nemec -- Austrian pair skater
Wikipedia - Michael Pacher -- Austrian painter and sculptor
Wikipedia - Michael Randle -- English peace campaigner
Wikipedia - Michael Ray Charles -- African-American painter
Wikipedia - Michael Rowntree -- British journalist and social campaigner
Wikipedia - Michael Sittow -- Estonian painter
Wikipedia - Michael Smither -- New Zealand painter and composer (1939- )
Wikipedia - Michael Triegel -- German painter
Wikipedia - Michael Wolgemut -- 15th to 16th-century German painter and printmaker
Wikipedia - Michal Borucinski -- Polish painter
Wikipedia - Michal Bylina -- Polish painter
Wikipedia - Michela Cobisi -- Italian retired pair skater
Wikipedia - Michelangelo Anselmi -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Michelangelo Fumagalli -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Michelangelo -- Italian sculptor, painter, architect (1475-1564)
Wikipedia - Michel Delacroix (painter) -- French painter in the "naif" style
Wikipedia - Michele Cammarano -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Michele Cascella -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Michele Cassou -- American painter, teacher and author
Wikipedia - Michele de Napoli -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Michele Foschini -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Michele Lenzi -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Michelle Beasley -- American painter
Wikipedia - Michelle Cronin -- Canadian pair skater
Wikipedia - Michelle Despain -- Argentine-American luge athlete
Wikipedia - Michelle Menzies -- Canadian former pair skater
Wikipedia - Michel Tsiba -- Dutch pair skater
Wikipedia - Michiel de Wael -- 17th-century Dutch brewer painted by Frans Hals
Wikipedia - Michiel II Coignet -- Belgian painter
Wikipedia - Microdeletion syndrome -- Chromosomal deletion smaller than 5 million base pairs (5 Mb) spanning several genes that is too small to be detected by conventional methods
Wikipedia - Microsoft Paint -- Raster graphics editor
Wikipedia - Migishi Setsuko -- Japanese YM-EM-^Mga painter
Wikipedia - Migration of the Serbs (painting) -- A set of four similar oil paintings by the Serbian artist Paja Jovanovic
Wikipedia - Migration Series -- Group of paintings by Jacob Lawrence
Wikipedia - Miguel Cabrera (painter) -- Mexican painter
Wikipedia - Miguel Danus -- Spanish painter
Wikipedia - Miguelitos -- Puff pastry dessert from Spain
Wikipedia - Miguel Pais Salomao -- 12th-century Portuguese bishop
Wikipedia - Miguel Posadas -- Spanish painter
Wikipedia - Miguel Pou -- Puerto Rican oil canvas painter
Wikipedia - Mihailo Milovanovic -- Serbian painter, sculptor and writer
Wikipedia - Mihaly Kovacs (painter) -- Hungarian painter
Wikipedia - Mihaly Munkacsy -- Hungarian painter (1844-1900)
Wikipedia - Mihr-Mihroe's campaign of 554 -- battle during the Lazic War
Wikipedia - Mikalai Kamianchuk -- Belarusian pair skater
Wikipedia - Mikayil Abdullayev -- Azerbaijani painter
Wikipedia - Mike Bernard (painter) -- English painter
Wikipedia - Mike Gravel 2008 presidential campaign -- American campaign for Democratic and Libertarian nominations
Wikipedia - Mike Gravel 2020 presidential campaign -- 2020 American presidential campaign
Wikipedia - Mikey Welsh -- American musician and painter
Wikipedia - Mikhail Nazarychev -- Russian pair skater
Wikipedia - Mikhail Peskov -- Russian painter
Wikipedia - Mikhail Romadin -- Russian painter and book illustrator
Wikipedia - Mikhail Savitsky -- Belarusian painter
Wikipedia - Mikhail Vladimirovich Kuznetsov -- Russian pair skater
Wikipedia - Milan Milovanovic (painter) -- Serbian painter
Wikipedia - Mila Robert -- Bulgarian singer, actress and painter
Wikipedia - Mild cognitive impairment
Wikipedia - Milena Pavlovic-Barili -- Serbian painter and poet
Wikipedia - Mil Espaine -- Mythical ancestor of the final inhabitants of Ireland
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Wikipedia - Military campaign
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Wikipedia - Milly Childers -- English painter (1866-1922)
Wikipedia - MiloM-EM-! Alexander BazovskM-CM-= -- Slovak painter
Wikipedia - MiloM-EM-! Jiranek -- Czech painter, translator and writer
Wikipedia - Miltiadis Papaioannou -- Greek politician
Wikipedia - Milton W. Hopkins -- American painter
Wikipedia - Mily Possoz -- Portuguese modernist painter and engraver
Wikipedia - Mimmo Paladino -- Italian sculptor, painter and printmaker
Wikipedia - Mina Carlson-Bredberg -- Swedish painter
Wikipedia - Mina KaradM-EM->ic -- Historian and painter (1828-1894)
Wikipedia - Mineral painting -- technique of fresco preparation and painting
Wikipedia - Minerva between Geometry and Arithmetic -- Painting by Paolo Veronese
Wikipedia - Minerva's Visit to the Muses -- Painting by Joos de Momper
Wikipedia - Ming-HM-aM-;M-^S War -- 15th century Chinese military campaign
Wikipedia - Minimal pair -- Two words that differ in only one element of their pronunciation
Wikipedia - Mini-Mental State Examination -- Test to measure cognitive impairment
Wikipedia - Minimum-Pairs Protocol
Wikipedia - Minimum wage -- lowest wage which can be paid legally in a state for working
Wikipedia - Minol Araki -- Japanese painter and interior designer
Wikipedia - Mino Maccari -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Miquel Barcelo -- Spanish painter
Wikipedia - Miquel Bestard -- Spanish painter
Wikipedia - Miquel Crusafont i Pair
Wikipedia - Miracles of St. Francis Xavier (Rubens) -- C. 1618 painting by Peter Paul Rubens
Wikipedia - Mira Dancy -- American painter
Wikipedia - Mira Edgerly-Korzybska -- American portrait painter
Wikipedia - Mira Schendel -- Brazilian painter (1919-1988)
Wikipedia - Miriam Beerman -- American painter and printmaker
Wikipedia - Miriam Cahn -- Swiss painter
Wikipedia - Miriam Davenport -- American painter and sculptor
Wikipedia - Miriam Hatibi -- Data analyst and activist in Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain
Wikipedia - Mirko Muller -- German pair skater
Wikipedia - Mirror symmetry (string theory) -- In physics and geometry: conjectured relation between pairs of Calabi-Yau manifolds
Wikipedia - Mirror therapy -- Treatment for some kinds of pain
Wikipedia - Misai Kosugi -- Japanese painter
Wikipedia - Misch Kohn -- American painter and printmaker
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Wikipedia - Miss Spain 2008 -- Beauty pageant edition
Wikipedia - Miss Spain -- National beauty pageant competition in Spain, founded in 1929
Wikipedia - Mister EspaM-CM-1a -- National male beauty pageant competition in Spain
Wikipedia - Mitchell Paige -- US Marine Corps Medal of Honor recipient
Wikipedia - Mitral valve repair -- Cardiac surgery procedure
Wikipedia - Mitsutani KunishirM-EM-^M -- Japanese painter
Wikipedia - Mitt Romney 2012 presidential campaign -- Presidential campaign
Wikipedia - Miyagawa ChM-EM-^Mshun -- Japanese painter (1683-1753)
Wikipedia - MM-CM-$ekula, Paide Parish -- Village in Estonia
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Wikipedia - MM-CM-)rode Altarpiece -- 15th-century painting by the workshop of Robert Campin
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Wikipedia - Moderate Party (Spain) -- Defunct political party in 19th century Spain
Wikipedia - Modernisme -- Architectural and artistic movement originating in late-19th-century Catalonia, Spain
Wikipedia - Modern Rome - Campo Vaccino -- Landscape painting by J. M. W. Turner
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Wikipedia - Mohmand campaign of 1897-98 -- 19th century British military campaign in India
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Wikipedia - MoM-CM-0i and Magni -- Pair of deities in Norse mythology
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Wikipedia - Monarchy of Spain -- ruling monarchy in the Kingdom of Spain since the arrival of Felipe V
Wikipedia - Monastery of El Paular -- Carthusian monastery in Rascafria, Spain
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Wikipedia - Monegros Desert -- semi-desert in Spain
Wikipedia - Monge's theorem -- The intersections of the 3 pairs of external tangent lines to 3 circles are collinear
Wikipedia - Monghyr Mutiny Medal -- A Campaign medal
Wikipedia - Mongol campaign against the Nizaris -- Mongol campaign against the Shia Nizari Ismaili state (1253-1256)
Wikipedia - Mongol zurag -- Mongolian painting style
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Wikipedia - Monica Sjoo -- Swedish painter, writer and anarcho/eco-feminist
Wikipedia - Monika Baer -- German painter
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Wikipedia - Monument to Alfonso XII -- Monument by JosM-CM-) Grases Riera in Madrid, Spain
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Wikipedia - Monument to Galdos (Madrid) -- Statue by Victorio Macho in Buen Retiro park, Madrid, Spain
Wikipedia - Monument to Hernan CortM-CM-)s (Medellin) -- Monument in Medellin, Spain
Wikipedia - Monument to Miguel de Cervantes -- Monument in Palacio, Madrid, Spain
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Wikipedia - Moonlight (painting) -- painting by Philip James de Loutherbourg
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Wikipedia - Moret Law -- A form of freedom of wombs implemented by Spain in Cuba and Puerto Rico
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Wikipedia - Mountain Landscape with Campers and a Broken Tree -- Painting by Joos de Momper
Wikipedia - Mountain Landscape with Castle -- Painting by Joos de Momper
Wikipedia - Mountain Landscape with Pilgrims in a Grotto Chapel -- Painting by Joos de Momper
Wikipedia - Mountainous Landscape with a Bridge and Four Horsemen -- Painting by Joos de Momper
Wikipedia - Mountainous Landscape with a Torrent -- Painting by Jacob van Ruisdael
Wikipedia - Mountainous Landscape with Figures and a Donkey -- Painting by Joos de Momper
Wikipedia - Mountainous Landscape with Saint Jerome -- Painting by Paul Bril
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Wikipedia - MS Paint Adventures -- Set of multimedia webcomics by Andrew Hussie
Wikipedia - MtPaint -- Free software graphics editor
Wikipedia - Mu Bootis -- Pair of double stars in the northern constellation of Bootes
Wikipedia - MudM-CM-)jar art -- Art style in post-Islamic Spain
Wikipedia - Mufide Kadri -- Turkish painter
Wikipedia - Muggur -- Icelandic painter
Wikipedia - Mughal miniature painting
Wikipedia - Mughal painting -- South Asian painting in manuscript miniatures from the Mughal period
Wikipedia - Muhammad Ben Ali Ribati -- Moroccan painter
Wikipedia - Muhammad Hasan Afshar -- Persian portrait painter
Wikipedia - Muhittin Sebati -- Turkish painter
Wikipedia - Mula, Spain
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Wikipedia - Multiple epiphyseal dysplasia -- An osteochondrodysplasia that has material basis in defective cartilage mineralization into bone which results in irregular ossification centers of the located in hip or located in knee. The disease has symptom fatigue, has symptom joint pain.
Wikipedia - Muqi -- Chinese painter
Wikipedia - Muralla urbana de Marbella -- Fort in southern Spain
Wikipedia - Murals in Northern Ireland -- Political wall paintings
Wikipedia - Mural -- Piece of artwork painted or applied directly on a large permanent surface
Wikipedia - Murcian cheese -- Fatty goats' milk cheese from the Murcia region of south-east Spain
Wikipedia - Murcian wine cheese -- Fatty goatsM-bM-^@M-^Y milk cheese from the province of Murcia in the south-east of Spain
Wikipedia - Murder of Miquel Grau -- 1977 crime in Spain
Wikipedia - Murder of Paige Doherty -- 2016 murder case
Wikipedia - Murray Hantman -- American painter, muralist, and teacher
Wikipedia - Murtaja Baseer -- Bangladeshi painter
Wikipedia - Museo del Prado -- Spanish national art museum in Madrid, Spain
Wikipedia - Music of Spain -- Music and musical traditions of Spain
Wikipedia - Musidora: The Bather 'At the Doubtful Breeze Alarmed' -- Four nearly identical oil paintings on canvas by English artist William Etty
Wikipedia - Muslim conquest of the Maghreb -- Military campaign
Wikipedia - Muslim Spain
Wikipedia - Must I Paint You a Picture? The Essential Billy Bragg -- 2003 greatest hits album by Billy Bragg
Wikipedia - MV Prestige -- Oil tanker, sunk 2002 off coast of Galicia, Spain
Wikipedia - Myalgia -- Muscle pain
Wikipedia - Mya-Rose Craig -- Ornithologist, campaigner for equal rights
Wikipedia - Mykhailo Andriienko-Nechytailo -- Painter from Ukraine
Wikipedia - Mykola Storozhenko (painter) -- Ukrainian painter
Wikipedia - Myra Hamilton Green -- American painter
Wikipedia - Myrna Baez -- Puerto Rican painter and printmaker
Wikipedia - My Senpai Is Annoying -- Japanese manga series
Wikipedia - My Shanty, Lake George -- painting by Georgia O'Keeffe
Wikipedia - MySims Agents -- is a pair of 2009 mystery-simulation video games developed for the Wii and Nintendo DS
Wikipedia - Mysore Medal -- Campaign medal awarded by the Governor-General of India to native Indian soldiers
Wikipedia - Mystara -- Dungeons & Dragons fictional campaign setting
Wikipedia - Mystical Nativity (Filippo Lippi) -- c. 1459 painting by Filippo Lippi
Wikipedia - Mystic Marriage of Saint Catherine (Beccafumi) -- Painting by Domenico di Pace Beccafumi
Wikipedia - Mystic Marriage of Saint Catherine (Lotto, Munich) -- 1506-1508 painting by Loreno Lotto
Wikipedia - Mystic Marriage of Saint Catherine (Moretto) -- Painting by Moretto da Brescia
Wikipedia - Nacional Typefoundry -- Closed type foundry in Spain
Wikipedia - Nader's Mesopotamian Campaign -- Part of the Ottoman-Persian war (1730-35)
Wikipedia - Nadezhda Sapozhnikova -- Russian painter
Wikipedia - Nadir Afonso -- Portuguese geometric abstractionist painter (1920-2013)
Wikipedia - Naewat-dang shamanic paintings -- Series of portraits of shamanic deities from Jeju, South Korea
Wikipedia - Nainsukh -- Hillside painter (1710-1778)
Wikipedia - Nair Lady Adorning Her Hair (Varma) -- 1873 painting by Raja Ravi Varma
Wikipedia - Naja Abelsen -- Greenlandic painter and illustrator
Wikipedia - Nakamura Fusetsu -- Japanese painter
Wikipedia - Naked Child Laughing (painting)
Wikipedia - Naming customs of Hispanic America -- Similar to the Spanish naming customs practiced in Spain
Wikipedia - Nam June Paik -- Korean-American video artist
Wikipedia - Nam SM-FM-!n -- Vietnamese painter
Wikipedia - Nancy Ludington -- American pair skater
Wikipedia - Nancy Rourke -- American painter
Wikipedia - Nancy Spender -- British painter
Wikipedia - Nandini Bajpai -- Indian author
Wikipedia - Nangpai Gosum -- Mountain in the Himalayas
Wikipedia - Nani Alapai -- Hawaiian soprano singer
Wikipedia - Nan Lawson Cheney -- Canadian painter
Wikipedia - Nann Nann -- Burmese painter
Wikipedia - Nano Reid -- Irish painter
Wikipedia - Naphaswan Yangpaiboon -- Thai sport shooter
Wikipedia - Napoleon Crossing the Alps -- Series of paintings byM-BM- Jacques-Louis David
Wikipedia - Napoleone Angiolini -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Napoleone Parisani -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Napoleon Illakowicz -- Polish painter and decorator
Wikipedia - Napoleon in the Wilderness -- Painting by Max Ernst
Wikipedia - Nara-Narayana -- Hindu twin brother deity pair
Wikipedia - Narciso Malatesta -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Natale Betti -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Natalia Mishkutionok -- Belarusian pair skater
Wikipedia - Natalia Ponomareva -- Uzbekistani pair skater
Wikipedia - Natalie Edgar -- American painter
Wikipedia - Natalie Seybold -- American pair skater
Wikipedia - Natasha Kuchiki -- American pair skater
Wikipedia - Natela Iankoshvili -- Georgian painter
Wikipedia - Nathan Bartholomay -- American pair skater
Wikipedia - Nathan Hylden -- American painter
Wikipedia - Nathaniel Cannon Smith -- American painter and architect
Wikipedia - Nathaniel George Philips -- English painter and etcher
Wikipedia - Nathaniel Hone the Elder -- 18th-century Irish painter
Wikipedia - Nathan Walsh -- English painter
Wikipedia - Nathan Wasserberger -- Polish-born Jewish American painter
Wikipedia - National and regional identity in Spain -- none
Wikipedia - National Archives of Spain
Wikipedia - National Campaign for a Peace Tax Fund
Wikipedia - National Day of Spain -- National holiday of Spain
Wikipedia - Nationalities and regions of Spain -- Constitutional status of the Spanish regions with devolved powers
Wikipedia - National Library of Spain
Wikipedia - National Register of Historic Places listings in Yavapai County, Arizona -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - Nativity (Christus) -- Oil on wood panel painting by Petrus Christus
Wikipedia - Nativity with St Elizabeth and the Infant John the Baptist -- Painting by Antonio da Correggio
Wikipedia - Navacepeda de Tormes -- Hamlet in San Juan de Gredos, Spain
Wikipedia - Navacerrada Pass -- Mountain pass in Spain
Wikipedia - Navachica -- Mountain in Spain
Wikipedia - Navajo Bridge -- Bridge pair in Arizona, United States
Wikipedia - Navarre -- Autonomous community and province of Spain
Wikipedia - Nave nave moe -- Painting by Paul Gauguin
Wikipedia - Nawaal Akram -- Qatari comedian, model, athlete and disability rights campaigner
Wikipedia - Nazario Nazari -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Nazi Paikidze -- Georgian-American chess player
Wikipedia - Neapolitan campaigns of Louis the Great
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Wikipedia - Negro Life at the South -- 1959 painting by Eastman Johnson
Wikipedia - Neil Faulkner (painter) -- British realist painter
Wikipedia - Nellie Ellen Shepherd -- American painter
Wikipedia - Nellie Mathes Horne -- American painter
Wikipedia - Nell Walker Warner -- American painter
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Wikipedia - Nelly Degouy -- Belgian painter
Wikipedia - Nelly Erichsen -- English painter and illustrator
Wikipedia - Nelly McKenzie Tolman -- American painter
Wikipedia - Nels Hagerup -- Norwegian-born American painter
Wikipedia - Nelson Leirner -- Brazilian painter
Wikipedia - Neo-Fauvism -- Poetic style of painting
Wikipedia - Nephrogenic diabetes insipidus -- Impaired renal function disease characterized by a complete or partial resistance of the kidneys to vasopressin (ADH)
Wikipedia - Nerd -- Descriptive term, often used pejoratively, indicating that a person is overly intellectual, obsessive, or socially impaired
Wikipedia - Nero's Torches -- Painting by Henryk Siemiradzki
Wikipedia - Nestor Paiva -- American actor
Wikipedia - Netherlandish Proverbs -- Painting by Pieter Bruegel the Elder
Wikipedia - Neubrandenburg (painting) -- Painting by Caspar David Friedrich
Wikipedia - Neuralgia -- Pain disorder characterize by pain in the distribution of a nerve or nerves
Wikipedia - Never Been to Spain -- 1971 single by Three Dog Night
Wikipedia - Never pain to tell thy love
Wikipedia - Never Trump movement -- Political resistance to Donald Trump's 2016 presidential campaign
Wikipedia - New Cathedral of Salamanca -- Cathedral of Salamanca, Spain
Wikipedia - New Georgia campaign -- Series of land and naval battles of the Pacific campaign of World War II
Wikipedia - New Georgia counterattack -- Battle of the New Georgia campaign during World War II
Wikipedia - New Jalpaiguri-Alipurduar-Samuktala Road line -- Railway line in West Bengal, India
Wikipedia - New Jalpaiguri-New Bongaigaon section -- Railway line in India
Wikipedia - New Mexico Campaign -- Military operation of the Trans-Mississippi Theater of the American Civil War
Wikipedia - Newsboys' strike of 1899 -- American campaign
Wikipedia - New Song (Warpaint song) -- Single by Warpaint
Wikipedia - New Spain -- Kingdom of the Spanish Empire (1535-1821)
Wikipedia - New York and New Jersey campaign -- Campaign in the American Revolutionary War
Wikipedia - New York Movie -- Painting by Edward Hopper
Wikipedia - New York Studio School of Drawing, Painting and Sculpture -- art school in Manhattan, New York
Wikipedia - New Zealand Medal -- Campaign medal awarded to troops in the New Zealand Wars
Wikipedia - NGC 2207 and IC 2163 -- Pair of colliding spiral galaxies in the constellation Canis Major
Wikipedia - NguyM-aM-;M-^En TM-FM-0M-aM-;M-^]ng LM-CM-"n -- Vietnamese painter
Wikipedia - Niagara (Frederic Edwin Church) -- 1857 painting by Frederic Edwin Church
Wikipedia - Nica Digerness -- American pair skater
Wikipedia - Nicaraguan Literacy Campaign -- 1980 literacy campaign by the Sandinista government
Wikipedia - NiccolM-CM-2 Appiani -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - NiccolM-CM-2 Berrettoni -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - NiccolM-CM-2 Carissa -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - NiccolM-CM-2 Cartissani -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - NiccolM-CM-2 Casolani -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - NiccolM-CM-2 dell'Abbate -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - NiccolM-CM-2 Macii -- Italian pair skater
Wikipedia - NiccolM-CM-2 Paganelli -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Nicholas Borden -- British painter based in Hackney, London
Wikipedia - Nicholas Hondrogen -- American painter
Wikipedia - Nicholas Kole -- American pair skater
Wikipedia - Nicholas Lanier -- English musician, scenographer and painter
Wikipedia - Nicholas Roerich -- Russian painter, writer, archaeologist, theosophist, enlightener, philosopher
Wikipedia - Nicholas Zalevsky -- American figurative painter (born 1951)
Wikipedia - Nicolaas Baur -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Nicolaas Piemont -- Dutch Golden Age landscape painter
Wikipedia - Nicolaas Pieneman -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Nicola Casissa -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Nicola Contestabili -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Nicola De Maria -- Italian artist and painter
Wikipedia - Nicolae Gropeanu -- Romanian painter and illustrator
Wikipedia - Nicolaes de Kemp -- Dutch Golden Age painter
Wikipedia - Nicolaes Lastman -- Dutch Golden Age painter (1585-1625)
Wikipedia - Nicola Monti -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Nicola Peccheneda -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Nicola Rosini Di Santi -- French sculptor and painter
Wikipedia - Nicolas de Largilliere -- 17th and 18th-century French painter
Wikipedia - Nicolas de Villacis -- Spanish painter
Wikipedia - Nicolas Dreux -- Haitian painter
Wikipedia - Nicolas GuillM-CM-)n Landrian -- Cuban filmmaker and painter
Wikipedia - Nicolas-Guy Brenet -- French painter
Wikipedia - Nicolas Lokhoff -- 19th-century Russian painter
Wikipedia - Nicolas Megia -- Spanish painter
Wikipedia - Nicolas Osseland -- French pair skater
Wikipedia - Nicolas Poussin -- 17th-century French Baroque painter
Wikipedia - Nicolas Roulet -- Swiss pair skater
Wikipedia - Nicole Della Monica -- Italian pair skater
Wikipedia - NicolM-CM-2 Bonito -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - NicolM-CM-2 Grassi -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Niebla, Spain
Wikipedia - Niels Christian Hansen -- Danish painter (1834-1922)
Wikipedia - Nigel Cooke -- British painter
Wikipedia - Nigel Cox (artist) -- Irish figurative painter
Wikipedia - Nighthawks (painting) -- 1942 oil on canvas painting by Edward Hopper
Wikipedia - Night soil -- Historically used euphemism for human excreta collected from cesspools, privies, pail closets, pit latrines etc.
Wikipedia - Niki de Saint Phalle -- French plastician, painter and sculptor
Wikipedia - Nikita Bochkov -- Russian pair skater
Wikipedia - Nikita Ermolaev -- Russian pair skater
Wikipedia - Niklaus Butler -- Swiss painter
Wikipedia - Nikola Avramov -- Bulgarian painter
Wikipedia - Nikolai Astrup -- Norwegian painter (1880-1928)
Wikipedia - Nikolai Bodarevsky -- Russian painter (1850-1921)
Wikipedia - Nikolai Chekhov -- Russian painter
Wikipedia - Nikolai Ge -- Ukrainian-Russian realist painter and an early Ukrainian-Russian symbolist (1831-1894)
Wikipedia - Nikolai Petrovich Petrov -- Russian painter
Wikipedia - Nikolai Yaroshenko -- Russian painter
Wikipedia - Nikola Markovic (painter) -- Serbian painter
Wikipedia - Nikola Mikhaylov -- Bulgarian painter
Wikipedia - Nikolaos Lytras -- Greek painter
Wikipedia - Nikola Petrov (painter) -- Bulgarian painter
Wikipedia - Nikolaus Knupfer -- German-born Dutch painter (1609-1655)
Wikipedia - Nikolay Bogdanov-Belsky -- Russian painter
Wikipedia - Nikolay Dubovskoy -- Russian landscape painter
Wikipedia - Nikolay Gritsenko -- Russian painter
Wikipedia - Nikolay Sednin -- Russian painter
Wikipedia - Nik Spatari -- Italian painter, sculptor and architect
Wikipedia - Nils Gude -- Norwegian painter
Wikipedia - Nina Ahlstedt -- Finnish painter
Wikipedia - Nina Arbore -- Romanian painter and illustrator
Wikipedia - Nina Childress -- French and American painter, based in Paris
Wikipedia - Nina Kogan -- Russian painter
Wikipedia - Nina May Owens -- Canadian teacher and painter
Wikipedia - Nitrous oxide (medication) -- Gas used as anesthetic and for pain relief
Wikipedia - Niwatthamrong Boonsongpaisan -- Thai businessman and politician
Wikipedia - No 1 (Royal Red and Blue) -- Painting by Mark Rothko
Wikipedia - No. 61 (Rust and Blue) -- Painting by Mark Rothko
Wikipedia - No. 6 (Violet, Green and Red) -- Painting by Mark Rothko
Wikipedia - Noah Scherer -- Swiss pair skater
Wikipedia - Nobushige Kusamitsu -- Japanese painter
Wikipedia - No-cost campaign -- Term that refers to a political campaign in which the candidates run without funding
Wikipedia - Nodari Maisuradze -- Russian pair skater
Wikipedia - Nodhavn Ved Norskekysten -- Painting by Hans Gude
Wikipedia - Noel Guzman Boffil Rojas -- Cuban painter
Wikipedia - No I in Beer -- 2020 song by Brad Paisley
Wikipedia - Noli me tangere (Sustris) -- Painting by Lambert Sustris
Wikipedia - NoM-CM-+l-Antoine Pierre -- French pair skater
Wikipedia - Nomin Bold -- Mongolian painter
Wikipedia - Nonggirrnga Marawili -- Australian painter and printmaker
Wikipedia - NonVisual Desktop Access -- Software to describe a computer display for visually impaired users
Wikipedia - No Pais das Amazonas -- 1922 film by Silvino Santos
Wikipedia - Nora Heysen -- Australian painter
Wikipedia - Nordic Landscape with a Castle on a Hill -- Painting by Allaert van Everdingen
Wikipedia - Norham Castle, Sunrise -- Painting by J. M. W. Turner
Wikipedia - Norma Belleza -- Filipino painter
Wikipedia - Norman Jeschke -- German pair skater
Wikipedia - Norman Rockwell -- American painter
Wikipedia - Norman S. Chamberlain -- American painter
Wikipedia - Norman St. Clair -- English-born American painter and architect
Wikipedia - North African Campaign
Wikipedia - North and South Brother Islands (New York City) -- Pair of small islands in New York City's East River
Wikipedia - Northeaster (painting) -- 19th-century painting by Winslow Homer
Wikipedia - Northern Catalonia -- Catalan-speaking and Catalan-culture territory ceded to France by Spain (1659)
Wikipedia - Northern Expedition -- Kuomintang military campaign
Wikipedia - North Korea-Spain relations -- Diplomatic relations between North Korea and Spain
Wikipedia - Norwegian campaign -- Second World War campaign fought in Norway
Wikipedia - No-show job -- Form of corruption where one is paid to not show up
Wikipedia - Nothing Painted Blue -- American indie rock band
Wikipedia - Not to Be Reproduced -- Painting by RenM-CM-) Magritte
Wikipedia - Nou Estadi Castalia -- Multi-purpose stadium in Spain
Wikipedia - Novales -- Municipality in Aragon, Spain
Wikipedia - Novitiate Altarpiece -- Painting by Filippo Lippi
Wikipedia - Nucleophile -- Chemical species that donates an electron pair
Wikipedia - Nude Against the Light (Bonnard) -- Painting by Pierre Bonnard
Wikipedia - Nude Descending a Staircase, No. 2 -- Painting by Marcel Duchamp
Wikipedia - Nuevo Estadio de La Victoria -- Stadium in JaM-CM-)n, Spain
Wikipedia - Numa Coste -- French painter and journalist
Wikipedia - Nursing in Spain
Wikipedia - Nutzi Acontz -- Romanian painter
Wikipedia - Nyapanyapa Yunupingu -- Australian painter
Wikipedia - Nyctopais -- Genus of beetles
Wikipedia - Nyein Chan Su -- Burmese painter
Wikipedia - Nyima languages -- Pair of Eastern Sudanic languages of southern Sudan
Wikipedia - Octave Gallian -- French painter
Wikipedia - Octave Tassaert -- French painter and engraver
Wikipedia - October (painting) -- Painting by Jules Bastien-Lepage
Wikipedia - Ocular neuropathic pain -- Spectrum of disorders
Wikipedia - Oculus Quill -- Virtual reality painting software
Wikipedia - Odoardo Borrani -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Odoardo Fischetti -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Odysseas Phokas -- Greek painter (1857-1946)
Wikipedia - Ofelia Gelvezon-Tequi -- Filipina printmaker and painter (born 1944)
Wikipedia - Office at Night -- Painting by Edward Hopper
Wikipedia - Office in a Small City -- Painting by Edward Hopper
Wikipedia - Officer and Laughing Girl -- 17th-century painting by Johannes Vermeer
Wikipedia - Ognissanti Madonna -- painting by Giotto
Wikipedia - Ohara Koson -- Japanese painter and printmaker
Wikipedia - Oil painting -- Process of painting with pigments that are bound with a medium of drying oil
Wikipedia - Oil paint
Wikipedia - Ojo GuareM-CM-1a -- Cave and archaeological site in Spain
Wikipedia - Okada SaburM-EM-^Msuke -- Japanese painter
Wikipedia - Oksana Kazakova -- Russian pair skater
Wikipedia - Old Cathedral of Plasencia -- Romanesque/Gothic cathedral in Plasencia, Spain
Wikipedia - Old Church Tower at Nuenen -- Painting series by Vincent van Gogh
Wikipedia - Old Master -- Any skilled painter who worked in Europe before 1800
Wikipedia - Oleg Makarov (figure skater) -- Russian pair skater
Wikipedia - Olena Bilousivska -- Ukrainian former pair skater
Wikipedia - Ole Ring -- Danish painter (1902-1972)
Wikipedia - Olga Andrino -- Spanish painter and sculptor
Wikipedia - Olga DubeneckienM-DM-^W -- Lithuanian and Soviet painter
Wikipedia - Olga Mizgireva -- Botanist and painter (1908-2000)
Wikipedia - Olga Orgonista -- Hungarian pair skater
Wikipedia - Olga Sinclair -- Panamanian painter
Wikipedia - Olga Wagner -- Danish painter and sculptor
Wikipedia - Olga Wisinger-Florian -- Austrian painter (1844-1926)
Wikipedia - Oliver Frazer -- American painter
Wikipedia - Oliver Ingraham Lay -- American painter
Wikipedia - Oliver Milburn (painter) -- Canadian painter
Wikipedia - Olivier Pain -- French motorcycle racer
Wikipedia - Olivier van Deuren -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Olle Langert -- Swedish painter and sculptor
Wikipedia - Olle Nordberg (painter) -- Swedish painter
Wikipedia - Olof Sager-Nelson -- Swedish painter
Wikipedia - Oltos -- Late 6th century BC Athenian vase painter
Wikipedia - Olu Ajayi -- Nigerian painter, cartoonist, and art reviewer
Wikipedia - Olympia Bover -- Economist (Bank of Spain)
Wikipedia - Olympia (Manet) -- Painting by Edouard Manet
Wikipedia - OM-DM->ga BestM-CM-$ndigova -- Slovak pair skater
Wikipedia - Omnibus (painting) -- 1891-1892 painting by Anders Zorn
Wikipedia - Onde 2000 -- Motorcycle racing team based in Spain
Wikipedia - Ong Schan Tchow -- Chinese painter
Wikipedia - Onorato Carlandi -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - On the Bank of the Seine, Bennecourt -- 1868 painting by Claude Monet
Wikipedia - On the Platte River, Nebraska -- 1863 oil painting by Albert Bierstadt
Wikipedia - On the Threshold of Liberty -- Two paintings by RenM-CM-) Magritte
Wikipedia - Oopiri -- 2016 film by Vamsi Paidipally
Wikipedia - Open Casket -- controversial Dana Schutz painting depicting deceased Emmett Till in an open casket
Wikipedia - Open Happiness -- Marketing campaign
Wikipedia - Operation Condor -- US-backed campaign of political repression in South America
Wikipedia - Operation INFEKTION -- KGB disinformation campaign
Wikipedia - Operation Infinite Reach -- Code name of 1998 American bombing campaign in Sudan
Wikipedia - Operation Mole Cricket 19 -- Israeli air force bombing campaign
Wikipedia - Operation Nemesis -- Assassination campaign by the Armenian Revolutionary Federation carried out between 1920 and 1922
Wikipedia - Operation Rainfall -- Organization made by fans of video games campaigning for the global release of Japan-exclusive titles
Wikipedia - Ophelia (painting)
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Wikipedia - O Pobre Rabequista -- Painting by JosM-CM-) Rodrigues
Wikipedia - Orangemoody editing of Wikipedia -- Wikipedia paid editing scandal of 381 sockpuppets operating a secret paid editing ring
Wikipedia - Orange peel (effect) -- Kind of finish that may develop on painted and cast surfaces
Wikipedia - Orange Prince (1984) -- Painting by Andy Warhol
Wikipedia - Orazio Bianchi -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Orazio Farinati -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Orazio Frezza -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Orazio Gentileschi -- 16th and 17th-century Italian painter
Wikipedia - Orazio Samacchini -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Ordered pair
Wikipedia - Order of Charles III -- Order of chivalry of Spain
Wikipedia - Ordinariate for the Faithful of Eastern Rite in Spain
Wikipedia - Oreidis Despaigne -- Cuban Olympic judoka
Wikipedia - Oreste Casalini -- Italian painter and sculptor
Wikipedia - Orfeo Reda -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Organtino di Mariano -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Orgulho e Paixao -- Brazilian costume telenovela
Wikipedia - Orgullo Paisa -- Colombian cycling team
Wikipedia - Oriental carpets in Renaissance painting -- Aspect of art history
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Wikipedia - Orsino Carota -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Orzinuovi Altarpiece -- 1528 painting by Moretto da Brescia
Wikipedia - Oscar Bronner -- Austrian newspaper publisher and painter
Wikipedia - Oscar CahM-CM-)n -- Canadian painter
Wikipedia - Oscar Castberg -- Norwegian painter and sculptor
Wikipedia - Oscar Fruh -- Swiss painter
Wikipedia - Oscar Hullgren -- Swedish painter
Wikipedia - Oscar MuM-CM-1oz (artist) -- Colombian painter
Wikipedia - Osco Drug and Sav-on Drugs -- Former pair of chain pharmacies in United States
Wikipedia - Oskar Fischinger -- German-American abstract animator, filmmaker, and painter
Wikipedia - Oskar Herrfurth -- German painter and illustrator.
Wikipedia - Oskar Luthy -- Swiss painter
Wikipedia - Oskar Nerlinger -- German painter
Wikipedia - Ostend Manifesto -- 1854 document on US-Spain relations
Wikipedia - Oswald Oberhuber -- Austrian painter
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Wikipedia - Oswestry Disability Index -- Questionnaire for rating the severity of back pain
Wikipedia - Othello (paintings)
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Wikipedia - Otto Abt -- Swiss painter
Wikipedia - Otto Ackermann (painter) -- German painter
Wikipedia - Otto Dill -- German painter
Wikipedia - Otto Dix -- German painter and printmaker
Wikipedia - Otto Dlabola -- Czech retired pair skater
Wikipedia - Otto Eckmann -- German painter and graphic artist
Wikipedia - Otto Erdmann -- German painter
Wikipedia - Otto Freundlich -- German painter
Wikipedia - Otto Frolicher -- Swiss painter
Wikipedia - Otto Hanrath -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Otto Haslund -- Danish painter
Wikipedia - Ottoman illumination -- Painted or drawn decorative art in books or sheets
Wikipedia - Otto Marseus van Schrieck -- Painter from the Northern Netherlands
Wikipedia - Otto Mueller -- German painter and printmaker
Wikipedia - Otto Pilny -- Swiss Orientalist painter
Wikipedia - Otto Placht -- Czech painter
Wikipedia - Ottorino Mancioli -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Otto Scheffels -- German painter
Wikipedia - Otto Seitz -- German illustrator, painter, draftsman, and collector
Wikipedia - Otto van Veen -- Dutch painter, draughtsman and humanist (1556-1629)
Wikipedia - Otto WeiM-CM-^_ (figure skater) -- German pair skater
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Wikipedia - Our Grand Despair -- 2011 film
Wikipedia - Our Lady of Bethlehem (Puerto Rico) -- Flemish-style oil painting
Wikipedia - Our Lady of Mercy with Saints and Angels -- Painting by Lucas Signorelli
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Wikipedia - Our Lady of Prompt Succor of Binondo -- Oil painting
Wikipedia - Outline of painting
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Wikipedia - Ozias Humphry -- 18th/19th-century English painter
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Wikipedia - Pablo Amorsolo -- Filipino painter
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Wikipedia - Pablo de Olavide University -- Public university in Seville, Spain
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Wikipedia - Pablo Picasso -- 20th-century Spanish painter, sculptor, printmaker, ceramicist, and stage designer
Wikipedia - Pablo Rabiella -- Spanish painter
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Wikipedia - Pacifism in Spain
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Wikipedia - People's Party of Galicia -- Political party in Galicia, Spain
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Wikipedia - People's Party (Spain, 1976) -- Defunct political party in Spain
Wikipedia - People's Party (Spain) -- Political party in Spain
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Wikipedia - Philip III of Spain
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Wikipedia - Phillip II of Spain
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Wikipedia - Photon Paint
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Wikipedia - Pierre Montezin -- French painter
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Wikipedia - Pieta (Annibale Carracci) -- Painting by Annibale Carracci in the National Museum of Capodimonte, Naples
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Wikipedia - Pieta (Lotto) -- 1545 painting by Lorenzo Lotto
Wikipedia - Pieta (Sebastiano del Piombo) -- Painting by Sebastiano del Piombo
Wikipedia - Pieta with Saint Francis and Saint Mary Magdalene -- Paiting by Annibale Carracci
Wikipedia - Pieta with Saints Clare, Francis and Mary Magdalene -- Painting by Annibale Carracci
Wikipedia - Piet Bekaert -- Belgian painter
Wikipedia - Pieter Barbiers (painter) -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Pieter Bruegel the Elder -- Flemish Renaissance painter
Wikipedia - Pieter Brueghel the Younger -- Flemish painter
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Wikipedia - Pieter Cornelisz van Slingelandt -- Dutch Golden Age painter
Wikipedia - Pieter Crijnse Volmarijn -- Dutch Golden Age painter
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Wikipedia - Pieter Franciscus Dierckx -- Belgian painter
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Wikipedia - Pieter HardimM-CM-) -- Flemish painter
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Wikipedia - Pietro Barucci -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Pietro Benvenuti -- Italian painter
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Wikipedia - Pietro Desani -- Italian painter
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Wikipedia - Pietro Lorenzetti -- Italian painter (1280-1348)
Wikipedia - Pietro Paolini -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Pietro Paolo Agabito -- Italian painter (1470-1540)
Wikipedia - Pietro Paolo Baldinacci -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Pietro Pedroni -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Pietro Scalvini -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Piet van den Bergh -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Piet van der Hem -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Piet van Egmond -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Piet Verhaert -- Belgian painter
Wikipedia - Pilar Careaga -- First female engineer from Spain and also a politician
Wikipedia - Pinar del Rey (park) -- Public park in San Roque, Cadiz, Spain
Wikipedia - Pinchitos -- Southern Spain skewered meat dish
Wikipedia - Pinckney's Treaty -- 1795 treaty between the US and Spain
Wikipedia - Pinetta Colonna-Gamero -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Pinkie (painting) -- 1794 painting by Thomas Lawrence
Wikipedia - Pink Roses -- Painting by Vincent van Gogh
Wikipedia - Pino Grioni -- American painter
Wikipedia - Pio Collivadino -- Argentine painter
Wikipedia - Pio Fabio Paolini -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Pio Joris -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Pioneer Square South and Pioneer Square North stations -- Pair of light rail stations in Portland, Oregon
Wikipedia - Piotr Potworowski -- Polish painter and designer
Wikipedia - Piotr Snopek -- Polish pair skater
Wikipedia - Pirkko Lepisto -- Finnish painter
Wikipedia - Pirpainti (Vidhan Sabha constituency) -- Constituency of the Bihar legislative assembly in India
Wikipedia - Pisanello -- Italian medalist and painter
Wikipedia - Pit of despair
Wikipedia - P. J. Crook -- British artist, painter and sculptor
Wikipedia - Placa del Rei -- Square in Barcelona, Spain
Wikipedia - Placa Reial -- Square in Barcelona, Spain
Wikipedia - Placebo analgesia -- Ability of placebos to reduce pain
Wikipedia - Placido Fabris -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Plague of Ashdod (Poussin) -- 1630 painting by Nicolas Poussin
Wikipedia - Planescape Campaign Setting
Wikipedia - Plant A Tree In '73 -- UK government-sponsored campaign to encourage tree planting in 1973
Wikipedia - Platja des Niu Blau -- Beach in Ibiza, Spain
Wikipedia - Platon Tyurin -- Russian painter
Wikipedia - Playa de Los Ladrillos -- Beach in Spain
Wikipedia - Plaza de Cibeles -- Square in Madrid, Spain
Wikipedia - Plaza de Colon -- Square in Madrid, Spain
Wikipedia - Plaza de EspaM-CM-1a, Madrid -- Square in Madrid, Spain
Wikipedia - Plaza de LavapiM-CM-)s -- Public square in Madrid, Spain
Wikipedia - Plaza de Santa Ana -- Square in Madrid, Spain
Wikipedia - Plaza de toros La Montera -- bull ring in Los Barrios, Cadiz, Spain
Wikipedia - Plaza Mayor, Madrid -- Square in Madrid, Spain
Wikipedia - Plaza Mayor, Salamanca -- Square in Epila , Spain
Wikipedia - Plaza of Our Lady of the Pillar -- Square in Zaragoza, Spain
Wikipedia - Plaza Republica Dominicana bombing -- Car bomb attack carried out by the Basque separatist group ETA in Madrid, Spain in 1986
Wikipedia - Pleasant DeSpain -- American storyteller and author (born 1943)
Wikipedia - Please Give Me a Pair of Wings -- Chinese television series
Wikipedia - Pleitos colombinos -- Lawsuits of heirs of Christopher Columbus against Spain
Wikipedia - Plinio de Arruda Sampaio -- Brazilian politician
Wikipedia - Plinio Nomellini -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Plinio Plini -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Plovdiv University "Paisii Hilendarski" -- Public university in Plovdiv, Bulgaria
Wikipedia - Plum Brandy -- Oil-on-canvas painting by Edouard Manet
Wikipedia - Plus ultra -- Latin motto and the national motto of Spain
Wikipedia - PM-CM-)ricles Pantazis -- Greek painter
Wikipedia - Poblet Abbey -- Monastery in Spain
Wikipedia - Poet on a Mountaintop -- Ming dynasty painting by Shen Zhou
Wikipedia - Poland - The Year 1863 -- Painting by Jan Matejko
Wikipedia - Polar set -- Subset of all points that is bounded by some given point of a dual (in a dual pairing)
Wikipedia - Pol Cassel -- German painter
Wikipedia - Policia Foral -- Regional police of Navarre, Spain.
Wikipedia - Polideportivo El Plantio -- An indoor sporting arena located in Spain
Wikipedia - Poli Marichal -- Puerto Rican illustrator, painter and filmmaker
Wikipedia - Polina Kostiukovich -- Russian pair skater
Wikipedia - Polish anti-religious campaign
Wikipedia - Political campaign
Wikipedia - Political-Social Brigade -- Secret police in Francoist Spain
Wikipedia - Politics of Spain -- Overview of the politics of Spain
Wikipedia - Pollice Verso (GM-CM-)rome) -- 1872 painting by Jean-LM-CM-)on GM-CM-)rome
Wikipedia - Polyploidy -- the condition of having more than two paired sets of chromosomes
Wikipedia - Polyptych -- A painting divided into multiple panels
Wikipedia - Polytechnic University of Catalonia -- Public university in Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain (European Union)
Wikipedia - Pompeo Aldrovandini -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Pompeo Batoni -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Pompeo Borra -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Pompeo Pozzi -- Italian painter and photographer (1817-1890)
Wikipedia - Ponce de Leon family -- Aristocratic family in Leon in Spain
Wikipedia - Ponder's End Lock -- Paired lock on the River Lee Navigation in England
Wikipedia - Poor People's Campaign -- 1968 US anti-poverty campaign
Wikipedia - Pope Paul III with a Nephew -- Painting by Sebastiano del Piombo
Wikipedia - Poppe Damave -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Poppy Flowers -- Painting by Vincent van Gogh
Wikipedia - Popular Front (Spain)
Wikipedia - Portal:Painting
Wikipedia - Portal:Spain
Wikipedia - Portinari Altarpiece -- Painting by Hugo van der Goes
Wikipedia - Port of Barcelona -- Seaport in Spain
Wikipedia - Port of Spain -- Capital of Trinidad and Tobago
Wikipedia - Porto Pi Lighthouse -- Lighthouse on Mallorca, Spain
Wikipedia - Portrait of a Cardinal (Raphael) -- Painting by Raphael
Wikipedia - Portrait of a Couple -- painting by NiccolM-CM-2 dell'Abbate
Wikipedia - Portrait of a Courtesan (Caravaggio) -- Painting by Caravaggio
Wikipedia - Portrait of a Gentleman in a Fur -- Painting by Paolo Veronese
Wikipedia - Portrait of a Gentleman (Lotto) -- c. 1535 painting by Lorenzo Lotto
Wikipedia - Portrait of a Gentleman -- 1513 painting by Altobello Melone
Wikipedia - Portrait of a Gentleman with a Letter -- C. 1540 painting by Moretto da Brescia
Wikipedia - Portrait of a Gentleman with a Lion Paw -- Painting by Lorenzo Lotto
Wikipedia - Portrait of a German Officer -- Early 20th century abstract painting by Marsden Hartley
Wikipedia - Portrait of Agostino Barbarigo -- Painting by Paolo Veronese
Wikipedia - Portrait of a Halberdier -- Painting by Pontormo
Wikipedia - Portrait of a Knight of Malta -- c. 1515 painting by Titian
Wikipedia - Portrait of a Lady (de Crayer) -- Painting by Gaspar de Crayer
Wikipedia - Portrait of a Lady (Klimt) -- Painting by Klimt
Wikipedia - Portrait of a Lady (van der Weyden) -- Oil-on-oak panel painting executed around 1460 by Rogier van der Weyden
Wikipedia - Portrait of Alessandro Manzoni -- Painting by Francesco Hayez
Wikipedia - Portrait of a Man (Antonello da Messina, London) -- Painting by Antonello da Messina
Wikipedia - Portrait of a Man (Baldung) -- Painting by Hans Baldung
Wikipedia - Portrait of a Man (Bol) -- Painting by Ferdinand Bol
Wikipedia - Portrait of a Man (Lotto) -- c. 1545 painting by Lorenzo Lotto
Wikipedia - Portrait of a Man (Moretto) -- 1526 painting by Moretto da Brescia
Wikipedia - Portrait of a Man (Titian, Indianapolis) -- Painting by Titian
Wikipedia - Portrait of a Man with a Glove -- 1650 painting by Frans Hals
Wikipedia - Portrait of Ambroise Vollard (Picasso) -- Painting by Pablo Picasso
Wikipedia - Portrait of Ambroise Vollard with a Cat -- c. 1924 painting by Pierre Bonnard
Wikipedia - Portrait of a Military Commander, possibly Pierre Wautier -- c. 1650 painting by Michaelina Wautier
Wikipedia - Portrait of an African Man -- painting by Jan Mostaert
Wikipedia - Portrait of an Ecclesiastic -- C. 1545 painting by Moretto da Brescia
Wikipedia - Portrait of an Old Man with Gloves -- c. 1543 painting by Lorenzo Lotto
Wikipedia - Portrait of a Nun (Artemisia Gentileschi) -- Painting by Artemisia Gentileschi
Wikipedia - Portrait of an Unknown Gentleman -- Painting by El Greco
Wikipedia - Portrait of a Princess (Pisanello) -- Painting by Pisanello
Wikipedia - Portrait of a Seated Woman -- Painting by Nicolaes Maes
Wikipedia - Portrait of a Sick Man -- Painting by Titian
Wikipedia - Portrait of a Thirty-Seven-Year-Old Gentleman -- c. 1543 painting by Lorenzo Lotto
Wikipedia - Portrait of a Violinist -- Painting by Anne Vallayer-Coster
Wikipedia - Portrait of a Woman as Judith -- Painting by Agostino Carracci
Wikipedia - Portrait of a Woman inspired by Lucretia -- 1533 painting by Lorenzo Lotto
Wikipedia - Portrait of a Woman (Pollaiolo) -- Painting by Antonio del Pollaiolo
Wikipedia - Portrait of a Woman (Sebastiano del Piombo) -- 1512 painting by Sebastiano del Piombo
Wikipedia - Portrait of a Woman (van Vliet) -- Painting by Vliet, Hendrik Cornelisz. van der. 1611/12-1675
Wikipedia - Portrait of a Young Flautist -- Painting by Giovanni Savoldo
Wikipedia - Portrait of a Young Girl (Christus) -- Oil on oak painting by Petrus Christus
Wikipedia - Portrait of a Young Man (Barocci) -- Painting by Federico Barocci
Wikipedia - Portrait of a Young Man (Bellini, Liverpool) -- Oil painting by Giovanni Bellini
Wikipedia - Portrait of a Young Man holding a Medallion -- Painting by Sandro Botticelli
Wikipedia - Portrait of a Young Man (Lotto, Accademia) -- ca. 1530 painting by Lorenzo Lotto
Wikipedia - Portrait of a Young Man (Lotto, GemM-CM-$ldegalerie) -- c. 1526 painting by Lorenzo Lotto
Wikipedia - Portrait of a Young Man (Uccello) -- Painting by Paolo Uccello
Wikipedia - Portrait of a Young Man Wearing Lynx Fur -- 1560 painting by Paolo Veronese
Wikipedia - Portrait of a Young Man with a Book (Lotto) -- c. 1525 painting by Lorenzo Lotto
Wikipedia - Portrait of a Young Woman (Pollaiolo) -- C. 1470 painting
Wikipedia - Portrait of a Young Woman (Raphael, Strasbourg) -- Painting by Raphael
Wikipedia - Portrait of Benito PM-CM-)rez Galdos -- 1894 painting by Joaquin Sorolla
Wikipedia - Portrait of Bianca Ponzoni Anguissola -- Painting by Sofonisba Anguissola
Wikipedia - Portrait of Bindo Altoviti -- Around 1515 painting by Raphael
Wikipedia - Portrait of Bishop Antonius Triest and His Brother Eugene, a Capuchin -- Painting by David Teniers the Younger
Wikipedia - Portrait of Brother Gregorio Belo of Vicenza -- 1547 painting by Lorenzo Lotto
Wikipedia - Portrait of Cardinal Guido Bentivoglio -- Painting by Anthony van Dyck
Wikipedia - Portrait of Cardinal NiccolM-CM-2 Albergati -- Painting by Jan van Eyck
Wikipedia - Portrait of Cardinal Pietro Bembo -- Painting by Titian
Wikipedia - Portrait of Charlotte du Val d'Ognes (Marie-Denise Villers) -- Painting by Marie Denise Villers
Wikipedia - Portrait of Clemenceau (Manet, Paris) -- 1879-80 painting by Edouard Manet
Wikipedia - Portrait of Daniele Barbaro -- Painting by Paolo Veronese
Wikipedia - Portrait of Doge Leonardo Loredan -- Painting by Giovanni Bellin
Wikipedia - Portrait of DoM-CM-1a Antonia Zarate (1805) -- Painting by Francisco de Goya
Wikipedia - Portrait of DoM-CM-1a Antonia Zarate (1810-1811) -- Painting by Francisco Goya
Wikipedia - Portrait of Dora Maar -- Painting by Pablo Picasso
Wikipedia - Portrait of Dorothea Berck -- Painting by Frans Hals
Wikipedia - Portrait of Dr. Dumouchel -- Painting by Marcel Duchamp
Wikipedia - Portrait of Dr. Gachet -- Series of two paintings by Vincent van Gogh
Wikipedia - Portrait of Eleanor of Toledo -- 1540s painting by Bronzino
Wikipedia - Portrait of Elena Anguissola (Southampton) -- Painting by Sofonisba Aguissola
Wikipedia - Portrait of Elisabeth of Valois -- Painting by Sofonisba Anguissola
Wikipedia - Portrait of Febo da Brescia -- 1543-1544 painting by Lorenzo Lotto
Wikipedia - Portrait of Fortunato Martinengo Cesaresco -- 1542 painting by Moretto da Brescia
Wikipedia - Portrait of Georgiana, Duchess of Devonshire -- Painting by Thomas Gainsborough
Wikipedia - Portrait of Giovanni Agostino della Torre and his son NiccolM-CM-2 -- 1515 painting by Lorenzo Lotto
Wikipedia - Portrait of Giovanni della Volta with his Wife and Children -- 1515 painting by Lorenzo Lotto
Wikipedia - Portrait of Humphry Morice -- Painting by Pompeo Batoni
Wikipedia - Portrait of Infanta Isabella Clara Eugenia (Anguissola) -- Painting by Sofonisba Anguissola
Wikipedia - Portrait of Irma Sethe -- Painting by ThM-CM-)o van Rysselberghe
Wikipedia - Portrait of Iseppo da Porto and his son Adriano -- Painting by Paolo Veronese
Wikipedia - Portrait of Johanna de Geer and her Children as Charity -- Painting by Ferdinand Bol
Wikipedia - Portrait of Lady Theresa Shirley -- Painting by Anthony van Dyck
Wikipedia - Portrait of Louis-Auguste Schwiter -- C. 1830 painting by Eugene Delacroix
Wikipedia - Portrait of Luca Pacioli -- Painting by Jacopo de' Barbari
Wikipedia - Portrait of Madame Roulin -- Painting by Paul Gauguin
Wikipedia - Portrait of Maria Antonietta of Tuscany -- 1836 painting by Giuseppe Bezzuoli
Wikipedia - Portrait of Mariana of Austria -- 1652-1653 painting by Velazquez
Wikipedia - Portrait of Maria Portinari -- painting by Hans Memling
Wikipedia - Portrait of Marsilio Cassotti and His Bride Faustina -- 1523 painting by Lorenzo Lotto
Wikipedia - Portrait of Martin Luther (Lucas Cranach the Younger, 1564) -- Painting by Lucas Cranach the Younger
Wikipedia - Portrait of Massimiliano II Stampa -- Painting by Sofonisba Anguissola
Wikipedia - Portrait of Maurice, Prince of Orange -- 1610s painting by Michiel van Mierevelt
Wikipedia - Portrait of Michiel de Ruyter -- Painting by Ferdinand Bol
Wikipedia - Portrait of Minerva Anguissola (Milan) -- Painting by Sofonisba Anguissola
Wikipedia - Portrait of Monsieur and Madame Manet -- Painting by Edouard Manet
Wikipedia - Portrait of Monsieur Pertuiset the Lion-Hunter -- 1881 painting by Edouard Manet
Wikipedia - Portrait of monsignor Giovanni Battista Agucchi -- Painting by Annibale Carracci
Wikipedia - Portrait of Mrs Mary Graham -- 1777 painting by Gainsborough
Wikipedia - Portrait of Mrs. Theodore Atkinson Jr. -- painting by John Singleton Copley
Wikipedia - Portrait of NiccolM-CM-2 Vitelli -- Painting by Luca Signorelli
Wikipedia - Portrait of Omai -- Painting by Sir Joshua Reynolds
Wikipedia - Portrait of Pere Tanguy -- Painting by Vincent van Gogh
Wikipedia - Portrait of Sir David Webster -- Painting by David Hockney
Wikipedia - Portrait of Sir Thomas More (Holbein) -- painting byM-BM- Hans Holbein the Younger
Wikipedia - Portrait of Stephan Geraedts, Husband of Isabella Coymans -- Painting by Frans Hals
Wikipedia - Portrait of StM-CM-)phane MallarmM-CM-) -- Painting by Edouard Manet
Wikipedia - Portrait of Susanna Lunden -- Painting by Peter Paul Rubens
Wikipedia - Portrait of Teresa Manzoni Stampa Borri -- Painting by Francesco Hayez
Wikipedia - Portrait of the Artist's Father -- Painting by Giuseppe Tominz
Wikipedia - Portrait of the Artist's Mother (Van Gogh) -- 1888 painting by Vincent van Gogh
Wikipedia - Portrait of the Duke of Wellington -- Painting by Francisco de Goya
Wikipedia - Portrait of the Marquise de la Solana -- Painting by Francisco de Goya
Wikipedia - Portrait of the Trip Sisters -- Painting by Ferdinand Bol
Wikipedia - Portrait of Vitellozzo Vitelli -- Painting by Luca Signorelli
Wikipedia - Portrait painting -- Genre in painting, where the intent is to depict a specific human subject
Wikipedia - Portuguese Restoration War -- 1640-1688 war between Portugal and Spain
Wikipedia - Port Vell -- Port of Barcelona (Spain)
Wikipedia - Post-chemotherapy cognitive impairment -- Impairment that can result from chemotherapy treatment
Wikipedia - Post-painterly abstraction
Wikipedia - Poul Bille-Holst -- Danish painter
Wikipedia - P. Paiwang Konyak -- Indian politician
Wikipedia - PPG Paints Arena -- Multi-purpose indoor arena in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Wikipedia - Praetorian prefecture of Gaul -- Included Gaul, Upper and Lower Germany, Roman Britain, Spain and Mauretania Tingitana in Africa
Wikipedia - Praga Bridge -- Bridge in Spain
Wikipedia - Praileaitz Cave -- Cave and archaeological site in Spain
Wikipedia - Pralboino Altarpiece -- C. 1540 painting by Moretto da Brescia
Wikipedia - Pramod Kamble -- Indian painter and sculptor from Maharashtra
Wikipedia - Pratiksha Apurv -- Indian painter
Wikipedia - Pratima Devi (painter)
Wikipedia - Prentiss Taylor -- American illustrator, lithographer and painter (1907-1991)
Wikipedia - Preparing for a Fancy Dress Ball -- Painting by William Etty
Wikipedia - Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood -- Group of English painters, poets and critics, founded in 1848
Wikipedia - Presentation in the Temple (Lotto) -- c. 1555 painting by Lorenzo Lotto
Wikipedia - President Barack Obama (painting) -- painting by Kehinde Wiley
Wikipedia - President of the Senate of Spain -- Presiding officer of the Spanish Senate
Wikipedia - Preston Eugene Jackson -- American sculptor and painter
Wikipedia - Pricasso -- Australian painter
Wikipedia - Price's Lost Campaign: The 1864 Invasion of Missouri -- 2011 book by Mark A. Lause
Wikipedia - Priidu Aavik -- Estonian painter
Wikipedia - Prima Paint Corp. v. Flood & Conklin Manufacturing Co. -- 1967 U.S. Supreme Court case on arbitration
Wikipedia - Primeiros Sons do Hino da IndependM-CM-*ncia -- Painting by Augusto Bracet
Wikipedia - Prime Minister of Spain
Wikipedia - Primrose Harley -- British painter and gardener
Wikipedia - Princess Isabella of Parma -- 18th century Archduchess of Austria, Infanta of Spain and Princess of Parma
Wikipedia - Princess of Asturias Awards -- Annual prizes awarded in Spain
Wikipedia - Principal Monuments of France -- 1786 series of paintings by Hubert Robert
Wikipedia - Principal Painter in Ordinary -- First Court painter in Great Britain
Wikipedia - Principe Pio (Madrid Metro) -- Railway station in Spain
Wikipedia - Private spaceflight -- Spaceflight that is conducted and paid for by an entity other than a government agency
Wikipedia - Procesa del Carmen Sarmiento -- Argentine painter
Wikipedia - Proclamation of the German Empire (paintings) -- Paintings by Anton von Werner, 1877-1913
Wikipedia - Professional diving -- Underwater diving where divers are paid for their work
Wikipedia - Professional -- person who is paid to undertake a specialized set of tasks and to complete them for a fee
Wikipedia - Project Candor -- 1953 public relations campaign by U.S. President Dwight D. Eisenhower
Wikipedia - Prometheus Bound (Thomas Cole) -- painting by Thomas Cole
Wikipedia - Prosper Mortou -- French musician and painter
Wikipedia - Prospero Minghetti -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Prostitution in Spain -- Illegal activities in Spain
Wikipedia - Protective laws -- Laws enacted to protect women from hazards or difficulties of paid work
Wikipedia - Protestantism in Spain
Wikipedia - Province of A CoruM-CM-1a -- Province of Spain
Wikipedia - Province of Albacete -- Province of Spain
Wikipedia - Province of Alicante -- Province of Spain
Wikipedia - Province of Almeria -- Province of Spain
Wikipedia - Province of Badajoz -- Province of Spain
Wikipedia - Province of Barcelona -- Province of Spain
Wikipedia - Province of Burgos -- Province of Spain
Wikipedia - Province of Cadiz -- Province of Spain
Wikipedia - Province of Castellon -- Province of Spain
Wikipedia - Province of Ciudad Real -- Province of Spain
Wikipedia - Province of Cordoba (Spain) -- Province of Spain
Wikipedia - Province of Cuenca -- Province of Spain
Wikipedia - Province of Girona -- Province of Spain
Wikipedia - Province of Granada -- Province of Spain
Wikipedia - Province of Guadalajara -- Province of Spain
Wikipedia - Province of Huelva -- Province of Spain
Wikipedia - Province of Huesca -- Province of Spain
Wikipedia - Province of JaM-CM-)n (Spain) -- Province of Spain
Wikipedia - Province of Las Palmas -- Province of Spain
Wikipedia - Province of Leon -- Province of Spain
Wikipedia - Province of Lleida -- Province of Spain
Wikipedia - Province of Lugo -- Province of Spain
Wikipedia - Province of M-CM-^Avila -- Province of Spain
Wikipedia - Province of Ourense -- Province of Spain
Wikipedia - Province of Palencia -- Province of Spain
Wikipedia - Province of Salamanca -- Province of Spain
Wikipedia - Province of Santa Cruz de Tenerife -- Province of Spain
Wikipedia - Province of Segovia -- Province of Spain
Wikipedia - Province of Seville -- Province of Spain
Wikipedia - Province of Soria -- Province of Spain
Wikipedia - Province of Teruel -- Province of Spain
Wikipedia - Province of Tierra Firme -- Spain's New World Empire coastal possessions surrounding the Caribbean Sea and Gulf of Mexico
Wikipedia - Province of Toledo -- Province of Spain
Wikipedia - Province of Valencia -- Province of Spain
Wikipedia - Province of Valladolid -- Province of Spain
Wikipedia - Province of Zamora -- Province of Spain
Wikipedia - Province of Zaragoza -- Province of Spain
Wikipedia - Provinces of Spain
Wikipedia - Prudence Heward -- Canadian painter
Wikipedia - Prudence (painting) -- 1470 painting by Piero del Pollaiolo
Wikipedia - Prudent-Louis Leray -- 19th-century French painter
Wikipedia - Prussian Crusade -- Series of 13th-century campaigns of Roman Catholic crusaders
Wikipedia - Psiax -- Late 6th century BC Attic vase painter during the transition between the black-figure and red-figure styles
Wikipedia - Psychogenic pain
Wikipedia - Psychological pain -- Unpleasant feeling of a psychological nature
Wikipedia - Psychopathy -- Mental disorder characterized by persistent antisocial behavior, impaired empathy and remorse, and bold, disinhibited, and egotistical traits
Wikipedia - Public Health Service Smallpox Eradication Campaign Ribbon -- Decoration of the US Public Health Service
Wikipedia - Public holidays in Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - Public sector -- Tax-paid part of economy
Wikipedia - Puente de San Martin (Toledo) -- Medieval bridge in Toledo, Spain
Wikipedia - Puerta de Alcantara -- Cultural property in Toledo, Spain
Wikipedia - Puerta del Sol -- Square in Madrid, Spain
Wikipedia - Puerto de la Cruz Lighthouse -- Lighthouse on Tenerife, Spain
Wikipedia - Puerto del Rosario Lighthouse -- Lighthouse on Fuerteventura, Spain
Wikipedia - Puerto Hurraco massacre -- Mass murder that occurred in Spain on 26 August 1990
Wikipedia - Puerto Rico on stamps -- Puerto Rico has been on the stamps of Spain and of the United States
Wikipedia - Puget Sound on the Pacific Coast -- 1870 painting by Albert Bierstadt
Wikipedia - Puiatu, Paide Parish -- Village in Estonia
Wikipedia - Pullmantur Cruises -- A cruise line headquartered in Madrid, Spain
Wikipedia - Punch and Judy (dogs) -- pair of dogs who received the Dickin Medal for bravery in service in Israel in 1946
Wikipedia - Punta Abona Lighthouse -- Lighthouse on Tenerife, Spain
Wikipedia - Punta Almina Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in the autonomous city of Ceuta, Spain
Wikipedia - Punta Cumplida Lighthouse -- Lighthouse on La Palma, Spain
Wikipedia - Punta de Anaga Lighthouse -- Lighthouse on Tenerife, Spain
Wikipedia - Punta de Arinaga Lighthouse -- Lighthouse on Gran Canaria, Spain
Wikipedia - Punta del Castillete Lighthouse -- Lighthouse on Gran Canaria, Spain
Wikipedia - Punta Delgada Lighthouse -- Lighthouse on Alegranza, Spain
Wikipedia - Punta del Hidalgo Lighthouse -- Lighthouse on Tenerife, Spain
Wikipedia - Punta de Melenara Lighthouse -- Lighthouse on Gran Canaria, Spain
Wikipedia - Punta de Teno Lighthouse -- Lighthouse on Tenerife, Spain
Wikipedia - Punta Jandia Lighthouse -- Lighthouse on Fuerteventura, Spain
Wikipedia - Punta La Entallada Lighthouse -- Lighthouse on Fuerteventura, Spain
Wikipedia - Punta Lava Lighthouse -- Lighthouse on La Palma, Spain
Wikipedia - Punta MartiM-CM-1o Lighthouse -- Lighthouse on Lobos Island, Spain
Wikipedia - Punta Moscarter Lighthouse -- Lighthouse on Ibiza, Spain
Wikipedia - Punta Nati Lighthouse -- Lighthouse on the island of Menorca, Spain
Wikipedia - Punta Orchilla Lighthouse -- Lighthouse on El Hierro, Spain
Wikipedia - Punta Rasca Lighthouse -- Lighthouse on Tenerife, Spain
Wikipedia - Punta Sardina Lighthouse -- Lighthouse on Gran Canaria, Spain
Wikipedia - Puras de Villafranca -- Village in Spain
Wikipedia - Purita Campos -- Spanish cartoonist, illustrator and painter
Wikipedia - Puri YaM-CM-1ez -- Spanish-Mexican painter
Wikipedia - Pyotr Zakharov-Chechenets -- Russian painter
Wikipedia - Pyromellitamide gels -- Gels used to repair severed muscles and spinal cords in patients
Wikipedia - Qi Baishi -- Chinese painter
Wikipedia - Qin's campaign against the Xiongnu -- Qin's campaign against the Xiongnu (3rd century BC)
Wikipedia - Qiu Ying -- Ming Dynasty 16th-century Chinese professional painter
Wikipedia - Qiu Zhu -- Ming dynasty 16th-century Chinese woman painter
Wikipedia - Queen Elizabeth II (painting) -- Painting of Queen Elizabeth II by Henry Ward
Wikipedia - Queen Letizia of Spain -- Queen consort of Spain
Wikipedia - Quentin Matsys -- Flemish painter in the Early Netherlandish tradition (1466-1530)
Wikipedia - Que Pais E Este (song) -- Song by Brazilian rock band Legiao Urbana
Wikipedia - Quint Buchholz -- German painter, illustrator and author
Wikipedia - Rabah Driassa -- Algerian painter and singer
Wikipedia - Rabih Alameddine -- Lebanese-American painter and writer
Wikipedia - Rachel Berman -- Canadian painter and children's book illustrator
Wikipedia - Rachel Kirkland -- Canadian pair skater
Wikipedia - Rackstraw Downes -- British-born realist painter and author
Wikipedia - Radical (chemistry) -- Atom, molecule, or iron that has an unpaired valence electron; typically highly reactive
Wikipedia - Radio 5 (Spanish radio station) -- All-news national radio station in Spain
Wikipedia - Radio del Principado de Asturias -- Regional radio station in Asturias, Spain
Wikipedia - Radio reading service -- Service that reads printed material aloud for the blind and vision-impaired
Wikipedia - Radium dials -- Instrument dials painted with radium-based paint
Wikipedia - Radium Girls -- Women who died from radium while working as watch painters
Wikipedia - Radomir Reljic -- Serbian painter and professor
Wikipedia - Radoslaw ChruM-EM-^[cinski -- Polish pair skater
Wikipedia - Radu Paisie
Wikipedia - Rae Johnson -- Canadian painter
Wikipedia - Rafael Ballesteros -- Spanish poet living in Malaga, Spain
Wikipedia - Rafael Navarro (painter) -- Spanish painter and sculptor
Wikipedia - Rafael Romero Barros -- Spanish painter
Wikipedia - Rafael TufiM-CM-1o -- Puerto Rican painter
Wikipedia - Rafal Malczewski -- Polish painter and mountaineer
Wikipedia - Raffaele Belliazzi -- Italian sculptor and painter
Wikipedia - Raffaele Ciappa -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Raffaele Contigiani -- Italian architect and painter
Wikipedia - Raffaele Gioia -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Raffaele Maccagnani -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Raffaele Postiglione -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Raffaello del Brescianino -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Ragini Upadhyaya -- Nepalese painting artist
Wikipedia - Ragnhild Kaarbo -- Norwegian painter
Wikipedia - Rag painting -- Form of faux painting using paint thinned out with glaze and old rags to create a lively texture on walls and other surfaces
Wikipedia - Rahanpur -- Town in Chapai Nawabganj District, Rajshahi Division
Wikipedia - Rah Fizelle -- Australian painter
Wikipedia - Raid on Choiseul -- World War II US Marines action in the Solomon Islands campaign
Wikipedia - Raikat -- Princely family in Jalpaiguri, West Bengal, India
Wikipedia - Raimondo Epifanio -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Rainer Fetting -- German painter and sculptor
Wikipedia - Rain (Van Gogh) -- 1889 oil painting by Vincent van Gogh
Wikipedia - Raja Ravi Varma -- Indian painter from Kerala
Wikipedia - Ralfinamide -- Antalgic drug under investigation for the treatment of neuropathic pain
Wikipedia - Ralf Metzenmacher -- German artist, designer and painter
Wikipedia - Ralph Allen (painter, born 1926) -- Canadian painter
Wikipedia - Ralph Allen (painter, born 1952) -- Haitian painter
Wikipedia - Ralph Chapoteau -- Haitian painter
Wikipedia - Ralph Fabri -- American painter
Wikipedia - Ralph Heimans -- Australian painter
Wikipedia - Ralph Lavers -- British painter
Wikipedia - Ralph Nader 2004 presidential campaign -- Independent political campaign for president of the United States
Wikipedia - Ralph Nader 2008 presidential campaign -- Campaign for president of the United States by activist and perennial candidate Ralph Nader
Wikipedia - Ramdas Pai -- Chancellor of Manipal University
Wikipedia - Ramon Atiles y PM-CM-)rez -- Puerto Rican painter
Wikipedia - Rampai Sriyai -- Thai sports shooter
Wikipedia - Ranbir Singh Bisht -- Indian painter
Wikipedia - Ranchos of California -- Land Concessions by Spain and Land Grants by Mexico in the 18th and 19th centuries in California
Wikipedia - Randall Davey -- American painter
Wikipedia - Randolph Hewton -- Canadian painter
Wikipedia - Randy Bloom -- American painter
Wikipedia - Raninagar Jalpaiguri Junction railway station -- Railway station in West Bengal, India
Wikipedia - Raoul Dufy -- French painter (1877-1953)
Wikipedia - Raoul du Gardier -- French painter
Wikipedia - Raoul Hynckes -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Raphael Rooms -- Suite of reception rooms in the Palace of the Vatican painted by Raphael and his workshop between 1509 and 1524
Wikipedia - Raphael -- 16th-century Italian painter and architect
Wikipedia - Ras Akyem -- Barbadian painter
Wikipedia - Rascal Does Not Dream of Bunny Girl Senpai -- Japanese light novel series
Wikipedia - Rashid bin Khalifa Al Khalifa -- Bahraini painter
Wikipedia - Rashid Diab -- Sudanese painter
Wikipedia - Rashid Rana -- Pakistani painter and artist
Wikipedia - Raulian Paiva -- Brazilian MMA fighter
Wikipedia - Raul Mazza -- Argentine painter
Wikipedia - Rav akcesi -- "Rabbi tax" paid by Jewish communities in the Ottoman Empire
Wikipedia - Ravenloft -- Dungeons & Dragons fictional campaign setting
Wikipedia - Ray Albano -- Filipino painter, poet, and curator
Wikipedia - Raymond Bonheur -- French painter
Wikipedia - Raymond Nonnatus -- Saint from Catalonia in Spain
Wikipedia - Raymond Normand -- French painter
Wikipedia - Raymond P. R. Neilson -- American painter
Wikipedia - RBC Canadian Painting Competition -- open competition for emerging Canadian artists
Wikipedia - R. B. More -- Political leader and campaigner
Wikipedia - Real Academia de Bellas Artes de San Fernando -- Spanish art school, museum and gallery in Madrid, Spain
Wikipedia - Real Colegio de Doncellas Nobles -- Building in Toledo, Spain
Wikipedia - Realism (art movement) -- French painting movement
Wikipedia - Real Jardin Botanico de Madrid -- Cultural property in Madrid, Spain
Wikipedia - Reapers Resting in a Wheat Field -- Late 19th century painting by American impressionist John Singer Sargent
Wikipedia - Rebecca Solomon -- British painter (1832-1886)
Wikipedia - RecA -- DNA repair protein
Wikipedia - Red and Orange Streak -- painting by Georgia O'Keeffe
Wikipedia - Redes Natural Park -- Nature park in Spain
Wikipedia - Reding Fountain -- A historic fountain in Malaga, Spain
Wikipedia - Red pill and blue pill -- Dilemma between painful truth and blissful ignorance
Wikipedia - Red Square (painting) -- Painting by Kazimir Malevich
Wikipedia - Red Terror (Ethiopia) -- Political repression campaigned by the Derg in Ethiopia
Wikipedia - Red Terror (Spain) -- Assassinations during the Spanish Civil War
Wikipedia - Reema Bansal -- Indian painter
Wikipedia - Regalia of Spain -- Coat of arms
Wikipedia - Regenerationism -- Intellectual and political movement in late 19th century and early 20th century Spain
Wikipedia - Regidor -- Member of a council of municipalities in Spain and Latin America
Wikipedia - Reginald Higgins -- British painter
Wikipedia - Reginald Marsh (artist) -- American painter
Wikipedia - Reginald Till -- British painter
Wikipedia - Region of Murcia -- Autonomous community and province of Spain
Wikipedia - Reinhard Sebastian Zimmermann -- German painter
Wikipedia - Religion in Spain -- Religion in the Kingdom of Spain
Wikipedia - Religion saved by Spain -- painting by Titian
Wikipedia - Rembrandt -- 17th-century Dutch painter and printmaker
Wikipedia - Reminiscence of the TempyM-EM-^M Era -- 1902 painting by Fujishima Takeji
Wikipedia - Rena Inoue -- Japanese-born American pair skater
Wikipedia - Renato Natali -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Renewable energy in Spain -- Overview of renewable energy in Spain
Wikipedia - RenM-CM-) Auberjonois (painter) -- Swiss artist
Wikipedia - RenM-CM-) Besserve -- French painter
Wikipedia - RenM-CM-) Charles Edmond His -- 19th-20th century French painter
Wikipedia - RenM-CM-) Gilsi -- Swiss painter
Wikipedia - RenM-CM-) Magritte -- Belgian painter
Wikipedia - RenM-CM-) Margotton -- French painter
Wikipedia - RenM-CM-) Moreu -- French painter
Wikipedia - RenM-CM-) Roussel -- French painter
Wikipedia - RenM-CM-)-Xavier Prinet -- French painter
Wikipedia - Repairman Jack -- Fictional character by F. Paul Wilson
Wikipedia - Re-Pair -- Grammar-based compression algorithm
Wikipedia - Repose (painting) -- C. 1871 painting by Edouard Manet
Wikipedia - Republican Alternative (Spain) -- Left-wing political party in Spain
Wikipedia - Republican Left (Spain) -- Spanish political party
Wikipedia - Reservoir (Rauschenberg) -- Painting by Robert Rauschenberg
Wikipedia - Residential Lead-Based Paint Hazard Reduction Act -- 1992 United States measure
Wikipedia - Rest on the Flight into Egypt (Annibale Carracci) -- Painting by Annibale Carracci
Wikipedia - Rest on the Flight into Egypt (Caravaggio) -- Painting by Caravaggio
Wikipedia - Rest on the Flight into Egypt (David, Museu Nacional de Arte Antiga) -- C. 1510 painting by Gerard David
Wikipedia - Restoration (Spain) -- Period in the history of Spain, 1874-1931
Wikipedia - Resurrection (Annibale Carracci) -- Painting by Annibale Carracci
Wikipedia - Resurrection of Christ (Bellini) -- Painting by Giovanni Bellini
Wikipedia - Retail politics -- Type of political campaigning focused on direct interaction
Wikipedia - Retrato de Luis MuM-CM-1oz Marin -- Painting by Francisco Rodon
Wikipedia - Reus Airport bombing -- Terrorist attack in Catalonia, Spain on 21 July, 1996
Wikipedia - Reverse Cowgirl (song) -- 2010 song performed by T-Pain
Wikipedia - Revolt of the Comuneros -- 1520 rebellion in Spain
Wikipedia - Revolver (T-Pain album) -- 2011 album by T-Pain
Wikipedia - Revolving Door (advertisement) -- Campaign ad
Wikipedia - Rex Whistler -- British painter and illustrator
Wikipedia - RezsM-EM-^Q Balint (painter) -- Hungarian artist
Wikipedia - Rhina Espaillat -- American poet
Wikipedia - Rhine campaign of 1795 -- 1790s military campaign in Western Germany
Wikipedia - Rhine campaign of 1796 -- Last campaign of the War of the First Coalition, part of the French Revolutionary Wars
Wikipedia - Riad Beyrouti -- Syrian painter
Wikipedia - Ria of Ferrol -- Coastal inlet in Galicia, Spain
Wikipedia - Ribera, M-CM-^Alava -- Abandoned village in the province of M-CM-^Alava, Spain
Wikipedia - Ricardo Acevedo Bernal -- Colombian painter
Wikipedia - Ricardo Balaca -- Spanish painter and illustrator
Wikipedia - Ric Garcia -- Painter (b. 1968)
Wikipedia - Richard Bishop (painter) -- American painter
Wikipedia - Richard Brydges Beechey -- Anglo-Irish painter and admiral
Wikipedia - Richard Burnside -- American painter
Wikipedia - Richard Diebenkorn -- American painter
Wikipedia - Richard Dobbs Spaight Jr. -- 27th governor of North Carolina
Wikipedia - Richard Dobbs Spaight -- 8th governor of North Carolina
Wikipedia - Richard Earle (painter) -- American painter
Wikipedia - Richard Foster (painter) -- Portrait painter from the United Kingdom
Wikipedia - Richard Friese -- German painter
Wikipedia - Richard Gilkey -- American painter
Wikipedia - Richard Gorman -- Canadian painter
Wikipedia - Richard Jeranian -- Armenian painter
Wikipedia - Richard Lahey -- American painter
Wikipedia - Richard Lawrence (failed assassin) -- 19th-century American house painter and failed presidential assassin
Wikipedia - Richard Maguet -- French painter
Wikipedia - Richard Murphy (tax campaigner) -- British accountant and tax campaigner
Wikipedia - Richard Murry -- British painter
Wikipedia - Richard Orpen -- Irish architect and painter
Wikipedia - Richard Rothwell -- Irish portrait and genre painter
Wikipedia - Richard Tassel -- French painter
Wikipedia - Richard Throll -- German painter and designer
Wikipedia - Richard Winkler -- Swedish painter and sculptor
Wikipedia - Richard Zimmermann -- German painter
Wikipedia - Rick Amor -- Australian artist and figurative painter
Wikipedia - Ridda wars -- Series of military campaigns (632-633 CE) launched by Caliph Abu Bakr against rebel Arabian tribes soon after Muhammad's death; ended with Caliphate victory
Wikipedia - Riddoch syndrome -- Type of visual impairment
Wikipedia - Rie de Balbian Verster-Bolderhey -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Rif War -- 1920-1927 war between Spain and Berber tribes of Morocco
Wikipedia - Right and Left -- 1909 painting by Winslow Homer
Wikipedia - Rights of Man -- Set of essays by Thomas Paine
Wikipedia - Rikizo Takata -- Japanese painter
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Wikipedia - Rik Wouters -- Belgian painter and sculptor
Wikipedia - Rimantas M-EM- ulskis -- Lithuanian sculptor and painter
Wikipedia - Rina Lazo -- Guatemalan-Mexican painter
Wikipedia - Rinaldo and Armida -- Painting by Carracci
Wikipedia - Rinus van den Bosch -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Rio Tinto Pier (Huelva, Spain) -- Former commercial pier or wharf in Spain
Wikipedia - Rio Tinto (river) -- River in Spain
Wikipedia - Rista Vukanovic -- Serbian painter
Wikipedia - Rita Blitt -- American painter, sculptor and filmmaker
Wikipedia - Rita Briansky -- Canadian painter
Wikipedia - Ritsudo Kobayashi -- Japanese painter
Wikipedia - River Landscape (Carracci) -- Painting series by Annibale Carracci
Wikipedia - River Landscape (Salomon van Ruysdael) -- Painting by Salomon van Ruysdael
Wikipedia - River View with Rocks -- Painting by Paul Bril
Wikipedia - RM-CM-)gime sans pain -- 1984 film
Wikipedia - RM-CM-)my Landeau -- French painter
Wikipedia - ROA Time -- Official time of Spain
Wikipedia - Robelis Despaigne -- Cuban taekwondo practitioner
Wikipedia - Robert Angeloch -- American painter
Wikipedia - Robert Auer -- Croatian Secession painter.
Wikipedia - Robert Baca -- Croatian sculptor and painter
Wikipedia - Robert Ballagh -- Irish artist, painter and designer
Wikipedia - Robert Baratz -- American dentist and campaigner against health fraud
Wikipedia - Robert Bateman (painter) -- Canadian naturalist and painter
Wikipedia - Robert Bechtle -- American painter
Wikipedia - Robert Beck (painter) -- American painter
Wikipedia - Robert BerM-CM-)ny -- Hungarian painter
Wikipedia - Robert Blatchford -- English socialist campaigner and journalist
Wikipedia - Robert Byssz -- Hungarian painter
Wikipedia - Robert Czako Mural -- A Mural painting
Wikipedia - Robert Davison (figure skater) -- Canadian former competitive pair skater
Wikipedia - Robert Delaunay -- French painter
Wikipedia - Robert Eberle -- German painter
Wikipedia - Robert Elibekyan -- Armenian painter
Wikipedia - Robert Feintuch -- American painter
Wikipedia - Robert Fernier -- French painter
Wikipedia - Robert Hammerstiel -- Austrian painter and engraver
Wikipedia - Robert Jacks -- Australian painter, sculptor and printmaker (1943-2014)
Wikipedia - Robert Janitz -- German painter
Wikipedia - Robert Kunkel -- German pair skater
Wikipedia - Robert Lindneux -- American painter
Wikipedia - Robert Matthew Sully -- American portrait painter
Wikipedia - Roberto d'Azeglio -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Roberto Donis -- Mexican painter
Wikipedia - Roberto Ferri -- Italian artist and painter
Wikipedia - Roberto Melli -- Italian painter and sculptor
Wikipedia - Roberto Montanari -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Robert Paige -- American actor, newscaster
Wikipedia - Robert Paul -- Canadian pair skater
Wikipedia - Robert Peake the Elder -- English painter (c. 1551-1619)
Wikipedia - Robert Philipp -- American painter
Wikipedia - Robert Rauschenberg -- American painter and graphic artist
Wikipedia - Robert Reid (painter)
Wikipedia - Robert Sowers -- 20th century American painter and scholar
Wikipedia - Robert T. Paine (zoologist) -- American zoologist
Wikipedia - Robert Walker Macbeth -- Scottish painter, etcher and watercolourist
Wikipedia - Robert Williams (artist) -- American painter and cartoonist
Wikipedia - Robert W. Olszewski -- American painter and miniatures artist
Wikipedia - Robert Zimmermann (painter) -- German painter
Wikipedia - Rob Graafland -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Robin Cowan -- Canadian former pair skater
Wikipedia - Robin Eley -- Australian hyperrealist painter
Wikipedia - Robin Szolkowy -- German pair skater
Wikipedia - Robyn Kahukiwa -- New Zealand painter
Wikipedia - Roca dels Bous (archaeological site) -- Archaeological site in northern Spain
Wikipedia - Roca dels Moros -- Cave and archaeological site in Spain
Wikipedia - Rocallarga -- Mountain in Catalonia, Spain
Wikipedia - Rockne Brubaker -- American pair skater
Wikipedia - Rocky De La Fuente 2016 presidential campaign -- Third-party campaign for President of the United States
Wikipedia - Rocky Landscape with a Waterfall -- Painting by Joos de Momper
Wikipedia - Rocky Marval -- American pair skater
Wikipedia - Roderic O'Connor (painter) -- American painter
Wikipedia - Rod Milgate -- Australian painter and playwright
Wikipedia - Rodney Charman -- British painter
Wikipedia - Rodney Thomson -- American painter
Wikipedia - Rodolfo Abularach -- Guatemalan painter and printmaker
Wikipedia - Rodolfo Zagert -- Argentinian painter and architect
Wikipedia - Rodolphe Topffer -- Swiss teacher, author, painter, cartoonist, and caricature artist
Wikipedia - Roelant Savery -- Flemish-born Dutch Golden Age painter
Wikipedia - Roelof Frankot -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Rogan painting -- Art of cloth printing practiced in the Kutch District of Gujarat, India
Wikipedia - Rogelio Polesello -- Argentinian sculptor and painter
Wikipedia - Roger Chaput -- French musician, painter and banjoist
Wikipedia - Roger de la Corbiere -- French painter
Wikipedia - Roger Lau -- American political campaign manager
Wikipedia - Roger Nivelt -- French painter
Wikipedia - Roger Van de Wouwer -- Belgian painter and illustrator
Wikipedia - Rogier van der Weyden -- 15th-century Early Netherlandish painter
Wikipedia - RogM-CM-)rio Sampaio -- Brazilian judoka
Wikipedia - Rohullah Nikpai -- Afghan-Hazara Taekwondo practitioner
Wikipedia - Rokeby Venus -- Painting by Diego Velazquez
Wikipedia - Roland Blain -- Haitian painter
Wikipedia - Roland Clark (painter) -- American painter
Wikipedia - Roland Dorcely -- Haitian painter
Wikipedia - Roland Topor -- French writer, screenwriter, actor and painter
Wikipedia - Rolf Iseli -- Swiss painter
Wikipedia - Rolf Knie -- Swiss painter
Wikipedia - Roman Campagna (painting) -- Painting by Thomas Cole
Wikipedia - Roman Carts -- Painting by Giovanni Fattori
Wikipedia - Roman Catafalque for Philip IV of Spain -- 17th-century Italian work
Wikipedia - Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Valencia in Spain
Wikipedia - Roman Catholic Diocese of Zamora in Spain
Wikipedia - Roman Catholicism in Spain
Wikipedia - Roman Charity (Rubens) -- Painting by Peter Paul Rubens
Wikipedia - Romanism (painting)
Wikipedia - Roman Kochanowski -- Polish painter
Wikipedia - Roman Kramsztyk -- Polish painter
Wikipedia - Roman Pleshkov -- Russian pair skater
Wikipedia - Roman Talan -- Ukrainian pair skater
Wikipedia - Roman villa of Can Llauder -- Cultural property in Mataro, Spain
Wikipedia - Roman Widow (Rossetti) -- Painting by Dante Gabriel Rossetti
Wikipedia - Rombout van Troyen -- 17th century Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Romeria -- Annual Catholic pilgrimage in Spain or Portugal
Wikipedia - Ronald Davis -- American painter
Wikipedia - Ronald Gray (painter) -- British painter
Wikipedia - Ronald Kauffman -- American pair skater
Wikipedia - Ronald Kidd -- British civil rights campaigner
Wikipedia - Ronald Ophuis -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Ronda de Atocha -- Thoroughfare in Madrid, Spain
Wikipedia - Ron Martin (artist) -- Canadian painter
Wikipedia - Ron Moppett -- Canadian painter
Wikipedia - Ronnie Landfield -- American abstract painter
Wikipedia - Ron Paul 1988 presidential campaign -- Presidential campaign of Libertarian Party's candidate in 1988
Wikipedia - Ron Paul 2012 presidential campaign
Wikipedia - Room in New York -- Painting by Edward Hopper
Wikipedia - Roque Ponce -- Spanish landscape painter
Wikipedia - Roquetas Pidgin Spanish -- Pidgin Spanish language spoken by immigrants in Southern Spain.
Wikipedia - Rosa Bonheur -- French painter and sculptor (1822-1899)
Wikipedia - Rosalba Carriera -- 18th-century Venetian Rococo portrait painter
Wikipedia - Rosalie Sully -- American painter
Wikipedia - Rosalind Bengelsdorf -- American painter
Wikipedia - Rosalind Rusbridge -- Welsh teacher and peace campaigner
Wikipedia - Rosario Cabrera -- Mexican painter
Wikipedia - Rosa Schweninger -- Austrian painter
Wikipedia - Rosemarie Beck -- American painter
Wikipedia - Rose-Marie Desruisseau -- Haitian painter
Wikipedia - Rosie Nangala Fleming -- Warlpiri painter and sculptor
Wikipedia - Rosina Cox Boardman -- American painter
Wikipedia - Rossana Campo -- Italian writer and painter
Wikipedia - Ross Dickinson -- American painter
Wikipedia - Rossello di Jacopo Franchi -- Florentine Renaissance painter
Wikipedia - Ross Perot 1992 presidential campaign -- United States presidential campaign
Wikipedia - Ross Perot 1996 presidential campaign -- Second presidential campaign of Ross Perot
Wikipedia - Rototom Sunsplash -- Annual reggae festival in Spain
Wikipedia - Rovelli Altarpiece -- 1539 painting by Moretto da Brescia
Wikipedia - Rowing at the 1900 Summer Olympics - Men's coxed pair -- Rowing at the Olympics
Wikipedia - Rowland Hibbard -- English watercolor painter
Wikipedia - Roxy Paine -- American painter and sculptor widely
Wikipedia - Royal Bridge (Badajoz) -- Bridge in Spain
Wikipedia - Royal Huisman -- Dutch shipyard that builds and repairs sailing yachts
Wikipedia - Royal Mint (Spain) -- Spanish public business entity
Wikipedia - Royal Pains -- American medical comedy-drama television series
Wikipedia - Roy Beddington -- British painter
Wikipedia - Royole FlexPai -- Foldable Android smartphone by Royole
Wikipedia - Rubbin Off the Paint -- Single
Wikipedia - Ruben Blommaert -- Belgian-born German pair skater
Wikipedia - Ruben De Pra -- Italian retired pair skater
Wikipedia - Rubens Peale -- American museum administrator and painter
Wikipedia - Rubens Peale with a Geranium -- painting by Rembrandt Peale
Wikipedia - Ruby Lindsay -- Australian illustrator and painter
Wikipedia - Ruby Loftus Screwing a Breech-ring -- Painting by Laura Knight
Wikipedia - Ruby Mazur -- American painter
Wikipedia - Ruby slippers -- Magical pair of shoes worn by Dorothy Gale as played by Judy Garland in the 1939 film The Wizard of Oz
Wikipedia - Rucellai Madonna -- 1285 painting by Duccio di Buoninsegna
Wikipedia - Rudi Johner -- Swiss pair skater
Wikipedia - Rudi Troger -- German painter
Wikipedia - Rudolf Alfred Hoger -- Austrian painter
Wikipedia - Rudolf Bottger -- Austrian painter
Wikipedia - Rudolf Jettmar -- Austrian painter and printmaker
Wikipedia - Rudolf Koller -- 19th-century Swiss painter
Wikipedia - Rudolf Koselitz -- German painter (1861-1948)
Wikipedia - Rudolf Otto (painter) -- German painter
Wikipedia - Rudy Rahme -- Lebanese sculptor and painter
Wikipedia - Rue de la ChaussM-CM-)e in Argenteuil -- 1872 painting by Alfred Sisley
Wikipedia - Ruins of Eldena Abbey in the Riesengebirge -- Painting by Caspar David Friedrich
Wikipedia - Rui Paes -- British painter
Wikipedia - Rumyana Spasova -- Bulgarian pair skater
Wikipedia - Rungkao Wor.Sanprapai -- Muay Thai fighter
Wikipedia - Rungkit Wor.Sanprapai -- Muay Thai fighter (b. 2002)
Wikipedia - Rupelo Formation -- Geologic formation in Spain
Wikipedia - Rupert Bunny -- Australian painter
Wikipedia - Rushern Baker IV -- American painter
Wikipedia - Ruskin Spear -- British painter
Wikipedia - Russell Reeve -- British painter
Wikipedia - Russian bounty program -- Alleged Russian military program of paid assassinations
Wikipedia - Russian interference in the 2016 Brexit referendum -- Alleged foreign meddling campaign
Wikipedia - Russian Winter -- winter in Russia in the context of military campaigns
Wikipedia - Rustam Mustafayev -- Azerbaijani scenic designer and painter
Wikipedia - Rutger von Langerfeld -- Dutch mathematician, painter, and architect
Wikipedia - Ruth Abrams (artist) -- Jewish-American painter
Wikipedia - Ruth Peabody -- American painter
Wikipedia - Ruth Sobotka -- Austrian-born American dancer, costume designer, art director, painter, and actress
Wikipedia - Ryan Arnold -- Canadian pair skater
Wikipedia - Ryokichi Sakai -- Japanese painter
Wikipedia - Ryom Tae-ok -- North Korean pair skater
Wikipedia - Ryszard Morawski -- Polish painter
Wikipedia - Ryusei Furukawa -- Japanese painter
Wikipedia - Sabina Imaikina -- Russian pair skater
Wikipedia - Sabina Teichman -- American painter
Wikipedia - Sabine BaeM-CM-^_ -- German pair skater
Wikipedia - Sabine Funke -- German painter
Wikipedia - Sabrina Lefrancois -- French pair skater
Wikipedia - Saburo Kurata -- Japanese painter
Wikipedia - Sack of Santiago de Compostela -- Viking plunder of Santiago in Spain in 1968.
Wikipedia - Sack (wine) -- Historical term for white fortified wine from Spain or the Canary Islands
Wikipedia - Sacred Conversation (Bellini, Madrid, 1505-1510) -- Painting by Giovanni Bellini
Wikipedia - Sacrificial Scene -- 16th c. painting by Pontormo
Wikipedia - Sacromonte -- neighbourhood of Granada, Spain
Wikipedia - Sad Hill Cemetery -- film location, Spain
Wikipedia - Sadhu Aliyur -- Indian painter
Wikipedia - Sad Inheritance -- 1899 painting by Joaquin Sorolla
Wikipedia - Sadopaideia -- Pornographic novel published in 1907
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Wikipedia - Safety for Sarah movement -- Social media movement & campaign for safety on film sets, in memory of Sarah Jones
Wikipedia - Sahibdin -- Indian miniature painter
Wikipedia - Saint Agapius of Spain
Wikipedia - Saint Anthony Abbot (Correggio) -- Painting by Antonio da Correggio
Wikipedia - Saint Anthony of Padua holding the Infant Jesus -- painting by Bernardo Strozzi
Wikipedia - Saint Anthony Preaching to the Fish -- Painting of Anthony of Padua by Paolo Veronese
Wikipedia - Saint Apollonia (Artemisia Gentileschi) -- Painting by Artemisia Gentileschi
Wikipedia - Saint Catherine (Caravaggio) -- Painting by Caravaggio
Wikipedia - Saint Catherine of Siena Receiving the Stigmata -- Painting by Domenico Beccafumi
Wikipedia - Saint Cecilia (Poussin) -- 1628 painting by Nicolas Poussin
Wikipedia - Saint Christopher Carrying the Christ Child -- Painting by Hieronymus Bosch
Wikipedia - Saint Didacus of Alcala Presenting Juan de Herrera's Son to Christ -- Painting by Annibale Carracci
Wikipedia - Saint Dominic (Titian) -- C. 1565 painting by Tiziano Vecellio
Wikipedia - Saint Dorothy (painting) -- Painting by Sebastiano del Piombo
Wikipedia - Saint Francis Receiving the Stigmata (Gentile da Fabriano) -- c. 1420 painting by Gentile da Fabriano
Wikipedia - Saint Francis Receiving the Stigmata (Giotto) -- panel painting by Giotto
Wikipedia - Saint Francis Receiving the Stigmata (van Eyck) -- Two unsigned paintings completed around 1428-1432 attributed to Jan van Eyck
Wikipedia - Saint Francis with the Blood of Christ -- Painting by Carlo Crivelli
Wikipedia - Saint George and the Princess (Cicognara) -- Painting by Antonio Cicognara
Wikipedia - Saint George Hare -- Irish painter
Wikipedia - Saint George's Day in Spain
Wikipedia - Saint Isidore Cemetery -- Cemetery of Madrid, Spain
Wikipedia - Saint James and Saint Lucy Predella -- Series of paintings by Fra Angelico
Wikipedia - Saint Jerome Hears the Trumpet of the Last Judgment -- painting by Jacques-Louis David
Wikipedia - Saint Jerome in Penitence (Lotto, Allentown) -- 1515 painting by Lorenzo Lotto
Wikipedia - Saint Jerome in Penitence (Lotto, Paris) -- c. 1506 painting by Lorenzo Lotto
Wikipedia - Saint Jerome in Penitence (Lotto, Rome) -- c. 1509 painting by Lorenzo Lotto
Wikipedia - Saint Jerome in Penitence (Lotto, Sibiu) -- c. 1513 painting by Lorenzo Lotto
Wikipedia - Saint Jerome in the Desert (Pinturicchio) -- Painting by Pinturicchio in the Walters Art Museum, Baltimore
Wikipedia - Saint Jerome in the Wilderness (Leonardo) -- Unfinished painting by Leonardo da Vinci
Wikipedia - Saint Joachim Reading a Book -- 1650s painting by Michaelina Wautier
Wikipedia - Saint Joachim (Wautier) -- 1650s painting by Michaelina Wautier
Wikipedia - Saint John the Baptist as a Boy (Andrea del Sarto) -- Painting by Andrea del Sarto
Wikipedia - Saint John the Baptist as a Boy (Raphael) -- Painting by Raphael
Wikipedia - Saint John the Baptist as a Boy (Wautier) -- 1650s painting by Michaelina Wautier
Wikipedia - Saint John the Baptist (Leonardo) -- Painting by Leonardo da Vinci
Wikipedia - Saint John the Baptist Preaching -- Painting of John the Baptist by Paolo Veronese
Wikipedia - Saint John the Evangelist (Wautier) -- 1650s painting by Michaelina Wautier
Wikipedia - Saint Joseph (Wautier) -- 1650 painting by Michaelina Wautier
Wikipedia - Saint Lawrence (Zurbaran) -- Painting by Francisco de Zurbaran
Wikipedia - Saint Lucy Before the Judge -- 1532 painting by Lorenzo Lotto
Wikipedia - Saint Luke Drawing the Virgin -- Painting by Rogier van der Weyden
Wikipedia - Saint Margaret of Antioch (painting) -- Painting by Annibale Carracci
Wikipedia - Saint Matthew and the Angel (Savoldo) -- Painting by Girolamo Savoldo
Wikipedia - Saint Michael Defeats the Rebel Angels (Beccafumi) -- Painting by Domenico di Pace Beccafumi
Wikipedia - Saint Patrick, Bishop of Ireland -- Painting by Giambattista Tiepolo
Wikipedia - Saint-Paul Asylum, Saint-RM-CM-)my (Van Gogh series) -- Series of paintings by Vincent van Gogh
Wikipedia - Saint Roch Giving Alms -- Painting by Annibale Carracci
Wikipedia - Saint Roch Interceding with the Virgin for the Plague-Stricken -- Painting by Jacques-Louis David
Wikipedia - Saint Sebastian and the Angel -- Painting by Carlo Bononi
Wikipedia - Saint Stephen (Giotto) -- painting by Giotto
Wikipedia - Sait Maden -- Turkish translator, poet, painter and graphic designer
Wikipedia - Sakaki Hyakusen -- Japanese painter
Wikipedia - Sakuichi Fukazawa -- Japanese painter
Wikipedia - Salah Taher -- Egyptian painter
Wikipedia - Salahuddin Ahmed (Chapai Nawabganj politician) -- Bangladeshi politician
Wikipedia - Salahuddin campaign
Wikipedia - Salam Salamzade -- Azerbaijani painter
Wikipedia - Salceda de Caselas -- municipality in Galicia, Spain
Wikipedia - Sales tax -- Tax paid to a governing body for the sales of certain goods and services
Wikipedia - Sally Caldwell Fisher -- American painter
Wikipedia - Sally Smart -- Australian painter
Wikipedia - Salme ships -- Pair of ship burials
Wikipedia - Salome Dancing before Herod -- 1876 oil painting by Gustave Moreau
Wikipedia - Salome (Titian) -- Painting by Titian in Rome
Wikipedia - Salome with the Head of John the Baptist (Sebastiano del Piombo) -- Painting by Sebastiano del Piombo
Wikipedia - Salomon Landolt -- Swiss painter
Wikipedia - Saltillo Mansion -- 1943 painting by Edward Hopper
Wikipedia - Salut les copains (magazine) -- Defunct French music magazine
Wikipedia - Salvatore Fergola -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Salvatore Guidotti -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Salvatore Pais -- American physicist, aerospace engineer, and inventor
Wikipedia - Salvatore Pinto -- American painter
Wikipedia - Salvatore Postiglione -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Salvator Mundi (Leonardo) -- Painting by Leonardo da Vinci
Wikipedia - Salvator Mundi (Palma Vecchio) -- Painiting by Jacopo Negretti (aka Palma Vecchio)
Wikipedia - Salvator Rosa -- Italian painter, poet and printmaker
Wikipedia - Sam Dillemans -- Belgian painter
Wikipedia - Same-sex marriage in Spain -- Legal history of same-sex marriage in Spain
Wikipedia - Samuel Cooper -- 17th-century English painter of miniatures
Wikipedia - Samuel Dirksz van Hoogstraten -- Painter and writer from the Northern Netherlands
Wikipedia - Samuel Forde -- Irish painter
Wikipedia - Samuel Jonsson -- Icelandic painter (1884-1969)
Wikipedia - Samuel Morse -- American inventor and painter (1791-1872)
Wikipedia - Samuel Prophask Asamoah -- Painter (b. 1981)
Wikipedia - Samuel S. Carr -- American painter
Wikipedia - Samuel Theobald (painter) -- American painter
Wikipedia - Samuel Tilden 1876 presidential campaign -- Presidential campaign
Wikipedia - San Antonio de los Alemanes -- Cultural property in Madrid, Spain
Wikipedia - San Antonio Island -- Small island in the Ebro Delta, Spain
Wikipedia - San Bernardino Altarpiece -- 1521 painting by Lorenzo Lotto
Wikipedia - San Bernardo railway station -- Railway station in Seville, Spain
Wikipedia - San Carlos del Valle -- Municipality in Castile-La Mancha, Spain
Wikipedia - San Cristobal Lighthouse -- Lighthouse on La Gomera, Spain
Wikipedia - San Domenico di Pesaro Altarpiece -- Painting by Girolamo Savoldo
Wikipedia - Sandor Brodszky -- Hungarian painter
Wikipedia - Sandor Ziffer -- Hungarian painter
Wikipedia - Sandpainting -- Form of art creation
Wikipedia - Sandra Blow -- English abstract painter
Wikipedia - Sandra Brown (campaigner) -- Scottish campaigner
Wikipedia - Sandra Coney -- NZ politician, writer, feminist, historian, and women's health campaigner
Wikipedia - Sandra Paintin-Paul -- Australian biathlete
Wikipedia - Sandro Botticelli -- 15th and 16th-century Italian Renaissance painter
Wikipedia - Sandro Nocentini -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Sandviksfjorden -- Painting by Hans Frederik Gude
Wikipedia - San Gallo Annunciation -- Painting by Andrea del Sarto in the Palazzo Pitti
Wikipedia - San Giorgio Maggiore (Monet series) -- Series of paintings by Claude Monet
Wikipedia - Sang Kee Paik -- South Korean taekwondo practitioner
Wikipedia - San Gottardo Altarpiece -- c. 1520 painting by Giovanni Cariani
Wikipedia - San Lesmes Abad -- Cultural property in Burgos, Spain
Wikipedia - San Lucchese Madonna -- Painting by the Master of San Lucchese
Wikipedia - San Martino Nativity -- Painting by Domenico di Pace Beccafumi
Wikipedia - San Patricio Bridge -- Aqueduct-bridge in Spain
Wikipedia - San Prudencio festival -- Saint's feast day celebration in Spain
Wikipedia - San Sebastian International Film Festival -- Annual film festival held in Donostia-San Sebastian, Spain
Wikipedia - San Sebastian -- City in the Basque Autonomous Community, Spain
Wikipedia - Sansepolcro Deposition -- 1528 painting by Rosso Fiorentino
Wikipedia - Santa Barbara Castle -- Castle in Alicante, Spain
Wikipedia - Santa Barbara, Madrid -- Roman Catholic church in central Madrid, Spain
Wikipedia - Santa Barraza -- American mixed-media artist and painter
Wikipedia - Santa Cecilia -- Municipality and town in Burgos, Castile and Leon, Spain
Wikipedia - Santa Cruz, Molledo -- Town in the municipality of Molledo in Cantabria, Spain
Wikipedia - Santa Eulalia, Morcin -- Parish in Morcin, Spain
Wikipedia - Santa Maria de M-CM-^Svila -- former 12th-century Cistercian monastery in Trillo, Spain
Wikipedia - Sant Antoni, Barcelona -- Human settlement in Eixample, Barcelona, Barcelones, Spain
Wikipedia - Sant Antoni de Benaixeve -- Village in Spain
Wikipedia - Santas Anonymous -- Annual charitable campaign in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada
Wikipedia - Santa Trinita Maesta -- Painting by Cimabue
Wikipedia - Sante Peranda -- Italian painter (1566-1638)
Wikipedia - Sant'Eufemia Altarpiece -- C. 1530 painting by Moretto da Brescia
Wikipedia - Santiago de Compostela Cathedral -- Roman Catholic cathedral of the archdiocese of Santiago de Compostela in Galicia, Spain
Wikipedia - Santiago Martinez Delgado -- Colombian painter, sculptor, art historian and writer (1906-1954)
Wikipedia - SantimamiM-CM-1e -- Cave and archaeological site with prehistoric paintings in Spain
Wikipedia - Santo Spirito Altarpiece -- 1521 painting by Lorenzo Lotto
Wikipedia - Santo Tomas de las Ollas -- Hermitage in Spain
Wikipedia - Santo Zago -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Sanya Nakade -- Japanese painter
Wikipedia - San Zeno Altarpiece (Mantegna) -- Triptych by painter Andrea Mantegna
Wikipedia - Sapaia -- Genus of beetles
Wikipedia - Sappho Painter
Wikipedia - Sara Blomfield -- Irish Baha'i and rights campaigner
Wikipedia - Sarah Abitbol -- French pair skater
Wikipedia - Sarah Baker (painter) -- American painter
Wikipedia - Sarah Clarke (nun) -- Irish nun and civil rights campaigner
Wikipedia - Sarah Cole -- American landscape painter from the 19th Century
Wikipedia - Sarah Crowner -- American painter
Wikipedia - Sarah Feng -- American pair skater
Wikipedia - Sarah Jane Kirk -- New Zealand temperance campaigner
Wikipedia - Sarah Sanders -- American campaign manager and political adviser
Wikipedia - Sarah Stein -- American art collector and painter
Wikipedia - Sara Sampaio -- Portuguese model and actress
Wikipedia - Sara Shamma -- Syrian painter
Wikipedia - Saratoga campaign -- Military campaign during the American Revolutionary war
Wikipedia - Sara Ulrik -- Danish flower painter
Wikipedia - Sarteano Annunciation -- Painting by Domenico di Pace Beccafumi
Wikipedia - Saspol Caves -- Painted cave temples
Wikipedia - Sassnitz Campaign -- 18th-century military campaign
Wikipedia - Sasura Bada Paisawala -- 2004 Indian Bhojpuri-language film
Wikipedia - Sathyapal T. A -- Indian painter
Wikipedia - Saturn Devouring His Son -- Painting by Francisco Goya
Wikipedia - Sava M-EM- umanovic -- Serbian painter
Wikipedia - Saxon Wars -- campaigns and insurrections of 772-804
Wikipedia - Saying Grace (Chardin) -- Painting by Jean SimM-CM-)on Chardin
Wikipedia - Scene at the Signing of the Constitution of the United States -- 1940 painting by Howard Chandler Christy
Wikipedia - Scene from Shakespeare's The Tempest -- c.M-bM-^@M-^I1736-1738 painting by William Hogarth
Wikipedia - Scenes from the Life of Noah -- C. 1440 paintings by Paolo Uccello
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Wikipedia - School of Paris -- loose term for painters and artistic movements based in Paris during the early 20th century
Wikipedia - Sciarra Madonna -- c. 1528 painting by Titian
Wikipedia - Science and technology in Spain -- Overview of science and technology in Spain
Wikipedia - Scipione Cappella -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Scipione Compagno -- Italian painter
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Wikipedia - Scott H. Irwin -- economist (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign)
Wikipedia - Scottish expedition into Argyll (1221-22) -- Scottish military campaign
Wikipedia - Scouting and Guiding in Spain -- Scouting and Guiding in Spain
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Wikipedia - Sean Danielsen -- American musician and artistic painter
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Wikipedia - Searchlight on Harbor Entrance, Santiago de Cuba -- Painting by Winslow Homer
Wikipedia - Sears Gallagher -- American painter
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Wikipedia - Sebastian Blanck -- American musician and figurative painter
Wikipedia - Sebastiano De Albertis -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Sebastiano del Piombo -- 16th-century Italian painter
Wikipedia - Sebastiano Mazzoni -- Italian painter (1611-1678)
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Wikipedia - Second Battle of Krithia -- Battle of the Gallipoli Campaign in WWI
Wikipedia - Second Spanish Republic -- Regime in Spain, 1931 to 1939
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Wikipedia - Secretary of State for Energy (Spain) -- Senior official within the Ministry for the Ecological Transition of the Government of Spain
Wikipedia - Secretary of State for Infrastructure, Transport and Housing -- Official of the Ministry of Development of the Government of Spain
Wikipedia - Secretary of State for Justice (Spain) -- Official of the Ministry of Justice of the Government of Spain
Wikipedia - Secretary of State for Press -- Secretariat of State of Spain
Wikipedia - Secretary of State for Social Security (Spain) -- Official of the Ministry of Inclusion, Social Security and Migration of the Government of Spain
Wikipedia - Secretary of State for Tourism -- Official of the Ministry of Industry, Trade and Tourism of the Government of Spain
Wikipedia - Section of Painting and Sculpture -- United States federal arts organization
Wikipedia - Segovia Cathedral -- Cathedral in Segovia, Spain
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Wikipedia - Self-Portrait (Annibale Carracci) -- Painting by Annibale Carracci
Wikipedia - Self-Portrait as a Soldier -- painting by Ernst Ludwig Kirchner
Wikipedia - Self-portrait at an Easel (Sofonisba Anguissola) -- Painting by Sofonisba Anguissola
Wikipedia - Self-portrait at an Easel -- 1790-1795 painting by Francisco de Goya
Wikipedia - Self-Portrait (Beccafumi) -- Painting by Domenico di Pace Beccafumi
Wikipedia - Self-Portrait (Bol) -- Painting by Ferdinand Bol
Wikipedia - Self-Portrait (Durer, Madrid) -- Painting by Albrecht Durer
Wikipedia - Self-Portrait in a Black Eyepatch -- Painting by Rik Wouters
Wikipedia - Self-portrait in a Convex Mirror -- Painting by Parmigianino
Wikipedia - Self-Portrait in a Group of Friends -- 1820s painting by Francesco Hayez
Wikipedia - Self-Portrait in a Hat -- Painting by Paul Gauguin
Wikipedia - Self-Portrait (Ingres) -- Painting by Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres
Wikipedia - Self-Portrait (Paul Bril) -- Painting by Paul Bril
Wikipedia - Self-Portrait (Salvator Rosa) -- Painting by Salvator Rosa
Wikipedia - Self-Portrait with a Black Dog -- Painting by Gustave Courbet
Wikipedia - Self-portrait with Easel -- 1640s painting by Michaelina Wautier
Wikipedia - Self-portrait without beard -- Painting by Vincent van Gogh
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Wikipedia - Self-repair mechanisms
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Wikipedia - Serafino Ramazzotti -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - SerDes -- serializer/deserializer pair in network equipment
Wikipedia - Serenade (Leyster) -- 1629 painting by Judith Leyster
Wikipedia - Serge Charchoune -- Russian painter and poet
Wikipedia - Sergei Fyodorov (painter)
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Wikipedia - Sergei Karev -- Russian pair skater
Wikipedia - Sergei Lisiev -- Russian pair skater
Wikipedia - Sergei Shakhrai -- Russian retired pair skater
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Wikipedia - Sergey Yendogurov -- Russian painter
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Wikipedia - Sergio Ceccotti -- Italian painter
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Wikipedia - Serious Mental Illness -- mental health condition that seriously impairs life activities
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Wikipedia - Sermon on Mani's Teaching of Salvation -- Yuan dynasty silk painting
Wikipedia - Serra d'Irta -- Mountain in Valencia, Spain
Wikipedia - Serra Mariola Natural Park -- Nature reserve in mountains in Valencia region, Spain
Wikipedia - Serveis Ferroviaris de Mallorca -- Railway operator in Mallorca, Spain
Wikipedia - S'Espalmador -- Island in Spain
Wikipedia - Severino Galante -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Sevillanas -- Musical genre, folk song, and dance in Sevilla, Spain
Wikipedia - Seville Metro -- Rapid transit system in Seville, Spain
Wikipedia - Seville, Spain (photograph) -- Photograph by Henri Cartier-Bresson
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Wikipedia - Sexual pain disorder
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Wikipedia - Shadows (Warpaint song) -- Song by Warpaint
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Wikipedia - She Painted Her Face -- 1937 novel by Dornford Yates
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Wikipedia - Sheryl Franks -- American pair skater
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Wikipedia - Shigenobu Ito -- Japanese painter
Wikipedia - Shigeru Aoki -- Japanese painter
Wikipedia - Shimonoseki campaign -- series of military engagements in 1863-64 between Japan and China
Wikipedia - Shingo Yamada -- Japanese painter
Wikipedia - Shintaro Takeda -- Japanese painter
Wikipedia - Shipaiqiao station -- Guangzhou Metro station
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Wikipedia - Ships in Harbour, Evening -- Painting by Caspar David Friedrich
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Wikipedia - Shui Cham Tsui Pai -- Uninhabited island in North District, Hong Kong
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Wikipedia - Shunsuke Matsumoto -- Japanese painter
Wikipedia - Shurooq Amin -- Kuwaiti painter and poet
Wikipedia - Shuzo Kanda -- Japanese painter
Wikipedia - Shyam Vatika -- Largest indoor mural , painted in Gwalior, India, in 2005
Wikipedia - Siam Park (Tenerife) -- water park in Tenerife, Canary Islands, Spain
Wikipedia - Sick leave -- Policy allowing paid time off from work for health needs
Wikipedia - Sidron Cave -- Cave and archaeological site in Spain
Wikipedia - Siega Verde -- Archaeological site and cultural property in Villar de ArgaM-CM-1an, Spain
Wikipedia - Siege of Aachen (1614) -- Spain defeats Aachen and Brandenburg during the War of the Julich Succession
Wikipedia - Siege of Berwick (1355) -- 14th century Scottish military campaign
Wikipedia - Siege of Cadiz -- 1810s siege in Spain by the French
Wikipedia - Siege of Kabul (1504) -- Part of campaigns of Babur
Wikipedia - Siege of Malaga (1487) -- Siege during the Reconquista of Spain
Wikipedia - Siege of Malta (World War II) -- Military campaign in the Mediterranean Theatre of the Second World War
Wikipedia - Siege of SaM-CM-/o -- Siege during the East African Campaign of World War II
Wikipedia - Sierra de Almijara -- Mountain range in Spain
Wikipedia - Sierra de BM-CM-)jar (mountain range) -- mountain in Spain
Wikipedia - Sierra de Francia -- mountain range in Spain
Wikipedia - Sierra de Javalambre -- Mountain in Spain
Wikipedia - Sierra de Tejeda -- Mountain range in Spain
Wikipedia - Sierra Nevada (Spain) -- Mountain range in southern Spain
Wikipedia - Sieuwert van der Meulen -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Sigmund Freudenberger -- Swiss painter
Wikipedia - Sigrid LehrbM-CM-$ck -- Finnish painter
Wikipedia - Sigurd Kielland Brandt -- Danish painter
Wikipedia - Sigurd Swane -- Danish painter
Wikipedia - Siliguri Jalpaiguri Development Authority -- Development authority in West Bengal
Wikipedia - Silk painting depicting a man riding a dragon -- Silk painting
Wikipedia - Silvano Campeggi -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Silver Memorial Cross, 1813-1815 (Netherlands) -- Dutch campaign medal for Napoleonic wars
Wikipedia - Silvia Dimitrova -- European painter
Wikipedia - Silvia Dimitrov -- German former pair skater
Wikipedia - Silvia Grandjean -- Swiss pairs skater
Wikipedia - Silvia Torras -- Catalan informalist painter
Wikipedia - Silvio Allason -- Italian painter
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Wikipedia - Simmie Knox -- American painter
Wikipedia - Simone Balli -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Simone Barabino -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Simone Boutarel -- French painter
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Wikipedia - Simon Maris -- Dutch painter
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Wikipedia - Simon van der Does -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Simon Vouet -- French painter
Wikipedia - Sinai and Palestine campaign -- Campaign of the Middle Eastern theatre of World War I
Wikipedia - Sine MacKinnon -- Irish painter
Wikipedia - Singlet oxygen -- Oxygen with all of its electrons spin paired
Wikipedia - Sinikka Kurkinen -- Finnish painter
Wikipedia - Siping Campaign -- Part of the Chinese Civil War
Wikipedia - Siri Aurdal -- Norwegian painter
Wikipedia - Sistema IbM-CM-)rico -- Major system of mountain ranges in Spain
Wikipedia - Sitges Film Festival -- Annual film festival held in Sitges, Spain
Wikipedia - Skagen Painters -- late 1870s-early 1900s group of Scandinavian artists who operated in the Danish village of Skagen
Wikipedia - Skittle Players outside an Inn -- Oil on oak panel painting by the Dutch artist Jan Steen
Wikipedia - Skull of a Skeleton with Burning Cigarette -- Painting by Vincent van Gogh
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Wikipedia - Slavery in Spain
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Wikipedia - Sleeping Venus (Carracci) -- Painting by Annibale Carracci
Wikipedia - Sleeping Venus with Cupid (Poussin) -- Painting by Nicolas Poussin
Wikipedia - Slipped strand mispairing -- Nucleotide duplications created by DNA polymerase during DNA replication
Wikipedia - Small Holy Family -- Painting by Raphael
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Wikipedia - Smikros -- Late 6th century BC Athenian red-figure style vase painter
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Wikipedia - Smiling Girl -- 20th-century painting
Wikipedia - SmugMug -- Paid image sharing, image hosting service, and online video platform
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Wikipedia - Soap Bubbles (Chardin) -- Painting by Jean SimM-CM-)on Chardin
Wikipedia - Socialist Campaign Group -- Left-wing grouping within Labour Party
Wikipedia - Socialist Democracy (Spain) -- Socialist political party (1990-1992)
Wikipedia - Socialist Party of the Islands -- Defunct socialist party in Spain
Wikipedia - Socialist Unity (Spain) -- Defunct political party alliance in Spain
Wikipedia - Social security in Spain
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Wikipedia - Socrate Sidiropoulos -- Greek painter and sculptor
Wikipedia - Soeki Irodikromo -- Surinamese painter
Wikipedia - Sofia Adlersparre -- Swedish painter (1808-1862)
Wikipedia - Sofia Gandarias -- Spanish painter
Wikipedia - Sofia Pomba Guerra -- Portuguese feminist and anti-colonial campaigner
Wikipedia - Sofija VeiverytM-DM-^W -- Lithuanian painter
Wikipedia - Sofonisba Anguissola -- Italian painter (c.1532-1625)
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Wikipedia - Solly Afrika Mapaila -- South African politician
Wikipedia - Somerset House Conference (painting) -- Painting
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Wikipedia - Sonar -- Arts, design, and electronic and advanced music festival in Barcelona, Spain (European Union)
Wikipedia - Sonia Lewitska -- Painter and printmaker.
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Wikipedia - SotM-CM-)s -- Village in La Rioja, Spain
Wikipedia - South American painted-snipe -- Species of bird
Wikipedia - South Armagh Sniper (1990-1997) -- Sniping campaign against British Army in Northern Ireland 1990-1997
Wikipedia - South Sulawesi campaign of 1946-1947 -- Battle between Indonesian and Dutch forces during the Indonesian National Revolution
Wikipedia - South West Africa Campaign
Wikipedia - South West Africa campaign
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Wikipedia - Spain Again -- 1969 film
Wikipedia - Spain: A History -- Book by Raymond Carr
Wikipedia - Spain and the American Revolutionary War -- 18th-century war between UK and Spain
Wikipedia - Spain Asks for Forgiveness -- Art work by Abel Azcona
Wikipedia - Spain at major beauty pageants -- Spain at Miss Universe, Miss World, Miss International, and Miss Earth
Wikipedia - Spain at the 2020 Summer Olympics -- Spain at the Games of the XXXII Olympiad in Tokyo
Wikipedia - Spain at the Olympics -- Participation of athletes from Spain in the Olympic Games
Wikipedia - Spain during World War II -- Overview of the situation of Spain during World War II
Wikipedia - Spain during World War I -- Overview of Spain's role during World War I
Wikipedia - Spain in the Eurovision Song Contest -- Overview of Spain in the Eurovision Song Contest
Wikipedia - Spain men's national junior ice hockey team -- national men's U20 ice hockey team
Wikipedia - Spain Rodriguez -- American artist
Wikipedia - Spain's economy
Wikipedia - Spain -- Kingdom in Southwestern Europe
Wikipedia - Spalliera -- Painting mounted into fiurniture or panelling
Wikipedia - Spanair Flight 5022 -- August 2008 plane crash in Madrid, Spain
Wikipedia - Spaniards -- People native to any part of Spain or that hold Spanish citizenship
Wikipedia - Spanish Agency of Medicines and Medical Devices -- Government agency in Spain
Wikipedia - Spanish Air Force -- Air warfare branch of Spain's armed forces
Wikipedia - Spanish architecture -- Architecture of buildings in Spain
Wikipedia - Spanish Armed Forces -- Combined military forces of the Kingdom of Spain
Wikipedia - Spanish art -- History of art of Spain from Ancient Iberia to the present
Wikipedia - Spanish Baroque architecture -- Architecture of the Baroque era in Spain and its former colonies
Wikipedia - Spanish Christmas Lottery -- National Christmas lottery in Spain
Wikipedia - Spanish comics -- Comics originating in Spain
Wikipedia - Spanish Communist Party -- Former communist party in Spain
Wikipedia - Spanish Constitution of 1812 -- The first Constitution of Spain
Wikipedia - Spanish Constitution of 1837 -- Former constitution of Spain
Wikipedia - Spanish Constitution of 1845 -- Former constitution of Spain
Wikipedia - Spanish Constitution of 1869 -- Former constitution of Spain
Wikipedia - Spanish Constitution of 1876 -- Former constitution of Spain
Wikipedia - Spanish Constitution of 1931 -- Former constitution of Spain
Wikipedia - Spanish Cross -- Nazi German campaign award
Wikipedia - Spanish Draft Constitution of 1856 -- Proposed constitution of Spain
Wikipedia - Spanish Draft Constitution of 1873 -- Proposed constitution of Spain
Wikipedia - Spanish era -- Calendar era used in medieval Spain.
Wikipedia - Spanish Golden Age -- Period of flourishing in arts and literature in Spain
Wikipedia - Spanish heraldry -- Tradition and art of heraldry of Spain
Wikipedia - Spanish Ice Sports Federation -- governing body of ice sports in Spain
Wikipedia - Spanish Karate Federation -- National body for Karate in Spain
Wikipedia - Spanish miracle -- Economic boom in Spain 1959-1974
Wikipedia - Spanish naming customs -- Historical traditions practiced in Spain for naming children
Wikipedia - Spanish National Research Council -- National research council in Spain
Wikipedia - Spanish Navy -- Naval warfare branch of Spain's military
Wikipedia - Spanish peseta -- Former currency of Spain
Wikipedia - Spanish-Portuguese diocese -- Diocese of the Moscow Patriarchate of Spain and Portugal.
Wikipedia - Spanish royal family -- Royal house of the Kingdom of Spain
Wikipedia - Spanish ship Purisima Concepcion (1779) -- Spanish first-rate ship of the line of the Kingdom of Spain's Armada Real
Wikipedia - Spanish Socialist Workers' Party -- political party in Spain
Wikipedia - Spanish Social Reform -- Defunct political party in Spain
Wikipedia - Spanish-suited playing cards -- Card deck used in Spain
Wikipedia - Spanish Supercomputing Network -- Distributed infrastructure involving the interconnection of 12 supercomputers in Spain
Wikipedia - Spanish Texas -- Province of New Spain
Wikipedia - Spanish Trotter -- Breed of trotting horse of Spain
Wikipedia - Spatial Concept (painting) -- Painting by Lucio Fontana
Wikipedia - Spatula -- Flexible, wide blade, used to lift, smear, mix, spread, or scrape material, including foods, drugs, plaster, and paint
Wikipedia - SPEAK campaign
Wikipedia - Specific language impairment
Wikipedia - Speech and language impairment
Wikipedia - Speedy Graphito -- French painter
Wikipedia - Spelljammer -- Dungeons & Dragons fictional campaign setting
Wikipedia - Sphenoid bone -- Unpaired bone situated at the front middle of the skull in front of the temporal bone and basilar part of the occipital bone
Wikipedia - Sphenoid sinus -- One of the four paired paranasal sinuses
Wikipedia - Spirit of the Dead Watching -- 1892 painting by Paul Gauguin
Wikipedia - Spirito Santo Banner -- C. 1494 paintings by Luca Signorelli
Wikipedia - SpM-CM-)ranza Calo-SM-CM-)ailles -- Greek painter, singer, inventor and opera singer (1885-1949)
Wikipedia - Spray painting -- A painting technique in which a device sprays coating material through the air onto a surface
Wikipedia - Spyros Vassiliou -- Greek painter, printmaker, illustrator, and stage designer
Wikipedia - Squatting in Spain -- Occupation of unused land or derelict buildings in Spain
Wikipedia - S. Rajam -- Indian musician and painter (1919-2010)
Wikipedia - Stacey Ball -- Canadian pair skater
Wikipedia - Staerkel Planetarium -- Planetarium at Parkland College in Champaign, Illinois
Wikipedia - Stag Hunt -- Painting by Paul Bril
Wikipedia - Stanczyk (painting) -- Painting by Jan Matejko
Wikipedia - Standard of Our Lady of Mercy -- Painting by Moretto da Brescia
Wikipedia - Stanimir Todorov -- Bulgarian pair skater
Wikipedia - Stanislav Leonovich -- Pair skater
Wikipedia - Stanislav Zakharov -- Russian former pair skater
Wikipedia - Stanislaw Bohusz-Siestrzencewicz (painter) -- Polish painter
Wikipedia - Stanislaw Jakub Rostworowski -- Polish painter
Wikipedia - Stanislaw Kamocki -- Polish painter
Wikipedia - Stanislaw Noakowski -- Polish painter and architect
Wikipedia - Stanislaw Prauss -- Polish painter
Wikipedia - Stan Jones (painter) -- Welsh artist
Wikipedia - Stanley Morris -- British painter
Wikipedia - Stanley Reed (artist) -- Painter (1908-1978)
Wikipedia - St Anthony of Padua (Cosimo Tura) -- Painting by Cosimo Tura
Wikipedia - St Anthony of Padua with Two Saints -- C. 1530 painting by Moretto da Brescia
Wikipedia - St Antony the Abbot (painting) -- C. 1530 painting by Moretto da Brescia
Wikipedia - Star of the Sea Painted Church -- Historic Place in Hawaii County, Hawaii
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Wikipedia - State of alarm (Spain) -- Situation in which a Spanish Government is empowered to perform special actions
Wikipedia - States of Mind I:The Farewells -- Painting by Umberto Boccioni
Wikipedia - Statue of Federico Martin Bahamontes -- Sculpture in Toledo, Spain
Wikipedia - Statue of Francisco Franco, Melilla -- Last remaining statue of Francisco Franco in Spain
Wikipedia - Statue of Lazaro Cardenas (Madrid) -- Statue in Spain
Wikipedia - Stay Up Late -- Furry fandom watercolor painting
Wikipedia - St Dominic (Cosme Tura) -- C.1475 painting by Cosimo Tura
Wikipedia - Steele dossier -- Political opposition research report alleging co-operation between the Trump campaign and Russia to help Trump win
Wikipedia - Stefaneschi Triptych -- painting by Giotto
Wikipedia - Stefan Ettlinger -- German painter and draughtsman
Wikipedia - Stefania Berton -- Italian pair skater
Wikipedia - Stefan Lochner -- German late Gothic style painter (c. 1410-1451)
Wikipedia - Stefan MroM-EM- -- Polish painter
Wikipedia - Stefano Celesti -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Stefano Cernotto -- 16th century Italian painter
Wikipedia - Stefano di Giovanni -- 15th-century Italian Renaissance painter
Wikipedia - Stefano Fiorentino -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Stefan Osiecki -- Polish painter
Wikipedia - Stefano Torelli -- Italian painter (1712-1784)
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Wikipedia - Stephen Greene (artist) -- American painter
Wikipedia - Stephen Rodefer -- American poet and painter
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Wikipedia - Steven Assael -- American painter
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Wikipedia - Still life -- Type of painting
Wikipedia - Still Life with Straw Hat -- Painting by Vincent van Gogh
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Wikipedia - St. Jerome in the Desert (Bellini, Birmingham) -- Painting by Giovanni Bellini in the Barber Institute of Fine Arts, Birmingham
Wikipedia - St. Jerome in the Desert (Bellini, Washington) -- Painting by Giovanni Bellini in the National Gallery of Art, Washington
Wikipedia - St. Jerome in the Wilderness (Durer) -- Painting by Albrecht Durer in the National Gallery, London
Wikipedia - St John Chrysostom Altarpiece -- Painting by Sebastiano del Piombo
Wikipedia - St John the Evangelist at Patmos -- Painting by Paul Bril
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Wikipedia - St Margaret of Antioch with Two Saints -- 1530 painting by Moretto da Brescia
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Wikipedia - Stop HS2 -- Campaign against HS2 in UK
Wikipedia - Stop Snitchin' -- Witness intimidation campaign
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Wikipedia - Tale of Igor's Campaign
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Wikipedia - Template talk:Campaignbox Constantine Wars
Wikipedia - Template talk:Campaignbox Second Libyan Civil War
Wikipedia - Template talk:Covering/packing-problem pairs
Wikipedia - Template talk:Spain-RC-bishop-stub
Wikipedia - Template talk:Spain-reli-bio-stub
Wikipedia - Template talk:Spain-saint-stub
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Wikipedia - Temptation of St. Thomas (Velazquez) -- Painting by Diego Velazquez
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Wikipedia - The Descent from the Cross (Rubens, 1617) -- Painting by Peter Paul Rubens, Palais des Beaux-Arts de Lille
Wikipedia - The Descent from the Cross (Rubens, 1618) -- Painting byM-BM- Peter Paul Rubens (Hermitage, M-PM-^SM-PM---471)
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Wikipedia - The Feast in the House of Simon the Pharisee (Veronese, Milan) -- Painting by Paolo Veronese
Wikipedia - The Feast in the House of Simon the Pharisee (Veronese, Turin) -- Painting by Paolo Veronese
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Wikipedia - The Finding of Moses (studio of Veronese, Liverpool) -- Painting by the studio of Paolo Veronese
Wikipedia - The Finding of Moses (studio of Veronese, Turin) -- Painting by the studio of Paolo Veronese
Wikipedia - The Finding of Moses (Veronese, Dijon) -- Painting by Paolo Veronese
Wikipedia - The Finding of Moses (Veronese, Dresden) -- Painting by Paolo Veronese
Wikipedia - The Finding of Moses (Veronese, Lyon) -- Painting by Paolo Veronese
Wikipedia - The Finding of Moses (Veronese, Madrid) -- Painting by Paolo Veronese
Wikipedia - The Finding of Moses (Veronese, Smith collection) -- Lost painting by Paolo Veronese
Wikipedia - The Finding of Moses (Washington) -- Painting by Paolo Veronese
Wikipedia - The Finding of the Saviour in the Temple -- Painting by William Holman Hunt
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Wikipedia - The First Days of Spring -- 1929 painting by Salvador Dali
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Wikipedia - The Forgotten Man (painting) -- Painting by Jon McNaughton
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Wikipedia - The Fox Hunt (painting) -- Painting by Winslow Homer
Wikipedia - The Funeral (painting) -- C. 1870 painting by Edouard Manet
Wikipedia - The Gardener (Arcimboldo) -- Painting by Giuseppe Arcimboldo
Wikipedia - The Garden of Earthly Delights -- Medieval triptych painting by Hieronymus Bosch
Wikipedia - The Gazebo (painting) -- Painting by Caspar David Friedrich
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Wikipedia - The Gilded Cage (Evelyn De Morgan painting) -- Painting by Evelyn De Morgan
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Wikipedia - The Glorification of the Virgin -- 1490s painting by Geertgen tot Sint Jans
Wikipedia - The Golden Bough (painting) -- 1834 painting by the English painter J. M. W. Turner
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Wikipedia - The Golf Players -- 1658 painting by Pieter de Hooch
Wikipedia - The Goose Girl (Bouguereau) -- Painting by William-Adolphe Bouguereau
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Wikipedia - The Great Red Dragon paintings
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Wikipedia - The Vision of Saint Anthony of Padua (Murillo) -- Painting by BartolomM-CM-) Esteban Murillo
Wikipedia - The Vision of Saint Anthony of Padua (Pittoni) -- 1730 painting by Giambattista Pittoni
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Wikipedia - The Vision of Saint Eustace -- Painting by Pisanello
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Wikipedia - The Young Beggar -- 17th c. painting by BartolomM-CM-) Esteban Murillo
Wikipedia - The Zoka-ol-Molk I -- Painting by Kamal-ol-molk



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