Tag Archives: balanced life
The Old Account Was Settled
The Old Account Was Settled There’s a country gospel song about our debt of sin. It goes: The old account was settled long ago. I’ve been reckoning up accounts that ordinarily get settled in young adulthood, when you figure out … Continue reading
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Tagged a daughter’s duty, accounts left open, American culture mid-20th-century, American intellectual life, arbitration hearing, archives, Archiving, balanced assessment, balanced life, balancing accounts, closure, Columbia University philosophers, country gospel, CUNY “Corporation Counsel”, CUNY lawyer, debt to parents, essays, father fixation, fiction, filial piety, Henry M. Rosenthal, Henry M. Rosenthal's The Consolations of Philosophy, Holocaust rescue, Horace L. Friess, intellectual correspondence, international law, journals, keeping accounts, lawyer friend, letter of appreciation, literary property, manuscripts, master list, nonfiction, papers of Henry M. Rosenthal, personal presence, private man, public man, Rafael Lemkin, recommendation letter, record of a life, record of achievement, remarkable father, reviews, settling accounts, success and unsuccess, testimony under oath, The Genocide Convention, the Jewish spirit, union lawyer, work realized, work unrealized, young adulthood
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