The Edinburgh Review: Or Critical Journal, Volume 212A. Constable, 1910 |
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Page 146
... Nature is not our mother Nature is our sister . We can be proud of her beauty , since we have the same father ; but she has no authority over us ; we have to admire , but not to imitate . This gives to the typically Christian pleasure ...
... Nature is not our mother Nature is our sister . We can be proud of her beauty , since we have the same father ; but she has no authority over us ; we have to admire , but not to imitate . This gives to the typically Christian pleasure ...
Page 262
... nature's laws , and submitted without a possibility of protest to any casual fate that might await him . In this condition he must have remained for many ages . Evolution at first moves with a slowness , hardly comparable with the rapid ...
... nature's laws , and submitted without a possibility of protest to any casual fate that might await him . In this condition he must have remained for many ages . Evolution at first moves with a slowness , hardly comparable with the rapid ...
Page 458
... nature and shall not be derived from nature either by imitation or selection . A longing after , a passionate seeking for spiritual expression— that is one commanding trait of Indian art ; a dislike and distrust of nature and a ...
... nature and shall not be derived from nature either by imitation or selection . A longing after , a passionate seeking for spiritual expression— that is one commanding trait of Indian art ; a dislike and distrust of nature and a ...
Contents
THE DEATH OF THE KING | 1 |
tion By John Pentland Mahaffy New York | 32 |
Lyte Macmillan 1899 | 54 |
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