Tolstoy: the Inner DramaHarcourt, Brace, 1927 - 320 strani |
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Zadetki 1–3 od 64
Stran 38
... deny the intellect is as impossible to the man in whom it has once asserted its rights as to deny the instincts is to the savage . To attempt to do so , as Tolstoy did all his life , is merely to confirm its despotism , until finally it ...
... deny the intellect is as impossible to the man in whom it has once asserted its rights as to deny the instincts is to the savage . To attempt to do so , as Tolstoy did all his life , is merely to confirm its despotism , until finally it ...
Stran 43
... deny his instincts more and more triumphed over the need of indulging them . Increasingly too he came to associate the release from possessive egotism for which he strove with the hour when men accepted the lordship of death . There is ...
... deny his instincts more and more triumphed over the need of indulging them . Increasingly too he came to associate the release from possessive egotism for which he strove with the hour when men accepted the lordship of death . There is ...
Stran 247
... denied the physical life over which it ruled . After all his ten years ' search in the Scriptures for the secret of eternal ... deny , now with a transient moral satisfaction , now with an overpowering physical disgust , the flesh which ...
... denied the physical life over which it ruled . After all his ten years ' search in the Scriptures for the secret of eternal ... deny , now with a transient moral satisfaction , now with an overpowering physical disgust , the flesh which ...
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accepted achieve activity admit already animal artist beauty become believe body ceased characters Christianity Church civilization claimed conception conscience consciousness continually creative critical death demands deny described desire elements essential evil example exist experience expressed eyes fact failed faith false fear feeling felt final forces girl hands happiness hated heart human idea ideal individual inevitably instincts intelligence intense justify knowledge labour later less live longer look marriage meaning mental merely mind moral nature never once passions peace peasant perfect physical Pierre pleasure possessed possible practical primitive pure rational reality realize reason relation religious satisfy seek seemed sense sensual sentimental simple social society soul spiritual struggle suffering teaching thing thought tion Tolstoy Tolstoy's true truth turned understand virtue whole woman women writing wrote