Religious and Moral Ideas in the Novels of George EliotUniversity of Wisconsin--Madison, 1963 - 398 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 43
Page 69
... find a more typical instance than Young's poetry , of the mistake which substitutes interested obedience for ... finds a basic we are told , is a specimen " of the species divine -- a sur- prising name considering the nature of ...
... find a more typical instance than Young's poetry , of the mistake which substitutes interested obedience for ... finds a basic we are told , is a specimen " of the species divine -- a sur- prising name considering the nature of ...
Page 74
... finds ex- pression in the essay " German Wit : Heinrich Heine . ' In this essay she wanted to introduce the work of the German poet to her countrymen at a time when he was little known in England . She considered Heine as the legitimate ...
... finds ex- pression in the essay " German Wit : Heinrich Heine . ' In this essay she wanted to introduce the work of the German poet to her countrymen at a time when he was little known in England . She considered Heine as the legitimate ...
Page 166
... finds no guidance in the family religion . In the lives of Dodsons and Tullivers which constitute Maggie's family environments " one sees little trace of religion , still less of a distinctively Christian creed . " Their religion ...
... finds no guidance in the family religion . In the lives of Dodsons and Tullivers which constitute Maggie's family environments " one sees little trace of religion , still less of a distinctively Christian creed . " Their religion ...
Common terms and phrases
accept according action Adam Bede admiration affections Arthur attempt authority Barton become begins belief Book Bray brought called Chapter character Christianity Church Comte concept concern consequences course criticism Daniel Deronda deeds divine doctrines dogma early emotions essay ethics Evangelical existence experience expression face fact faith feelings Felix Holt felt finds force George Eliot give hand heart Hennell hopes human ideas individual influence intellectual kind leads letter lives London looked man's means mind Miss moral nature never novels one's passionate perfect philosophy position present question reading religion religious responsibility Review Romola says seems sense shows social sometimes soul Spinoza spirit story Strauss struggle suffering suggests sympathy teaching tells things thought tried true truth turned universe Westminster Review whole writes wrote