Religious and Moral Ideas in the Novels of George EliotUniversity of Wisconsin--Madison, 1963 - 398 pages |
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Page 87
... seem plainly destined to extermination or fusion not excepting even the Hebrew - Caucasian . But the Negroes are too ... seems too strong , for fusion to take place to any great extent . In the review she refuses to hazard an opinion on ...
... seem plainly destined to extermination or fusion not excepting even the Hebrew - Caucasian . But the Negroes are too ... seems too strong , for fusion to take place to any great extent . In the review she refuses to hazard an opinion on ...
Page 97
... seems to look at them from a different angle . Her churchmen seem to fall in three easily distinguishable groups . On one side are those who are very zealous about dogma whose knowledge of doctrines is unassailable , and who never miss ...
... seems to look at them from a different angle . Her churchmen seem to fall in three easily distinguishable groups . On one side are those who are very zealous about dogma whose knowledge of doctrines is unassailable , and who never miss ...
Page 112
... seems always to have left me to myself . I have sometimes prayed to Him to help me and yet help 24 everything has been just the same as before . " Tryan lays bare his own bruised heart before her . He tells her how the object of his ...
... seems always to have left me to myself . I have sometimes prayed to Him to help me and yet help 24 everything has been just the same as before . " Tryan lays bare his own bruised heart before her . He tells her how the object of his ...
Common terms and phrases
action Adam Bede admiration Amos Barton Arthur artist Auguste Comte become belief Book VII Bray's called Chapter character Charles Bray Charles Lee Lewes Christianity Church churchmen clerical Comte concept Coventry criticism Daniel Deronda deeds divine doctrines dogma egoism Eliot presents Eliot's ethics emotions essay Evangelical evil experience F. R. Leavis fact faith Farebrother feelings Felix Holt felt Feuerbach fiction finds Floss George Eliot Gilfil's Gwendolen Haight heart Hennell's Hetty Hetty's human nature ideas influence intellectual Janet's Repentance Jesus letter Lewes lives London looked Maggie man's mankind Mary Ann Middlemarch Mill mind miracles Miss Evans moral never novelist one's pantheism parishioners passionate philosophy poem poetry position preacher religion religious Romola Sara Sophia Hennell sense sermons Silas Marner social soul Spinoza spirit story Strauss struggle suffering suggests sympathy theology things thought Transome truth Tryan Westminster Review William Wilberforce writes wrote to Sara young