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...poetry of Rainer Maria Rilke and Wallace Stevens. Jehovah's angels are powerful creatures; in Genesis they guard the east gates of Eden with flashing swords; in Ezekiel they overpower the prophet with awesome visions, four-headed, multiwinged and many eyed; in Revelation they do battle with a dragon. Milton describes the "flaming Seraph, fearless, though alone, encompassed round with foes." And Rilke wrote, "If the archangel now, perilous, from behind the stars took even one step down toward us, our own heart, beating higher and higher, would beat us to death." Every angel, he declared, "is terrifying...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Angels Among Us | 12/27/1993 | See Source »

...their physical nature, angels were traditionally said to assume bodies only as needed to carry out a task. This meant that they had no gender, despite the sentimental Victorian image of the pale virgin with wings. Milton's angels, however, among the most vivid in literature, were robust figures who ate and drank freely. Raphael, in fact, "with a smile that glowed/ Celestial rosy red," blushingly explained to Adam and Eve how angels make love, "Easier than air with air, if spirits embrace, / Total they mix, union of pure with pure/ Desiring...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Angels Among Us | 12/27/1993 | See Source »

...Iblis, a word perhaps derived from the Greek diabolos, the proudest of all God's creatures. And it was pride that would lead to Satan's rebellion and eventual expulsion from heaven. But even in the depths of hell, he retained an awe-inspiring dignity. In the words of Milton's Paradise Lost, "With grave aspect he rose, and in his rising seemed a pillar of state . . . princely counsel in his face yet shone, majestic though in ruin...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sympathy for the Devil | 12/27/1993 | See Source »

...task fell to Time imaging specialist Kin Wah Lam, who went to work on computerized photos of 14 models selected by Time's assistant picture editor Jay Colton. Aided and abetted by our issue's design directors, Walter Bernard and Milton Glaser, Lam spent more than 65 hours on the computer, using a complicated formula to produce the various combinations of offspring. The result is the fascinating chart on pages 66 and 67. Time makes no claim to scientific accuracy (although the process is described in more detail in the text accompanying the chart) but presents Lam's chimerical results...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: From The Managing Editor: Nov. 18, 1993 | 12/2/1993 | See Source »

...than a third of those huge companies are still dripping with red ink. So far, the government has been unwilling to enforce a five-year-old bankruptcy law that would require the firms to cut featherbedded staffs and losses. Privatization remains the government's great and enduring taboo. Says Milton Friedman, the Nobel-prizewinning conservative economist, who completed a trip through China last month: "The answer to the question of how to go about getting a free- market system is very straightforward. You get the government out of the way and privatize, privatize, privatize. The Chinese have the words...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Slipping Out of Zhu's Squeeze | 11/29/1993 | See Source »

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