I don’t know if you’re alive or dead. Can you on earth be sought, Or only when the sunsets fade Be mourned serenely in my thought?
Read More...by Suhel Ahmad | Last Updated on June 17, 2020 | Created on June 17, 2020
Damn you! I will not grant your cursed soul Vicarious tears or a single glance. And I swear to you by the garden of the angels, I swear by the miracle-working icon, And by the fire and smoke of our nights: I will never come back to you.
Read More...by Suhel Ahmad | Last Updated on June 17, 2020 | Created on June 17, 2020
You thought I was that type: That you could forget me, And that I’d plead and weep And throw myself under the hooves of a bay mare…
Read More...by Suhel Ahmad | Last Updated on June 17, 2020 | Created on June 17, 2020
I go forth to seek — To seek and claim the lovely magic garden Where grasses softly sigh and Muses speak.
Read More...by Suhel Ahmad | Last Updated on June 17, 2020 | Created on June 17, 2020
O let the organ, many-voiced, sing boldly, O let it roar like spring’s first thunderstorm! My half-closed eyes over your young bride’s shoulder Will meet your eyes just once and then no more.
Read More...by Suhel Ahmad | Last Updated on June 17, 2020 | Created on June 17, 2020
The breath coming out of your chest Turns into a dark cloud And stands like a wall In front of your eyes
Read More...by Suhel Ahmad | Last Updated on June 17, 2020 | Created on June 17, 2020
The leafless orchard Is alone day and night With his pure and sad silence.
Read More...by Suhel Ahmad | Last Updated on June 17, 2020 | Created on June 17, 2020
Your greetings they’ll ignore. With their heads resting on their chests, They seek warmth from their breasts, None affords to lift a head to greet the guests. Vision is limited, The road’s dark and slick. Your extended friendly hand is refused, Not because they are confused; They rather keep their hands where they are warmed. […]
Read More...by Suhel Ahmad | Last Updated on June 17, 2020 | Created on June 17, 2020
Each individual family, then, does almost as well with a good rule of thumb as it would with perfect rationality—close enough to make perfect rationality an irrational goal. But now comes Akerlof’s big insight: “near-rational” behavior and perfectly rational behavior have very different implications for policy.
Read More...by Suhel Ahmad | Last Updated on June 17, 2020 | Created on June 17, 2020
To understand the economy then is to comprehend how it is driven by the animal spirits. Just as Adam Smith’s invisible hand is the keynote of classical economics, Keynes’ animal spirits are the keynote to a different view of the economy — a view that explains the underlying instabilities of capitalism.
Read More...by Suhel Ahmad | Last Updated on June 17, 2020 | Created on June 17, 2020