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...title sequence of the book takes the reader through a tour of Dante's tomb. Schnackenberg's meditation on the poet becomes a lament for the loss of a great poetic tradition. The speaker grieves that "no one will ever bother to cast again" the stunning images he created. The tone becomes less pessimistic as Schnackenberg begins to blur the lines between past and present: "There is a flood remnant...As if the Samaritan woman's water jar/Had been hurled against the wall, and was still dripping...Or it may be only a freshly washed floor/ Whose little lakes...

Author: By Deborah T. Kovsky, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: A Beautiful Gilded Lapse of Time | 12/17/1992 | See Source »

...heavy-handed mistreatment, that the Iceman was given professional succor. Arriving at the morgue, Konrad Spindler, head of Innsbruck's Institute for Prehistory, was stunned, immediately realizing the significance of the shriveled body. "I thought this was perhaps what my colleague Howard Carter experienced when he opened the tomb of Tutankhamen and gazed into the face of the Pharaoh...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Stone Age Iceman | 10/26/1992 | See Source »

North of the Franco-German border, Charlemagne's bones rest in the gilded tomb of Aachen's cathedral. The community's 12-star flag flutters from public buildings in a town that was briefly, in the 9th century, the capital of a Holy Roman Empire that united Europe from Brittany to Bohemia. But today, as Germans' once overwhelming support for Maastricht ebbs, flower seller Barbel Krutt speaks for Aachen's townspeople: "You can send all the politicians to the moon: this treaty does not mean a thing to folks like...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: In the Hands Of The People | 10/5/1992 | See Source »

...bore the inscription "Yehosef bar Qayafa," or Joseph, son of Caiaphas, and included the remains of a woman, a man of about 60 and four children. The outside of the ossuary is decorated in a rare and intricate pattern of concentric circles and rosettes, perhaps befitting a priest's tomb. After almost 2,000 years, however, it is impossible to know for sure...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Caiaphas' Cave | 8/24/1992 | See Source »

Examinations of bones and teeth may offer some valuable information about the inhabitant of the tomb. But the key to figuring out exactly who is buried there lies in the hieroglyphics emblazoned on the pots. Expert readers are currently baffled by the mysterious writings...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Fit for A King | 6/15/1992 | See Source »

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