In a Distant Isle: The Orkney Background of Edwin MuirScottish Academic Press, 1987 - 184 pages Om social velfærd i Storbritannien, USA, Frankrig, Vesttyskland, Sverige, Østtyskland og Indien |
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Page 50
... Feelings for the natural world that go beyond the secular could survive in an agricultural community only because , as Muir says , ploughing and reaping were more than a business . The traditional feeling for the land was sanctified by ...
... Feelings for the natural world that go beyond the secular could survive in an agricultural community only because , as Muir says , ploughing and reaping were more than a business . The traditional feeling for the land was sanctified by ...
Page 52
... feeling struggling for expression . 16 To describe this feeling Huberman uses the word " worship " ; and this is a word that might aptly be applied in the later poem , if by " worship " is meant strong feelings of mystery , awe and ...
... feeling struggling for expression . 16 To describe this feeling Huberman uses the word " worship " ; and this is a word that might aptly be applied in the later poem , if by " worship " is meant strong feelings of mystery , awe and ...
Page 95
... feeling for one's kin and the place they call home has anything to do with racialism or nationalism . In Muir's work " race " usually means the whole of mankind and " tribe " the particular group of people whose past one inherits ...
... feeling for one's kin and the place they call home has anything to do with racialism or nationalism . In Muir's work " race " usually means the whole of mankind and " tribe " the particular group of people whose past one inherits ...
Table des matières
Introduction I | 1 |
References | 159 |
List of Sources | 170 |
Droits d'auteur | |
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Expressions et termes fréquents
ation Autobiography ballads belief boyhood Burroughs Calvinism Calvinist Chapter childhood Church of Scotland congregation crofters Crofting Cursiter Dennison dream Edinburgh Edwin Muir Egilsay Eliade emigration Ernest Marwick evictions exile experience Fable farm farmers father Free Church George Mackay Brown George William Traill Glasgow Golden Age Highlands hill horses houses ibid innocence James Muir John Firth Kirkwall Burgh School labyrinth laird land landlord landscape lived M'Callum memory ministers Muir family Muir's Muir's poetry myth Napier Commission neighbours never nineteenth century Norse North Ronaldsay nostalgia Orcadian Orkney Archives Orkney Herald Paradise parish past peasant plough poem poet religion religious remembered rent road Robert Scarth Rousay Sanday Scots Scottish Journey Secession Church seems Selected Letters society songs Stanley Cursiter Statistical Account story suggests symbol teacher tenants theme traditional Trumland United Presbyterian Church wall Walter Traill Dennison Willa Muir writing wrote Wyre