6 Quotes & Sayings By Albert Thomas Bifarelli

Albert Thomas Bifarelli was born in Bastia, Corsica, Italy. He has been a prisoner of war and sojourner in many parts of the world, including North Africa during World War II, France after the liberation of Paris and the Dachau concentration camp in Germany. Since his arrival in the United States in 1945 he has lived and worked here in Chicago and is a member of the Christian Science Church. He was professor of English at Loyola University for many years and is currently retired from that post Read more

His books include: People Will Talk (1963); The Young Man (1966); Our Brilliant Future (1969); The Cardinal (1970); Cardinal Of Chicago (1971); The Cardinal Revisited (1972).

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Jungian psychology built upon a numinous sandcastle-of-gilded- abstractions, reflects modernity’s transcendental reinstatement of Theosophy into an archetypal, pseudo-scientific conflation of mysticism and shamanic-induced revelation. Albert Thomas Bifarelli
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STARLIGHT and THUNDERThe Limits of Art is an anthological collection for the ages..for a lifetime. A veritable ark containing excerpts from the sound and fury representative of the finest literary scriveners the world has yet produced. Unequivocally, intellectual nourishment breeds a fire in the mind..a conflagration of ideas and incendiary thoughts that furnish the spirit with conviction and courage to confront the ballet and ballistics of life with passion, wit, tenderness, reason, resolve, humor, imagination and unconditional curiosity. Amidst the clamor brought forth by the alarums and excursions of modern day pontifications, nevertheless, conform and commit your mind to the abolition of ignorance! Accede your sensibilities to the rapture of beauty and her ineffable grace. For beauty is enchantment, a romantic allegiance to the rhapsodic seduction celebratory of the ephemeral, the eternal and the esoteric nature and narratives of fictive splendor, which valorously emanate from this voluptuous volume. This magisterial tome is a figurative brocade of both starlight and thunder transcribed into an insatiable verbal delirium groping toward an unbridled exposition on life’s wonders and mysteries. Drink mightily from its gilded chalice. . Albert Thomas Bifarelli
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Evil exemplifies the contemptuous transgression and annihilation of virtue. Albert Thomas Bifarelli
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Bureaucracy: A contentious rumble toward the establishment of authoritarian rule. Albert Thomas Bifarelli
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Liberty exists as the moral fiber within the political tapestry of man. Albert Thomas Bifarelli