The Teaching of George Eliot |
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Page 31
... true atheist . Dinah , however , as a true Methodist , eschews ritual . Closing her eyes , she is ' enclosed by the Divine Presence ' by ' a Love and Sympathy deeper and more tender than was breathed by earth and sky ' . Without knowing ...
... true atheist . Dinah , however , as a true Methodist , eschews ritual . Closing her eyes , she is ' enclosed by the Divine Presence ' by ' a Love and Sympathy deeper and more tender than was breathed by earth and sky ' . Without knowing ...
Page 120
... true ; everything is permitted . " Thus having identified asceticism as the enemy of life , analysis finds that it is itself ascetic : the intellect hunts itself down in The Genealogy of Morals and is in at the death : all that remains ...
... true ; everything is permitted . " Thus having identified asceticism as the enemy of life , analysis finds that it is itself ascetic : the intellect hunts itself down in The Genealogy of Morals and is in at the death : all that remains ...
Page 202
... true distinction of her lovers is to be identical with their task of discover- ing and demonstrating their true feelings for each other . Seen in this light the love - story of Dorothea and Will becomes a technical triumph : its means ...
... true distinction of her lovers is to be identical with their task of discover- ing and demonstrating their true feelings for each other . Seen in this light the love - story of Dorothea and Will becomes a technical triumph : its means ...
Contents
Morality and religion | 17 |
Heredity and psychology | 38 |
the challenge of Marxs Theses on Feuerbach | 103 |
Copyright | |
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accept action Adam apparently associated becomes Bede believed called characters clearly comparable Comte conception condition consciousness consequences course Critical culture Daniel Deronda described distinction Dorothea effect emotional English Essays example experience fact feeling Felix Holt fiction finally finds force George Eliot give ground hand heart Hetty human Ibid ideal ideas ignorance important individual intellectual intense kind later least less limited lives logic Maggie means memory mental Middlemarch mind moral narrative nature never novel object organic particular passion past political position Positivist possible practical precisely present principle problem question reader reading relations religion religious represented respect response Romola seems seen sense significant simply social society soul specific structure suggests symbol sympathy theory things thinking thought tion true values whole woman writing