anghraine: vader extending his lightsaber; text: and now for the airing of grievances! (cèsar [il principe])
Shout-out to my man Erasmus for his take on Giuliano della Rovere/Pope Julius II, c. 1517:

But when nations and their rulers have been carrying on riotous raids and counter-raids for years on end, what happens then to the papal authority, once second only to that of Christ himself? It might be exercised even here, if the popes were not held in the grip of the same passions. Let the pope call for war, he is obeyed at once; when he calls for peace, why isn’t he obeyed the same way? If the princes were so eager for peace, why did they obey Julius in his belligerent outbursts yet pay hardly any attention to Leo when he spoke out for peace? If the pope’s authority is sacred, it ought to be particularly so whenever he urges the same things as Christ originally proposed. The princes who listened to Julius when he called for that awful war but then couldn’t hear Leo when he called for Christian concord were practically admitting that, while using the church as a smoke-screen, they were really serving their own appetites.

anghraine: various thickly-bound books on the shelves of a library (library)
In response to this quote, irresistible-revolution said:

agshdjdkdkd WIG

I replied:

lol right?

#pretty rude of erasmus to attack us five hundred years ago

She responded:

that line about locking up a manuscript for years and years where no one can see it…my whole scalp!

I replied:

For me it’s the part about constantly taking things out and putting them back in. Like … wow, Erasmus, that was NOT called for.
anghraine: a piece of paper covered in handwriting and a fountain pen; text: writer (writing)
I reblogged this quote, which I had earlier posted in August of 2018—

These erudites seem to me more pitiable than happy, since they are assiduous self-torturers. They change, they interline, they erase something and put it back in, they rewrite the whole thing, after rephrasing a passage they show it to their friends and after all they closet up the manuscript for nine years but without ever satisfying themselves—and this for an empty reward of praise from a mere handful of critics.

—Desiderius Erasmus, "The Praise of Folly" (1510)

—and added:

adjkdf;kajf this call-out remains 100% valid

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anghraine: vader extending his lightsaber; text: and now for the airing of grievances! (Default)
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