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For other authors named Raphael, see the disambiguation page.

29 Works 104 Members 1 Review

About the Author

Raphael was, with Michelangelo and Leonardo da Vinci, one of the three masters of the High Renaissance. He was also the youngest and died prematurely after a life of incredible creativity and accomplishment. The son of a painter, Giovanni Santi, his actual name was Raffaello Santi of Sanzio. He was show more trained in Florence but spent most of his short life in Rome. There he created his major works, famous for the harmony and elegance of their design. Above all, there are the frescoes for the papal apartments in the Vatican (The Stanze), which he painted at exactly the time Michelangelo was painting the Sistine Chapel (1508--12); among them are such masterpieces as the School of Athens and the Disputa. His oil painting, the Sistine Madonna, is justly famous. Raphael---in the Renaissance manner---was also an accomplished architect and, in his last years, architect-in-chief of St. Peter's. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

Works by Raphael

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Common Knowledge

Legal name
Cross, Robert
Date of death
1923
Gender
male

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Reviews

2 reviews
Fate is a peculiar word. Some people believe implicitly in fate, others believe in nothing of the kind, but that all our doings and actions are ruled by Providence. I do not agree with either -- my opinion being that we can shape our own course, and that we are never tempted beyond what we are able to bear. Astrology teaches the same thing, for where there is evil there is sure to be some good, which creates, as it were, a loophole for us to escape from the evil.
Although this is called a show more "Book of Fate", it is nothing of the kind -- it is really a compilation of different modes of Divination, whereby one may know the future.
In the human soul are seeds of omniscience, that is, the power of knowing or perceiving everything, and thus when the mind is truly anxious about anything, the soul gets stirred, and energizes and directs the mind to the truth. If man could subdue the mind and the passion, he would hear the voice of his own soul, and this voice would never deceive him, or lead him astray. The mind should be kept absolutely passive. The very thoughts render it impossible for the soul to make itself heard. Therefore, when thou consultest any of the following pages, let it not be upon any trivial or superficial occasion, but only such as thy mind is truly anxious about; and during the operation let thy mind be intent upon the subject, and sincerely anxious to know the truth, for in this case the soul will dispose the action of the mind, and guide it to the proper and correct solution of the doubts.
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Statistics

Works
29
Members
104
Popularity
#184,480
Rating
2.9
Reviews
1
ISBNs
93
Languages
5

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