In the end, the desolate age always turns instinctively to Classicism, which if nothing else legislates against certain kinds of disappointment.


Aphorisms in Poetry, vol. 187, n. 1, October 2005


In the end, the desolate age always turns instinctively to Classicism, which if nothing else legislates against certain kinds of disappointment.

In the end, the desolate age always turns instinctively to Classicism, which if nothing else legislates against certain kinds of disappointment.

In the end, the desolate age always turns instinctively to Classicism, which if nothing else legislates against certain kinds of disappointment.

In the end, the desolate age always turns instinctively to Classicism, which if nothing else legislates against certain kinds of disappointment.