![]() Herman Melville in Moby Dick writes, “I am tormented with an everlasting itch for things remote. Exploration, no matter how we wish to define it, is hunger in all of us. The object of discovery has led me to become vocal and expressive, to manifest myself in ways I’ve never dreamt of, and though I find myself to never really say much, my authorship is ode to exploration. Without the first breath of wind, without the courage to sail stormy seas, without defiance of probability, no such humanly quote would be taken. The truth in a dry Latin phrase is that without the first paving stones, there is no road. Throughout my works I have discovered video games, politics, follies of humanities and the rawness of human emotion, the density of the people around me, napkins, movies, various faux pas, a difficulty with juvenoia, comedy, contrarianism, a concern for Earth, and above all, myself. This is the message that the essays of Fallout Hippocrates wishes to impart. Despite the phrase’s immense lifespan, they all mean the same thing: We have to sail-we do not have to live. Paine’s “Ships of the World.” It is the stuff of in and outside maritime culture. It has been emblazoned on the gates of the Hanseatic League. The Latin phrase appeared in the Middle Ages. In fact he provided so much of it that there was a surplus left over for the use of people outside Italy, the supply overflowing, as it were from a welling fountain, in all directions.”-Plutarch, Pompei Viri Illustris Vita “So, with good fortune assisting his own daring and energy,” Plutarch pens, “he filled the sea with ships and the markets with grain. According to Plutarch (46-120 AD), Pompey coined this Latin term to kindle his captains. Staving anchour, she & her captains refused to set sail. In 56 BC, Pompey the Great (104-48 BC)’s ships were ready for the ocean voyage home from Africa to Rome, when an adverse storm brewed across the salty brine. “NAVIGARE NECESSE EST, VIVERE NON EST NECESSE.”
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