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Word: soul (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
Sort By: most recent first (reverse)


Usage:

...fans had come to the Harvard-Cornell baseball game at Soldiers Field Friday they would have been frozen stiff. Not a soul was in the stands, however, as the Crimson scored an impressive 11-1 victory in an abbreviated seven-inning game...

Author: By Steven V. Roberts, | Title: Garibaldi Pitches Nine to 11-1 Win | 5/13/1963 | See Source »

...moral status of the prostitute is a natural issue for modern questioning of traditional ethics. Christianity has taken a dramatic position on this issue, giving no quarter to sins brought on by the harlot, yet offering her soul communal redemption. But in by-passing the powerful intellectual and emotional conflicts posed by the Church's stand, Cole and Perera give Saint Pelagia its sorry artistic impotence...

Author: By William A. Weber, | Title: Saint Pelagia | 5/13/1963 | See Source »

...intellectual waters. The characters rarely do more than waggle their toes in these depths, but the feeling is conveyed that they are all excellent swimmers. In The Unicorn, her seventh novel, the author unwisely grows impatient with toe dipping. She pitches her characters into the murkiest of the soul's dark waters, and leaps in after them. But the water proves to be not deep but merely cloudy...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Deep Mist & Shallow Water | 5/10/1963 | See Source »

...Hannah before exiling himself to New York: she was never, from that moment, to leave Gaze Castle. The curse tethers Hannah on a chain of neurosis, and she accepts its terms. As her lover watches her from afar with binoculars, she mournfully prowls the grounds of Gaze. Every living soul at Gaze Castle wallows vicariously in her entrapped shame...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Deep Mist & Shallow Water | 5/10/1963 | See Source »

...care paramountly for certain ones among them as 'Me', and appropriate to these the rest. This Me is an empirical aggregate of things objectively known. The I which knows them cannot itself be an aggregate; neither for psychological purposes need it be an unchanging metaphysical entity like the Soul, or a principle like the transcendental Ego, viewed as 'out of time.' It is a thought, at each moment, different from that of the last moment, but appropriative of the latter, together with all that the latter called its own. All the experimental facts find their place in this description, unencumbered...

Author: By William James, | Title: The Imprint of James Upon Psychology | 5/10/1963 | See Source »

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