Dear Colleague: Common and Uncommon ObservationsU of Minnesota Press - 223 pagini |
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Pagina 3
... thing as bad weather . All weather is good because it is God's . ” Saint Columba ( 521–97 ) didn't recognize bad weather either . Or , rather , he welcomed it without exception . On the desolate island of Iona , he spoke fondly of his ...
... thing as bad weather . All weather is good because it is God's . ” Saint Columba ( 521–97 ) didn't recognize bad weather either . Or , rather , he welcomed it without exception . On the desolate island of Iona , he spoke fondly of his ...
Pagina 12
... things sustaining and renewing themselves through time . What about life in the desert — for example , flowers that bloom after spring showers ? Yes , but they quickly disappear , as though to dramatize the ephemerality of life . In the ...
... things sustaining and renewing themselves through time . What about life in the desert — for example , flowers that bloom after spring showers ? Yes , but they quickly disappear , as though to dramatize the ephemerality of life . In the ...
Pagina 13
... things do. But in Shakespeare's time, adaptation was far more grandly conceived. To young Lorenzo and Jessica, the harmony to be sought was between the celestial orbs above and the immortal souls below. Shakespeare did not see nature ...
... things do. But in Shakespeare's time, adaptation was far more grandly conceived. To young Lorenzo and Jessica, the harmony to be sought was between the celestial orbs above and the immortal souls below. Shakespeare did not see nature ...
Pagina 14
... things that change, things whose beauty is typically frail or transient. We human beings know change and frailty as we do not know permanence. We bond naturally with the daffodil, because as Robert Herrick (1591–1674) put it: We have ...
... things that change, things whose beauty is typically frail or transient. We human beings know change and frailty as we do not know permanence. We bond naturally with the daffodil, because as Robert Herrick (1591–1674) put it: We have ...
Pagina 30
Ți-ai atins limita de vizualizări pentru această carte.
Ți-ai atins limita de vizualizări pentru această carte.
Cuprins
1 | |
Civilization and City | 20 |
Politics and Ideology | 33 |
Culture Society Work | 48 |
Home Rootedness Place | 58 |
Human Ties and Isolation | 67 |
Ancestors | 81 |
Sex | 84 |
Geography | 118 |
History | 131 |
Aesthetics | 134 |
Intellect | 147 |
Language | 161 |
Morality | 170 |
Religion | 191 |
Stages of Life | 203 |
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aesthetic African Americans Alfred North Whitehead American André Gide animals artists asked beauty believe better body C. S. Lewis child chimpanzees China Chinese civilization Consider contrast course culture Czeslaw Milosz death earth envy example experience eyes feel friends geographers Greeks happened happiness human imagination immortal intellectual Iris Murdoch John Updike kind lack landscape less live look male means mind modern Moloko moral mother movie nature never night one’s person Peter Kropotkin philosopher physical physicist Pier Paolo Pasolini pleasure political reason Roland Barthes sense sexual social society someone soul spirit story street T. E. Lawrence tell things thinkers thought tion truth University W. H. Auden wait Western woman women wonder words write wrote young