In the earlier tract I was told I did not make my meaning sufficiently clear. In this I have consequently tried to illustrate it in various ways, and may have been guilty of much repetition. Yet, as I am anxious to leave no room for doubt, I shall venture... Woman in the nineteenth century - Pagina 160di Sarah Margaret Ossoli (march.) - 1845Visualizzazione completa - Informazioni su questo libro
| Margaret Fuller - 1855 - 444 pagine
...which is ever flowing from the heights of my thought. In the earlier tract I was told I did not make my meaning sufficiently clear. In this I have consequently...intelligences above him. The earth is his school, if not his birth-place ; God his object ; life and thought his means of interpreting nature, and aspiring... | |
| Margaret Fuller - 1860 - 448 pagine
...from the heights of my thought. In the earlier tract I was told I did not make my meaning suiBciently clear. In this I have consequently tried to illustrate...intelligences above him. The earth is his school, if not his birth-place ; God his object ; life and thought his means of interpreting nature, and aspiring... | |
| Julia Ward Howe - 1883 - 332 pagine
...enough to show its general scope and tenor. Here is the substance of it, mostly in her own words : — Man is a being of twofold relations, — to nature...intelligences above him. The earth is his school, God his object, life and thought his means of attaining it. The growth of man is twofold, — masculine... | |
| Margaret Fuller - 1978 - 406 pagine
...is ever flowing from the heights of my thought. In the earlier tract, I was told, I did not make my meaning sufficiently clear. In this I have consequently...intelligences above him. The earth is his school, if not his birth-place: God his object: life and thought, his means of interpreting nature, and aspiring... | |
| Margaret Fuller - 1992 - 540 pagine
...is ever flowing from the heights of my thought. In the earlier tract, I was told, I did not make my meaning sufficiently clear. In this I have consequently...being of two-fold relations, to nature beneath, and intelligence above him. The earth is his school, if not his birth-place: God his object: life and thought,... | |
| Sherry Lee Linkon - 1997 - 202 pagine
...form, "The Great Lawsuit," saying, for example: "In the earlier tract, I was told, I did not make my meaning sufficiently clear. In this I have consequently tried to illustrate it various ways" (112). Displaying her cooperation with her readers, Fuller rejects a rhetoric of control... | |
| Mark G. Vásquez - 2003 - 424 pagine
...reflects upon her non-linear, associative approach: "In the earlier tract, I was told, I did not make my meaning sufficiently clear. In this I have consequently...ways, and may have been guilty of much repetition." (99). This "the stylized repetition of acts," one of the "strategies 224 of subversive repetition"... | |
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