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Forums -> Authors & Novels -> Virginia Woolf: An Inspiration But A Different Vision
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Last Online: 28th Jun 2010 16:44:42
Registered: 14th Apr 2008 14:31:35
VISIONS -Ron Price with thanks to 1Tricia Ares, "Feminist Body, Feminist Mind: A Comparative Analysis of Hélène Cixous and Virginia Woolf," Modern Matriarch, May 14, 2007; and 2 Peter Jack, "Virginia Woolf’s Richest Novel," The New York Times, 11 April 1937. a vision of some place they would find familiar: with style, humour and a brilliant sensibility, where they could stretch the night and fill it fuller and fuller with dreams, while they searched for some form of salvation. But you offered secular intelligence, no doctrine, salvation, no dogma—far, far, far outside of beliefs, just naturalness, charm of spirit which moved precariously entre deux guerres moments in the past renewed in our time in their uncertainty for your peace and ours, with your genius, for our world’s words. Many, but not all, felt you could say the unsayable and lift veil after veil to reveal the meaning of life; and so, too, did those pledged in that preliminary task, that initial stage in the unfoldment of another vision of a spiritual destiny which my generation laboured to fulfil in my life’s century: 1944-2044.1Shoghi Effendi, Messages to America, Wilmette, 1947, p.13. 1 Ron Price 12 April 2008
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married for 41 years, a teacher for 35 and a Baha'i for 50
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