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By AnonymMatthew De Abaitua
A talent for forgetting is necessary to maintain civility.
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By AnonymMatthew De Abaitua
Exhaustion is a thin blanket tattered with bullet holes.
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By AnonymMatthew De Abaitua
Her self lagged behind her anger, like a mother picking up after a destructive child.
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By AnonymMatthew De Abaitua
Horror is the awakening of repressed knowledge, something that you have known all along but kept at the periphery of awareness so that life can go on.
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By AnonymMatthew De Abaitua
Humans make tools. Some animals make tools too. The making and using of tools is important for developing language, how we think and speak. If we do not make anything, it affects our thinking.
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By AnonymMatthew De Abaitua
If you said to me, “I do not love, I have never loved,” then you would sound incomplete. Equally, if you say “I do not hate, I have never hated,” then you sound like half a man.
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By AnonymMatthew De Abaitua
It is in his obsessions that mankind most closely resembles his machines.
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By AnonymMatthew De Abaitua
The devil steps up to the podium, clears his throat and taps out time with his baton: in come the monstrous iron kettle drums of artillery, joined by a woodwind section of whistling bullets and shrieking shells, the ever-crackling light percussion of rifle fire.
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By AnonymMatthew De Abaitua
Who desired the Great War? No nation benefitted from it. The war brought about the destruction of the Prussian Empire, stripped the British Empire of its ability to hold its colonies, slaughtered the French and starved Germany, inspired a revolution in Russia, and prepared the ground for a more terrible slaughter to come. The great powers didn’t want a war and they certainly didn’t need one. But their people wanted a war. To the surprise of the rulers across the Allies and the Central Powers, the idea of war was seized by the people of every nation.
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