The Yale Literary Magazine, Bind 117,Oplag 1Yale Literary Society, 1949 |
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Side 26
very demanding experience , requiring a thorough negation of one's former way of life . The neces- sity of struggle becomes the theme of the latter part of the poem . Suffering , we learn , will be required to relieve suffering . At all ...
very demanding experience , requiring a thorough negation of one's former way of life . The neces- sity of struggle becomes the theme of the latter part of the poem . Suffering , we learn , will be required to relieve suffering . At all ...
Side 27
... one's natural environment . Eliot's religion is no primrose path to heaven over which the faithful may travel in perfect confidence and security from the evil of the outside world . Rather , it requires one to face up to that evil and ...
... one's natural environment . Eliot's religion is no primrose path to heaven over which the faithful may travel in perfect confidence and security from the evil of the outside world . Rather , it requires one to face up to that evil and ...
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Aeschylus Alice answer appears asked become began belts Bermuda Bobby Book boys called close complete concert continued critics darkness death described don't Eliot Eliot's existence experience eyes face faith feels feet final follow Four girl give goal ground hands head heard hears held hold hope issue kind later leading letters Lieutenant Literary Literary Magazine lives looked Magazine meaning mind moving musical nature never November October officer one's past picture play plight poems poetry present problem Prufrock publication Quartets redemption returned Richie secular seemed seen sense side spiritual story Strauss street struggle symbolic taking teeth tell theme things thought told took touch tragedy tragic turned Turner UNIVERSITY values voice waiting Waste Land white gloves woman women Yale