Lucy Beckett, Wallace Stevens (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1974), 174. 6. Beckett, 174–175. 7. Theodor Adorno, “Text 3: Beethoven's Late Style,” in “The Late Style (I),” in Beethoven: The Philosophy of Music, Fragments and ...
“I come on in the second act, dressed as a mandarin.” “A mandarin! Then you play the part of a Chinaman?” “No, I don't. It's at the ball. In the second act, there's a ball on the stage —for the hero's coming of age—and I have to be a ...
Love's Shadow
Love's Shadow
Love's Shadow
A collection of writings by women that speak specifically to the shadow side of love, "the dark side ... [that's] primal, compulsive, demonic, insane and very human."
Romance, fiction, supernatural, short stories in paperback version. 126 pages. Perfect book to take on vacation or to finish over a weekend.
This work has been selected by scholars as being culturally important and is part of the knowledge base of civilization as we know it. This work is in the public domain in the United States of America, and possibly other nations.
Thrown together, years after she left his brother with a broken heart, Lucy Snow and Branwell D'Angelo struggle against their shared past.
Criticism needs new inspirations: the sober cheer of Wallace Stevens; the loving eye of Rembrandt; romance, melodrama, and wit. Let there be more poetry, Paul Bové says, and less cynicism"--
In Welcoming a Visitation of the Holy Spirit, Wesley Campbell takes a refreshing firsthand look at the renewal movement known as the Toronto Blessing.
Edith hadn't the slightest idea as she had heard nothing of the letter before but in the course of three years she had learnt that it saved time to accept...
Love's Shadow
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A sparklingly observed comedy of manners set in Edwardian London
Love's Shadow
Historical romance moving from the smartest squares of Mayfair to the slums of the East End, from the wilds of Scotland to the battle fields of the Crimea.
Edith and Bruce Ottley live in a very new, very small, very white flat in Knightsbridge. On the surface they are like every other respectable couple in Edwardian London and that is precisely why Edith is beginning to feel a little bored. .