Great are your
aspirations. Realize them by affirming silently: “God is
my Strength and my Life.” Emma Curtis
Hopkins
"True prayer is not begging for more wisdom, more supply, or more good.Infinite, all embracing Being cannot give us more than Itself.In sharing Itself with us, It has given us all that we can possibly need or desire.Our part is to accept." -- Nona Brooks (from her book The Prayer That Never Fails)
"Trust in my help, for I did not
walk alone,
and I will walk with you
as our Father walked with me."
and I will walk with you
as our Father walked with me."
ACIM Ch.12.II.7.5
"You are the Will of God. Do not accept anything else as your will, or you are denying what you are. Deny this and you will attack, believing you have been attacked. But see the Love of God in you, and you will see it everywhere because it is everywhere. See His abundance in everyone, and you will know that you are in Him with them. They are part of you, as you are part of God. You are as lonely without understanding this as God Himself is lonely when His Sons do not know Him. The peace of God is understanding this. There is only one way out of the world's thinking, just as there was only one way into it. Understand totally by understanding totality." ACIM Ch.7.VII.10
The year 1606 was productive for William Shakespeare — and terrible for England. Shakespeare wrote three of his most enduring plays, King Lear, Macbeth and Antony and Cleopatra, while England suffered through a serious bout of the plague, a Catholic conspiracy that aimed to do away with the King and a general sense of unrest across the land.
On the
400th anniversary of the playwright's death, CBC’s Writers & Company host Eleanor
Wachtel speaks with scholar James Shapiro, who chronicles this critical
year of Shakespeare's life in The Year of Lear: Shakespeare in 1606. http://www.cbc.ca/radio/writersandcompany/james-shapiro-on-the-critical-year-shakespeare-wrote-king-lear-1.3395413
One
of the interesting things people have brought up when they write of Shakespeare
is the Oxfordian theory of Shakespeare
authorship. Unfortunately, Edward de Vere died in 1604.

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