The Art of Growing OldJ. Cape, 1944 - 218 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 19
Page 22
... universal human responses to life — like love and hate and desire and fear and pleasure and pain and excitement and boredom - humour is something that escapes any easy definition . But detachment from the ordinary business of life ...
... universal human responses to life — like love and hate and desire and fear and pleasure and pain and excitement and boredom - humour is something that escapes any easy definition . But detachment from the ordinary business of life ...
Page 163
... universal treasure - house may bring us bolt up against some chance - selected word that may in itself prove a veritable postern - gate into the ' Appian Way ' of race - memory . In any case if we are dealing with this particular ...
... universal treasure - house may bring us bolt up against some chance - selected word that may in itself prove a veritable postern - gate into the ' Appian Way ' of race - memory . In any case if we are dealing with this particular ...
Page 171
... universal and infallible Orthodoxy nor degrading it into the tricks of a Provincial Conjurer ! - What in fact old age offers us as a protection from this totalitarian superstition - which is a disease rather than an ideal and is always ...
... universal and infallible Orthodoxy nor degrading it into the tricks of a Provincial Conjurer ! - What in fact old age offers us as a protection from this totalitarian superstition - which is a disease rather than an ideal and is always ...
Contents
INTRODUCTION L | 7 |
OLD AGE IN MAN AND WOMAN | 26 |
FEMININE OLD AGE AND NATURE | 37 |
10 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
absolutely advantage aesthetic attitude Categorical Imperative Chance Cicero Classics common sense Commonwealth of Nations conscience consciousness death demiurge destiny detachment devil devilish divine Don Quixote earth egoism elderly elements emotional enjoy enjoyment Erinyes essence essential Evil evolution existence experience fact feel feminine Gestapo Goethe Greek Hegel Homer Homo Sapiens human race humour imaginative imperative Inanimate individual instinct kind less Life-Illusion living logic loneliness magic magnetic man's matter mean mental middle-age mind monstrous moral Multiverse mystery mystical namely Nature Ogpu old age old woman ordinary pain particular passion person philosophy planetary pleasure possess prayer present Dimension psychic Rabelais reader regard Religion response Science scientific secret seems selfish sensation sensuous side simple sort soul Spinoza spirit supreme thing thoughts tion totalitarian tragic true truth ultimate universal Vivisection Vivisectors Walt Whitman Walter Pater whole women words young youth