Tolstoy: The Inner DramaJ. Cape, 1927 - 320 strani |
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Zadetki 1–3 od 23
Stran 123
... described the experience more exactly . It was because he experienced the victim's sensations with a morbid intensity unrelieved by even an element of rational detachment , that he felt that nothing could justify this deed . He felt it ...
... described the experience more exactly . It was because he experienced the victim's sensations with a morbid intensity unrelieved by even an element of rational detachment , that he felt that nothing could justify this deed . He felt it ...
Stran 145
... described as ' the true joy in life . . . the being a force of Nature instead of a feverish , selfish little clod of ail- ments and grievances , complaining that the world will not devote itself to making you happy . ' As he wrote he ...
... described as ' the true joy in life . . . the being a force of Nature instead of a feverish , selfish little clod of ail- ments and grievances , complaining that the world will not devote itself to making you happy . ' As he wrote he ...
Stran 255
... described as his ' implacable hostility ' to women was in- deed a necessary condition of his faith . For he felt that women expressed with terrible seductiveness the physical life which he must deny . He felt it so morbidly that he ...
... described as his ' implacable hostility ' to women was in- deed a necessary condition of his faith . For he felt that women expressed with terrible seductiveness the physical life which he must deny . He felt it so morbidly that he ...
Vsebina
PROLOGUE | 13 |
THE ELEMENTS OF CONFLICT | 29 |
THE ANTAGONISMS DEFINED | 73 |
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accepted admit animal Anna Karenina appetites artist beauty body CALIFORNIA/SANTA CRUZ Caucasus ceased characters Christ's teaching Christianity Church civilization claimed conception conflict conscience consciousness Cossacks creative criticism CRUZ The University death denial deny desire dream egotism elements enslaved evil exist experience expressed fact fact of death faith false fear feeling felt forces girl Hadji Murad happiness hated hatred horror human ideal impulse individual inevitably innocence instincts intelligence justify Kreutzer Sonata labour later Levin life-conception live marriage Maryanka 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 relation religion religious Russia Sebastopol seek seemed sensation sense sensual sentimental Shakespeare society soul spiritual struggle thought tion Tolstoy's true truth University Library UNIVERSITY UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA/SANTA virtue War and Peace whole woman women writing Yasnaya Polyana