Everyday SpiritsState University of New York Press, 1993 M07 1 - 195 pages Transformation of being begins exactly where one is. This is, for most of us, at home. We are acted upon by objects familiar to us, influenced in unfelt ways, and moved toward a destiny proper to a responsible being. Dwelling is complemented by journeying. To live in a home is to journey on the path that leads through the home to a world beyond. A householder becomes a traveler. A traveler is a seeker after new impressions, fresh impressions of a reality that beckons. Opening to the commonplace—what stands in front of us on the daily round—we are open to the call to respond to our role as mediator between heaven and earth. Everyday Spirits is a book about self-perception. |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 30
Page ix
... speak of our world from the stand- point of dwelling . Imagine ( Rilke suggests ) talking with an angel , a being of the higher world . What would rivet his attention ? What , from his superior vantage point , would be unknown ? " Tell ...
... speak of our world from the stand- point of dwelling . Imagine ( Rilke suggests ) talking with an angel , a being of the higher world . What would rivet his attention ? What , from his superior vantage point , would be unknown ? " Tell ...
Page xiv
... speak ) emulsifiers of inner life ? Then one's philosophy would leave the mind to itself and dwell with the forces giving rise to the moment of ability . Good philosophy may be pursued by compiling a census of guides . Rather than a ...
... speak ) emulsifiers of inner life ? Then one's philosophy would leave the mind to itself and dwell with the forces giving rise to the moment of ability . Good philosophy may be pursued by compiling a census of guides . Rather than a ...
Page xvii
... speak in love's modesty . For " the lover is an emperor ; the two worlds are scat- tered over him and he pays no heed to the scattering " ( Rumi ) . Other everyday spirits imitiate love in its longing for union , its caprice , its ...
... speak in love's modesty . For " the lover is an emperor ; the two worlds are scat- tered over him and he pays no heed to the scattering " ( Rumi ) . Other everyday spirits imitiate love in its longing for union , its caprice , its ...
Page 7
You have reached your viewing limit for this book.
You have reached your viewing limit for this book.
Page 14
You have reached your viewing limit for this book.
You have reached your viewing limit for this book.
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
action Alcibiades angels Aristotle become blink body bowl breath brings child craft creature dark death Descartes desert desire dream dwelling empty Eumaeus everyday spirits existence eyes fear feel fire forget frontier guard Frost Gawain gives gods grip ground grows guest heart Heraclitus Hermes hidden hiding holds householder householder's human hunter immiscible immortal infant Jack Frost keep knot knowledge knows ladder Lao Tzu laugh laughter leaves light listen lives look lullaby magical Mahakasyapa Maimed King matter means measure memory mind move nature ness never Odysseus one's oneself ourselves philosopher Plato play reality realm reason reticence reveals river rope secret seek shadow Siddhartha sleep Socrates solitude speak stick suffering T. S. Eliot takes tells things thought tion toast true lover's knot truth vision walk wander wash watch wild geese wind wine