Sunday’s Piece

“He who begins by loving Christianity better than Truth will proceed by loving his own sect or church better than Christianity, and end by loving himself better than all.”

(Samuel Coleridge, 1772 – 1834)

John Lentell

9th November, 1969

Saturday’s Piece

“George Bernard Shaw’s play required a large cast, but was not an outstanding success. Mrs. Campbell was peering at the audience through a peep-hole in the curtain on the third night when Shaw asked, ‘How are we doing?’

‘Better than last night,’ she answered, ‘but we are still in the majority.'”

John Lentell

8th November, 1969

Friday’s Piece

“There is no emotion in a human creature purer or sweeter than the hidden feeling that awakens to life unawares in the heart of a maiden to fill the emptiness of her breast with enchanting melodies and make her days like the poets’s dream and her nights like the prophet’s vision.”

(From Spirits Rebllious by Kahlil Gibran, 1883 – 1931)

John Lentell

7th November, 1969

Monday’s Piece

“Only a very small proportion of the population of a country – certainly less than one percent – makes a significant contribution to art, thought, culture, industry, everything which in our eyes constitutes the glory of a civilisation.”

(From Human Destiny by Pierre Lecomte du Noüy, 1883 – 1947)

John Lentell

3rd November, 1969

Sunday’s Piece

I was a child beneath her touch,–a man

When breast to breast we clung, even I and she,–

A spirit when her spirit looked through me,–

A god when all our life-breath met to fan

Our life-blood, till love’s emulous ardours ran,

Fire within fire, desire in deity.

(Dante Gabriel Rossetti, 1828 – 1882)

John Lentell

2nd November, 1969

Saturday’s Piece

“The moderate……is more free, and therefore less haunted by fear. Because he erects fewer barriers in his own mind, he needs fewer in the social order around him. Psychologically he appears to be a more secure person…..”

(Anatomy of South Africa by Hudson, Jacobs & Biesheuvel, 1966)

John Lentell

1st November, 1969

Friday’s Piece

“………..Rhodesian whites are on firm ground in their outright rejection of African majority rule.”

(Pat Bashford, 1915 – 1987)

John Lentell

31st October, 1969

Footnote:

Pat Bashford was the leader of the Center Party in Rhodesia. He died in 1987 in Harare at the age of 72.

Thursday’s Piece

“Philosophy, in its more rigid sense, has been at the same work for ages; and … has the honour of laying before us … her contribution towards the subject: that life is a Permanent Possibility of Sensation.”

(Robert Louis Stevenson,1850 – 1894)

John Lentell

30th October, 1969

Wednesday’s Piece

“Money may buy you the husk of things, but not the kernel. It brings you food but not appetite, medicine but not health, acquaintances but not friends, servants but not faithfulness, days of joy but not peace or happiness.”

(Henrik Ibsen, 1828 – 1906)

John Lentell

29th October, 1969

Saturday’s Piece

“The most wonderful of all things in life, I believe, is the discovery of another human being with whom one’s relationship has a glowing depth, beauty and joy as the years increase. This inner progressiveness of love between two human beings is a most marvelous thing, it cannot be found by looking for it or by passionately wishing for it. It is sort of Divine accident.”

(Sir Hugh Walpole, 1884 – 1941)

John Lentell

25th October, 1969

Thursday’s Piece

“…..Any man who has planted a tree and knows that it will grow up and be pleasant to others in years to come hence is experiencing in a small way what is one of the srongest emotions in humaity. This is a noble emotion when a man lays out gardens, levels terraces and plants woods for no other benefit than for his successors.”

(Passage Through the Present by George Buchanan, 1904 – 1989)

John Lentell

23rd October, 1969

Wednesday’s Piece

“In years to come our children will want to know what role we played in these decisive times. All of us must ensure that we have an adequate reply.”

(Anatomy of South Africa by Hudson, Jacobs & Biesheuvel, 1966)

John Lentell

22nd October, 1969

Tuesday’s Piece

“If I live to be old, for I find I go down,

Let this be my fate: In a country town

May I have a warm house with a stone at the gate,

And a cleanly young girl to rub my bald pate.

may I govern my passion with an absolute away,

And grow wiser and better as my strength wears away,

Without gout or stone, by a gentle decay.”

(The Old Man’s Wish by Walter Pope, 1627 – 1714)

John Lentell

21st October, 1969