Redeeming Time: T.S. Eliot's Four QuartetsThis exploration of T. S. Eliot's last major poem, Four Quartets, examines the poem's potential to transform readers' faith journeys. Kramer shows that the power of Four Quartets is its ability to create a dynamic interaction between the poem and the reader that promotes a genuine connection with the natural world, with others, and with the Divine. |
Contents
ThemeWord Design | 3 |
Entering Our First World | 27 |
Adopting the Old World | 65 |
Copyright | |
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According action become beginning brings Buber Burnt Norton called Christian church comes contemplative continues conversion dance darkness death desire dialogue divine Dry Salvages East Coker empty England English enter especially existence experience expressed Faber feelings final fire Four Quartets future garden genuine grace human illumination includes Indic John Krishna landscape language leads letter light lines Little Gidding living logos London meaning memory mind moment moments move movement mystical nature night notes once one's opening passage past pattern person poem poet poet's poetry possibility practice prayer present question readers reading realization recalls reciprocity redeeming refers relationship religious response rose sense soul speaks spiritual stillness Study suggests T. S. Eliot takes teaching temporal third thought timeless tion tradition turning understanding University University Press voice whole wisdom writes wrote York