“Live as brave men; and if fortune is adverse, front its blows with brave hearts”
― Horace
“Arthur's saga appears to be one of the many forms of the general myth of the Emperor or invisible Universal Ruler and of his manifestations. It is a theme that dates back to the most ancient times and that bears a certain relation to the doctrine of the "cyclical manifestations" or avatars, namely, the manifestation, occurring at special times and in various forms, of a single principle, which during intermediate periods exists in an unmanifested state. Thus every time a king displayed the traits of an incarnation of such a principle, the idea arose in the legend that he has not died but has withdrawn to an inaccessible seat whence one day he will manifest himself, or that he is asleep and will awaken one day. And just as the suprahistorical element in these cases overlaps the historical element, by turning a real figure into a symbolic one, likewise the opposite occurs; that is, the names of these real figures sometimes survive, yet designate something that transcends them.
The image of a regality in a state of sleep or apparent death, however, is akin to that of an altered, wounded, paralyzed regality, in regard not to its intangible principle but to its external and historical representatives. Hence the theme of the wounded, mutilated, or weakened king who continues to live in the inaccessible center, in which time and death are suspended.”
— Julius Evola, The Mystery of the Grail (1937)
"I hear with pleasure that our sun is moving rapidly towards the constellation Hercules: and I hope that the men on this earth will do like the sun." — Nietzsche
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Years after years, even if you live off the grid or not within society, the idea of comfort will appeal you.
A warmer winter, less pain on your face after training, an easiest way to get food, living near a town center.
Degeneration is the reward of comfort.
Even in nature, shit like incest or pedophilia, stuff that should be solved with 9mm pills, are non existent.
Put some animals in captivity and you will see what will happen. This is what comfort does to animals.
Of course, I'm not comparing you to a goat or a dog, but try to look at society and to how the world is ruled, and you will understand.
Moral: do not fucking forget why you stepped outside, and stay true to yourself.
"The active agency was always an idea become a person—it was one or several determined wills which were fixed on determined goals. There can be no question that the birth of modern Italy was the work of the few. And it could not be otherwise. It is always the few who represent the self-consciousness and the will of an epoch and determine what its history shall be; for it is they who see the forces at their disposal and through those forces actuate the one truly active and productive force—their own will."
— Gentile
Politics and Aesthetics: the Fascism of Robert Brasillach
by William R. Tucker
On February 6, 1945, Robert Brasillach, French poet, novelist, literary critic and journalist was executed at the age of thirty-five following his conviction for treason. Before World War II he had served as editor of the openly fascist newspaper, Je Suis Partout, and had lent his literary talents to the cause of Franco-German collaboration. The current revival of interest in his life and works’ is due to the drama of his personal tragedy and to the fact that his intellectual adventure paralleled that of a generation of European youth caught up in the vision of a new type of man, homo fascista. But it is also because his writings provide insights into the appeal of fascism which transcend his particular time and place. Indeed, Brasillach himself was certain in 1945 that future generations of youth would marvel as they learned of the exultation and grandeur of the millions who had found new hope through the fascist experience.
"Where the monarchy, found in hands no longer capable of wielding a sword and scepter, has been overthrown due to the intrigues of the Jewish rabble and merchants, it must be restored. Where it still exists by inertia, it must be renewed, strengthened, and made dynamic as an organic, central, and absolute function, embodying simultaneously the power of strength and the light of the spirit in a unique being; one that truly acts on behalf of an entire lineage and at the same time transcends everything conditioned by earth and blood. Only then will there be the right to speak of an empire. If it is awakened to a glorious, sacred, metaphysical reality, yet remains the pinnacle of a militarily ordered political hierarchy — then the monarchy will regain the position and function it once had before the usurpation by the priestly caste."
— Evola
"A man may be hard to persuade by rational argument while he is easily swayed by a display of passion, even if it is feigned."
— Yukio Mishima, Spring Snow
"Leadership is your ability to build the relationships with people around you, instill belief into them, belief in the mission, and actually go inspire them to take action."
— JOCKO
“The saying that “All abilities come from one mind” sounds as though it has to do with sentient matters, but it is in fact a matter of being unattached to life and death. With such non-attachment one can accomplish any feat.”
― Yamamoto Tsunetomo, Hagakure
"You socialists are not revolutionaries. In Italy, there are only three men who can make the revolution: Mussolini, D'Annunzio, and Marinetti."
— Lenin
“Ideas that have become blood demand blood.
War is the eternal form of higher human existence, and states exist for the sake of war; they are an expression of the readiness for war.”
— Spengler
"I overcame myself, the sufferer; I carried my own ashes to the mountains; I invented a brighter flame for myself."
Читать полностью…“This incessant worldly talk about charity and benevolence and generosity and liberality and gifts and donations is almost unmerciful.”
— Kierkegaard
"I've known supreme happiness, and I'm not greedy enough to want what I have to go on forever. Every dream ends. Wouldn't it be foolish, knowing that nothing lasts forever, to insist that one has a right to do something that does?"
— Yukio Mishima, 'Spring Snow'
VENI, VIDI, VICI!
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And this is a good thing. This is how you integrate prennial essences with present conditions in an organic and tasteful synthesis.
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