Random books from Lallum's library
La Espana medieval: Sociedades, estados, culturas (Spanish Edition) by Emilio Mitre Fernandez
European Literature and the Latin Middle Ages by Ernst Robert Curtius
La tierra de Dios by Claudia Casanova
The RSC Shakespeare: The Complete Works by William Shakespeare
El collar de la paloma (Spanish Edition) by Ibn Hazm De Córdoba
Cyrano De Bergerac (French Edition) by Edmond Rostand
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Friends: EduardoT, jmbadia, theoldman
LibraryThing authors: Claudia Casanova (Lallum)

Member: Lallum
CollectionsYour library (31)
Reviews1 review
Tagsnovela de aventuras (6), medieval (5), siglo XII (3), historia de la literatura (2), novela histórica (2), novela (2), historical fiction (1), poesía (1), historia medieval (1), España (1) — see all tags
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GroupsAncient History, Australian LibraryThingers, Bloggers, Club de lectura en Català, Historical Fiction, Literatura en Espanol, Medieval Europe, Science Fiction Fans, What Are You Reading Now?, Writer-readers
Favorite authorsClaudia Casanova (Shared favorites)
About meI am Spanish, a writer, a woman and a lover of good things.
About my libraryIn R/L, it's big and crowded. And here, I want to expand it and learn from other people's POW to read new, exciting stuff.
Homepagehttp://www.claudiacasanova.blogspot.com
LocationBarcelona, Spain
Account typepublic, free
Connection NewsConnection News
URLs
http://www.librarything.com/profile/Lallum (profile)
http://www.librarything.com/catalog/Lallum (library)
Common KnowledgeSeries (9), Awards (19), Characters (192), Places (38)
Member sinceMar 25, 2009










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by Edgar Albert Guest
Better than land or gold or trade
Are a high ideal and a purpose true;
Better than all of the wealth we've made
Is the work for others that now we do.
For Rome grew rich and she turned to song
And danced to music and drank her wine,
But she sapped the strength of her fibres strong
And a gilded shroud was her splendor fine.
The Rome of old with its wealth and wine
Was the handiwork of a sturdy race;
They builded well and they made it fine
And they dreamed of it as their children's place.
They thought the joys they had won to give,
And which seemed so certain and fixed and sure,
To the end of time in the world would live
And the Rome they'd fashioned would long endure.
They passed to their children the hoarded gold,
Their marble halls and their fertile fields!
But not the spirit of Rome of old,
Nor the Roman courage that never yields.
They left them the wealth that their hands had won,
But they failed to leave them a purpose true.
They left them thinking life's work all done,
And Rome went down and was lost to view.
We must guard ourselves lest we follow Rome.
We must leave our children the finer things.
We must teach them love of the spot called home
And the lasting joy that a purpose brings.
For vain are our Flag and our battles won,
And vain are our lands and our stores of gold,
If our children feel that life's work is done.
We must give them a high ideal to hold.
posted by theoldman at 8:30 am (EST) on Oct 19, 2009