Tolstoy; the Inner DramaRussell & Russell, 1968 - 320 strani |
Iz vsebine knjige
Zadetki 1–3 od 50
Stran 200
... relation with life , he felt , was organic , and without inquiring what sort of an organic relation it was , without remembering how often he had tried to recover this relation and how invariably he had failed , he determined that he ...
... relation with life , he felt , was organic , and without inquiring what sort of an organic relation it was , without remembering how often he had tried to recover this relation and how invariably he had failed , he determined that he ...
Stran 223
... relations was quite unjustified . At best it would only confine it within the limits of family life . Married life , as Tolstoy ... relation of men and women as distinct from a physical and negative one . It is not in fact marriage which ...
... relations was quite unjustified . At best it would only confine it within the limits of family life . Married life , as Tolstoy ... relation of men and women as distinct from a physical and negative one . It is not in fact marriage which ...
Stran 284
... relation to God is not one and the same , and the relation to God revealed in the works of Homer or the Hebrew prophets is to a modern perception imperfect . The Iliad is great art because the religious and artistic impulses were at one ...
... relation to God is not one and the same , and the relation to God revealed in the works of Homer or the Hebrew prophets is to a modern perception imperfect . The Iliad is great art because the religious and artistic impulses were at one ...
Vsebina
PROLOGUE | 13 |
THE ELEMENTS OF CONFLICT | 29 |
THE ANTAGONISMS DEFINED | 73 |
Avtorske pravice | |
4 preostalih delov ni prikazanih
Druge izdaje - Prikaži vse
Pogosti izrazi in povedi
accepted achieve admit animal Anna Karenina appetites artist beauty Beethoven body Caucasus ceased characters Christ's teaching Christianity Church civilization claimed conception Confession conflict conscience consciousness Cossacks creative criticism death denial deny desire dream Edward Garnett egotism elements enslaved evil exist experience expressed fact fact of death faith false fear feeling felt forces girl Hadji Murad happiness harmony hated hatred horror human ideal impulse individual inevitably innocence instincts intelligence justify Kreutzer Sonata labour later Levin life-conception live marriage Maryanka meaning ment mental merely mind modern moral Natasha nature never passions peace peasant perception perfect physical Pierre pleasure possessed Pozdnyshev primitive Prince Andrew rational reality realize reason reconcile relation religion religious Russia Sebastopol seek seemed sensation sense sensual sentimental Shakespeare society soul spiritual struggle thing thought tion Tolstoy's true truth virtue War and Peace whole woman women writing Wyndham Lewis Yasnaya Polyana