| Michael A Flannery, Lloyd Library And Museum, Dennis B Worthen - Medical - 2001 - 352 pages
...level and myself on another, there is something of George Eliot's The Choir Inyisible in this work: Oh, may I join the choir invisible Of those immortal dead...live again In minds made better by their presence. Alex has joined that "choir invisible" but he will not be forgotten, for surely my mind was made better... | |
| Paul Woodruff, Harry A. Wilmer - History - 2001 - 324 pages
...George Eliot's The Choir Invisible'. I used to be saying to myself, as I walked across that campus: Oh, may I join the choir invisible, Of those immortal dead who live again In minds made better for their presence: Live In pulses stirred to generosity, In deeds of daring rectitude, in scorn For... | |
| Steven Meyer - Literary Criticism - 2001 - 486 pages
...was adolescent I read a poem of George Eliot I cannot often remember poetry but I can remember that. May I join the choir invisible of those immortal dead who live again" [p. 119].) Yet, by contrast with the fairly obvious thematic concerns shared by Stein and Eliot in... | |
| Kathryn A. Neeley, Mary Somerville - Biography & Autobiography - 2001 - 284 pages
...253 Author's Preface In one of her best known poems, George Eliot wrote of "the choir invisible," the "immortal dead who live again / In minds made better by their presence." In the work of which this book is the culmination, I have been sustained and inspired by my own Choir... | |
| Lucinda Vardey - Religion - 2002 - 468 pages
...is everywhere. It is just tliat usually we are nat good enough to truly see the wotld. MOTHER MEERA O may I join the choir invisible Of those immortal dead who live again In minds made berter by their presence: live In pulses stirred to generosity, In deeds of daring rectitude, in scorn... | |
| Life - 210 pages
...but still a truthful interpreter—in the eye. - Charlotte Bronte, 19th-century English novelist Oh may I join the choir invisible Of those immortal dead...live again In minds made better by their presence. — George Eliot, 19th-century English novelist The soul should always stand ajar, ready to welcome... | |
| |