Clarity,
Office 17622,
PO Box 6945,
London.
W1A 6US
United Kingdom
Phone/ Voicemail:
+44 (0)20 3287 3053 (UK)
+1 (561) 459-4758 (US).
Corto Maltese consults the I Ching
[Begining dialog between Corto Maltesse and a chinese sage known as Long-Life]
—Welcome back, Corto Maltese ... smoke with me the air that will prepare your mind and listen to your mouth to ask what you want to know from the Book of Changes— said the old man with a deep voice and gentle , handing the sailor his fragile pipe.
—Thanks, Long-Life, but you know that my mind is always ready to listen to wise counsel coming from the reading of 'I Ching, also without smoking the air that has changed your great country.
—As you like it, Corto. Here —he said, handing him the three coins— Toss out six times and think about what you care about— Corto obeyed. To each of its launches, Long-Life traced on a sheet of paper a continuous or broken line.
The italian surce:
http://www.comecucinarelanostravita.it/corto-maltese-consulta-i-ching/
Courtney:...
Charly, in the picture of the Hidden Court, is that a well being featured? In the comic book I think he receives 38 and 54. I wonder if it was 38.6 or 54.6 and if he uses the advice he was given.
...
Courtney:I like the little fluttering fairy flower things dancing around in the first few frames.
You´re very kind, Courtney.Butterflies in the stomach and feelings in the wind. I think you are right Charly.
Hi Courtney:Butterflies in the stomach and feelings in the wind. I think you are right Charly.
Soong Ching-Ling (1893-1981)
(Madame Sun Yat-Sen)
Honorary President of the People's Republic of China
Leader of the Women's Department of the Kuomintang
Soong Ching-Ling was born in Shanghai on the 27th of January in 1893 to well-educated, Christian parents. Before marrying Dr. Sun Yat-sen, Ching-ling travelled to the United States for her education; she and her three sisters became the first Chinese girls to be educated in the states. At the age of eighteen, Ching-ling began to speak out against the conditions of women in her country in a non-violent manner which expressed her ideals of Liberty and Equality. For the next seven decades, Soong Ching-ling became an active character within both the political and social arenas of Chinese culture. She came to be known as "the Mother of China" by both the main political parties, the Kuomintang and the Communists.
A Brief Timeline of the Life of Soong Ching-Ling
1893 Born.
1915 Marries Dr. Sun Yat-sen, the founder of the first Chinese Republic. Together they struggle to bring social and economic order to the chaos of post-Imperial China.
1924 Elected head of the Women's Department of the Kuomintang.
1925 Dr. Sun Yat-sen dies. Soong Ching-Ling devotes the rest of her life to upholding her husband's ideals by becoming the most passionate and prominent opponent of Chiang Kai-shek.
1932 Founds the China League for Civil Rights.
1938 Founds China Defence League.
1949 Offered the leadership position of the Kuomintang, which she turns down.
Becomes the Vice-President of the Central People's Government Council as well as the Honorary President of the All-China Women's Federation.
1950 Creates the China Welfare Institute.
1952 Founds China Reconstructs magazine.
1957 Travels to Moscow with Chairman Mao for the Conference of World Communist Parties.
1981 Named Honorary President of the People's Republic of China.
Dies of Leukaemia in Peking.
Soong Ching-Ling as an early champion of Chinese Women's Liberation
When Soong Ching-Ling was a student in the United States she began to seriously consider the conditions of women in China. The first and foremost Chinese practice that she singled out was the issue of arranged marriages. Through the influences of Western emancipation, Ching-Ling tackled this institution by declaring that the abolition of arranged marriages would further the liberation of both women and men in China.
When she married Sun Yat-sen in 1915 she not only became his wife but a strong political collegue of his. Up until that time women were basically invisible in the eyes of society. Few women would show their faces in public and would rarely accompany their husbands to any social gathering. In a biography of Soong Ching-Ling, Jung Chang writes that Ching-Ling was the first Chinese woman to appear in public with her husband and that she became the first consort of a political leader anywhere in the world to act as "First Lady."
Politically, Ching-Ling was a leading force behind the reorganization of the Kuomintang as well as in the shift away from the western powers towards Russia. Then in 1924 she was made head of the Womens' Department of the Party. She viewed that Chinese Women's Liberation was an inseparable part of the Chinese revolution-her views therefore set the tone for the radical line on the question of women in China.
Early in her career she divided her time between working in the government and working on the affairs of women. One of her major achievements during this time was the founding of the Women's Political Training School in 1927 - here she gave numerous talks on the importance of women joining the revolution as well as on the liberation of women in China. In the 1950s and 1960s she was very active in the official women's movement. Her ideals, along with the creation of the All-China Women's Federation in 1949 helped to shape the policies of China pertaining to women.
Source: Jung Chang - "Mme. Sun Yat-sen". Penguin Books, 1986.
Borrowed from: Profile of Soong Ching-Ling
Clarity,
Office 17622,
PO Box 6945,
London.
W1A 6US
United Kingdom
Phone/ Voicemail:
+44 (0)20 3287 3053 (UK)
+1 (561) 459-4758 (US).