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The word "divan" has multiple meanings. It can refer to a pillowed
couch or daybed, a room with one side open to a sunny garden, or an
oriental council of state. A "divan" can also be a collection of
poems, especially in the Persian Sufi tradition (such as the divans
of Rumi and Hafiz) in which the poet celebrates the states
experienced in the progress toward unity with God. This divan is a
year's worth of poems in seasonal sequence recording the progress
of a student following the discipline of an esoteric school. The
collection begins in autumn - harvest - gathering the fundamental
ideas taught in all true esoteric schools in all ages. The poems
continue through the stages of spiritual growth these ideas
engender, culminating in the full sun of summer - the
ever-accessible presence of God.
If we had no other writings from Mr. Craig than Book of Petite
Wisdoms, it would be enough: They reveal a poet at the peak of his
profession, and still ascending. How possible? Read this volume to
find out. The first of four, it telescopes its revelation into
seven little 14-syllable lines of wisdom per stanza. 100 stanzas in
all. And the revelation? A mystical vision: How out of his Infinite
Love God allows Man to not only ascend to Him, but become Him.
Sharing this vision with that found in the poetry of Walt Whitman,
St. John of the Cross, Hafiz, Rumi, Plotinus, and others, the Book
of Petite Wisdoms is no spectator sport, it invites you the reader
to ascend as well: "Kiss me," one poem urges us, "Crack the layers
of chalk imprisoning your soul. It's not me you're kissing after
all --it's the God in you released to make love to everything your
senses present..."
With stunningly original illustrations by Kevin Watts, The
Awakening of Man Hamlet is psychological commentary at its finest.
Reminding us at the very beginning that Hamlet's main message is
about awakening, what it is and, most importantly, what it is not:
the author John Stubbs points out that you cannot awaken, for
example, just by behaving differently from now on, that is by
"adding virtue" to your resume. Why? The author explains: "Because
your old self will absorb the new and make it its own, thus
corrupting it... Consequently, you have to remove the old stock
completely - your entire old self has to go." Letting this first
message resonate, the author then points out the second, equally
disquieting message: "In order to completely remove the old self
you must even remove the part which is doing the removing." That is
why by the end of Hamlet, with the exception of Horatio cast in the
role of being the messenger, every major character is dead. Nothing
of the old self remains -- not even its highest and most noble
part, Hamlet. Be or Not Be.
The battle begins as Finneus, a grade three genius, has had
enough. Derek, a grade six bully, has been picking on him for
years, and now it is time for Finneus to get even. Will he be able
to design a creation to make Derek believe he is losing his mind,
or does God have a greater purpose for his talent? This is a
passionate, suspenseful, and amusing story of a boy that will learn
that his intelligence is not enough to change what he is going
through with Derek. He will have to stretch and grow in other ways
to become the person God wants him to be-the boy named Finneus
Bleek.
The word "divan" has multiple meanings. It can refer to a pillowed
couch or daybed, a room with one side open to a sunny garden, or an
oriental council of state. A "divan" can also be a collection of
poems, especially in the Persian Sufi tradition (such as the divans
of Rumi and Hafiz) in which the poet celebrates the states
experienced in the progress toward unity with God. This divan is a
year's worth of poems in seasonal sequence recording the progress
of a student following the discipline of an esoteric school. The
collection begins in autumn - harvest - gathering the fundamental
ideas taught in all true esoteric schools in all ages. The poems
continue through the stages of spiritual growth these ideas
engender, culminating in the full sun of summer - the
ever-accessible presence of God.
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