Many contemporary readers will have plenty of misgivings to overcome while reading The Western Canon. Though he isn’t always right, Bloom proceeds with a steamrolling certainty. The reader must accept that Bloom will repeat himself constantly; must accept, too, that Bloom is waging a pyrrhic rhetorical war he believes he has already lost. And yet, these are legitimate (if old-fashioned) literary modes: they only add to the gloriously fraught pathos that thrums through the whole book. When seen this way—as the hortatory orations of a beautiful, sad dinosaur—the book takes on its own decaying and tragic grandeur, like a ruined Gothic cathedral. And the sermon most often takes the form of a lamentation, the center of which lies in a passage from the opening prelude to the elegy:
Кардиолог раскрыла опасное влияние смены сезонов на сердце и сосуды07:40
。新收录的资料对此有专业解读
Фон дер Ляйен оценила идею вернуться к российскому топливу14:54
Стало известно о массовом вывозе убитых после удара по пансионату под Николаевом14:33。关于这个话题,新收录的资料提供了深入分析
Владислав Уткин。新收录的资料对此有专业解读
Tom Hardin doesn’t sound like a movie villain. He sounds like every smart, ambitious person who thinks they’re playing the game the way it’s supposed to be played—until the FBI taps them on the shoulder at 6:30 a.m. outside a dry cleaner. On a recent episode of How Success Happens, I talked with Tom, the former hedge fund analyst turned FBI informant known as “Tipper X,” about how he crossed the line into insider trading and how badly it cost him.