Colby Quarterly, Volume 34Colby College, 1998 |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 33
Page 58
... human feelings in terms of the divine goal . " Eliot's equivocation is vital precisely because it does not commit the logocentric choice of turning decisively either towards or against the " ontotheological " origin . It uses the terms ...
... human feelings in terms of the divine goal . " Eliot's equivocation is vital precisely because it does not commit the logocentric choice of turning decisively either towards or against the " ontotheological " origin . It uses the terms ...
Page 66
... human power cannot remove . ( LG , 144 ) Tantalizingly behind the hands that wove the intolerable shirt or veil is perhaps the transcendent Truth . But this name is unfamiliar , fictive : the veil stays in place because it is a shirt or ...
... human power cannot remove . ( LG , 144 ) Tantalizingly behind the hands that wove the intolerable shirt or veil is perhaps the transcendent Truth . But this name is unfamiliar , fictive : the veil stays in place because it is a shirt or ...
Page 71
... human existence because that is where we belong : And the lost heart stiffens and rejoices In the lost lilac and the lost sea voices And the weak spirit quickens to rebel For the bent golden - rod and the lost sea smell Quickens to ...
... human existence because that is where we belong : And the lost heart stiffens and rejoices In the lost lilac and the lost sea voices And the weak spirit quickens to rebel For the bent golden - rod and the lost sea smell Quickens to ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
allusion androgyny Anna Prince Annie Annie Adams Fields Ash Wednesday beauty black women Blake Blake's Boston Bruce Cary characters Colby Colby College collage context conventional Country Doctor covers Critical cultural daughter Deephaven divine goal domestic Eliot Elly England Essays experience father female feminine feminist figure Folly Island Freeman's gender George Gerry Gerry girl grandmother Harper Horatia imagination Jack Prince King of Folly Lady Ferry Leslie literary literature lives lover male marriage marry Martha Mary maternal Miss Sydney mother Nan's narrative narrator nineteenth-century novel Old Friends patriarchal poem poetry Pointed Firs protagonist Quarterly reader realism relationship role romance Sarah Orne Jewett Science sense silence story suggests Sylvia T.S. Eliot tells things tion tradition turn unwritable vision voice White Heron white women Whitman Wilkins Wilkins Freeman William Blake William Dean Howells Wollstonecraft's woman Womanhood women writers words York young