BOOK 4 CHAPTER 1

类别:文学名著 作者:乔治·艾略特 本章:BOOK 4 CHAPTER 1

    A Variation of Protestantism Unknoo Bossuet

    JOURNEYING do tud tain parts of its course, telling  river once rose, like an angry, destroying god sions ion. Strange contrast, you may , bet produced on us by ts of commonplace  days  ts details to our o produced by tled Ro suceeps, t to ural fitness, like tain pine: nay, even in t t ness, as if ted from ty parent a sublime instinct of form. And t  grim and drunken ogres, tain grandeur of t in t boars usks tearing and rending, not tic grunter: ted ty, virtue, and tle uses of life: trast in ture rel, t-lipped princess, timid Israelite. t ime of colour eel and floating banners: a time of adventure and fierce struggle - nay, of living, religious art and religious ent cat in t great emperors leave tern palaces to die before trong? t is t tles try: to toric life of y, and raise up for me t tinted, ons of villages on t  - is a narroence,  elevate, but ratends to ex in all its bare vulgarity of conception; and I ion t traces of  of a gross sum of obscure vitality, t  into tions of ants and beavers. Pero tco lift above tragi-comic. It is a sordid life, you say, tullivers and Dodsons - irradiated by no sublime principles, no romantic visions, no active, self-renouncing faitrollable passions  t primitive rougy of s, t oil, t c of ure ten, ry to peasant life. ional ions and s  instruction and  polis prosaic form of ability in a gig of unfas side-disune ioning tle trace of religion, still less of a distinctively Cian creed. t manifests itself at all, seems to be rations, trong tenacity, seem to andard beyond ary custom. You could not live among sucifled for  of an outlet toiful, great, or noble: you are irritated ion out of keeping  river flooings of ty . A vigorous superstition t lass gods or lass oo be more congruous ery of t, tal condition of t-like Dodsons and tullivers.

    I s it is necessary t o understand  acted on tom and Maggie -  ed on young natures in many generations, t in tendency of al level of tion before to rongest fibres of ts. tyr or victim, ed in to science tell us t its  striving is after tainment of a unity est? In natural science, I ood, tty to t ions, and to s a vast sum of conditions. It is surely tion of human life.

    Certainly, tullivers oo specific a kind to be arrived at deductively, from tatement t t of testant population of Great Britain. ts core of soundness, as all t  and prosperous families  it est tincture of ters, t some parts t ulip petals, ed quite impartially,  preference for torical, devotional, or doctrinal. t t, if  kno t of co run in families, like ast rural paris a controversialist, but a good  omary and respectable: it o be baptised, else one could not be buried in to take t before deaty against more dimly understood perils; but it y to  ones funeral, and to leave an unimpeac be taxed   belonged to t eternal fitness of ted in tice of t substantial parisraditions - suco parents, faito kindred, industry, rigid y, t, tensils, to disappear from tion of first-rate commodities for t, and tever er frustration of all desire to tax traditional duty or propriety. A  identified  integrity, to admitted rules; and society oies in many of o motter and ty o make it oto be  and poor to, still less, to seem rico be  and ric only ric rico live respected and  your funeral ence t irely nullified if on turning out to be poorer ted or by leaving your money in a capricious manner  strict regard to degrees of kin. t t alo to correct t to t still not to alienate from t rigy. A conspicuous quality in ter s genuineness: its vices and virtues alike o  its o and interest, and  `kin but  let t bread, but only require to eat it ter herbs.

    t of traditional belief ran in tulliver veins, but it ion and -tempered rasullivers grandfato say t ulliver, a ed   t family.

    If sucullivers  of Pitt and  you already knoate of society in St Oggs t to act on turer life. It ill possible, even in t later time of anti-Cato anding: so  t Mr tulliver, tiveness on t  t any  co s, aken ulliver regarded iful respect, as o t  ced nobody to tell  common sense ain seeds ances ure us of  t a ive surfaces. tual seed ulliver ly been destitute of any corresponding provision, and o total absence of hooks.


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