2007
Publication
# | Year | Text | Linked Data |
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1 | 1961 |
Lowry, Malcolm. Hear us O Lord from heaven thy dwelling place. (Philadelphia : Lippincott, 1961). "Or, at such a time of stillness, at the brief period of high tide before the ebb, it was like what I have learned the Chinese call the Tao, that, they say, came into existence before Heaven and Earthg something so still." "And the rain itself was water from the sea… raised to heaven by the sun, transformed into clouds, and falling again into the sea. While within the inlet itself the tides and currents in that sea returned, became remote, and becoming remote, like that which is called the Tao, returned again as we sourselves had done." |
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2 | 1996 |
Lowry, Malcolm. La mordida. Ed. by Patrick A. McCarthy. (Athens, Ga. : University of Georgia Press, 1996). [MS]. "Fu indicates that there will be free course and progress (in what it denotes) (the subject of it) finds no one to distress him in his exits and entrances, friends come to him, and no error is committed. He will return and repeat his (proper) course. In seven days comes his return. There will be advantage in whatever direction movement is made… But the I ching then goes on to show the meaning of each line making up the Hexagram, from bottom up, and the last section contains a warning. It may have been bad to repeat (or rvisit) the scene of your book." |
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# | Year | Bibliographical Data | Type / Abbreviation | Linked Data |
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1 | Zentralbibliothek Zürich | Organisation / ZB |
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