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/lit/ - Literature

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>> No.2399562 [View]
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2399562

I never have had to.

I speak English and French and I have never felt the need (or had the need) to extend my parameters beyond that point. There are many of the most relevant examples of literature in those two languages; more than I'll ever need. Time would be wasted learning it when I can read literature from already 'beautiful' languages. I pity OP for being elitist about something he might regret.

>> No.2399555 [View]
File: 39 KB, 500x272, redberet.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
2399555

I never have had to.

I speak English and French and I have never felt the need (or had the need) to extend my parameters beyond that point. There are many of the most relevant examples of literature in those two languages; more than I'll ever need. Time would be wasted learning it when I can read literature from already 'beautiful' languages. I pity OP for being elitist about something he might regret.

>> No.2326662 [View]
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2326662

I have a theory about death.
Humans have never known the meaning of why we're here, therefore our only option is to make more humans to think about it for us. As a reward for having children a something, not necessarily a higher power, makes us live on through our offspring. If you don't have children, you don't just feel emptiness, you ARE emptiness, assuming here that you can't feel.

Your thoughts on death /lit/?
Any interesting books that suggest unorthodox views on death?

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