Visionary experience in Daughter Buffalo (1972)

Ahila Sambamoorthy
University of Otago
Department of English

Deep South v.3 n.3 (Spring 1997)


Copyright (c) 1997 by Ahila Sambamoorthy, all rights reserved.

"the only contract that can be made with death is an imaginative one" (90)

Daughter Buffalo evokes a mysterious, disquieting world consisting of atypical perceptions about life and death. It is a "strange, visionary work" (Avant 2642) concerned with the expression of mystical experience and knowledge of death. Frame's visionaries/artist figures transcend mortality through their very ability to accept death within their imaginations, translating it into larger and richer symbolic terms. Indeed Frame's enduring preoccupation with death, surprisingly, "never destroys her fascination with life", as Winston Rhodes notes in his review of Daughter Buffalo (162). In this novel Frame expresses her fullest awareness of the positive dimension of death, drawing on the Heraclitean notion of the cyclic nature of life and death, the tendency of the final stage to curve back towards the initial stage. Hence, life is in itself is inseparable with death, and death is also the source of life, not only mystical life but of the resurrection of matter as well. This doctrine is embedded in the heart of Oriental (Hindu and Buddhist philosophy).

In Daughter Buffalo Frame's seer/artist communicates to us that death is a phase in creation, evolution rather than annihilation. The visionary-protagonists of the novel -- one 'Turnlung' and Talbot Edelman -- belong to that definite group of people Patrick Evans terms as people "whose apprehension of death or of a deeper dimension in life alienates them from their fellows" (294). However, it is their imaginative affiliation with death that is Frame's core concern in the quest for visionary experience that derives from the 'sanctuary' that nourishes and cherishes individual creative potential, even at death.

Jeanne Delbaere in her article, 'Turnlung in the Noon Sun: An Analysis of Daughter Buffalo (1992), provides an approach that emphasizes the role of Frame's visionary/artist figure, and Turnlung's search for the mystical dimension of experience through metaphysical penetration into the unknown and the unconscious, and his consequent liberation from personal conflicts and restrictions:

The poet knows that beyond all man-made divisions there is a continuity of consciousness, a unity of experience which our limited and partial vision generally prevents us from recognizing. In the total realm there are no separate identities; all forms, human and animal, animate and inanimate, are connected, everything is both an agent of change and an object of transformation; death itself is a stage in creation -- metamorphosis rather than extinction. It is the artist's privilege to recognize this unity; his task is to try and transcend the contradictions of life; his burden to feel exiled from timeless Being in the temporary division of human nature. (161)

I feel that Delbaere's interpretation of Daughter Buffalo as portraying the interconnectedness and coherence between all organic and inorganic forms, between the living and nonliving, and her larger view of mortality itself as a stage in creation instead of just extinction, reaches the heart of visionary experience. In this novel, this hub of mystical thought seeks to establish "a state of undifferentiation [and] a collapse of differences", so that all life forms "slide into one another" (Jackson 50).

My strategy of interpreting Daughter Buffalo is close to Delbaere's. Turnlung, in my opinion, is Frame's visionary who is driven towards a realization of the contradictory elements of life and death as merging in the desire for undifferentiation. This is represented preliminarily in the novel by the image of silkworms, with their circular structure of activity, constantly multiplying, producing more worms, followed by more silk. It is their "miracle of metamorphosis" (31), of devouring the leaves of the mulberry tree and transforming it to silk. In all their knotted energy these silkworms partake in the constant life and death cycle, of death followed by resurrection, just as the scales of the snake ("serpentas ") are renewed after being shed, or the tail of the lizard ("sauria ") regrows after dropping away ('Prologue') (italics in text).

Indeed, I suggest that the idea of the mutability of death that Frame presents through her visionary figures in this novel can be identified with Heraclitean, Schopenhaueran, and Nietzchean philosophies. Turnlung, in Heraclitean fashion, conceives of his impending death as an event of fertility, a way to effectively nourish other new forms of life, human as well as inanimate life. Indeed, for Heraclitus "the chain of life cannot be broken . . . and the process of creation of life from dead matter will go on in all eternity" (quoted in Choron 38). In the same vein, Heraclitus stresses that

death is not the absolute and irreversible cessation, but that there is a unity of life and death that means not only that life dies, but that death generates life. And precisely because everything flows and changes, death itself is not final, for man's soul is part of the eternal Fire and as such returns and passes again and again into everything. (my emphasis)

Turnlung's thinking and philosophy is distinctly Heraclitean in nature. These same essential ideas re-surface again in the nineteenth century in the philosophical writing of Schopenhauer, and Nietzsche, particularly. Schopenhauer in his book The World as Will and Idea (1883) asserts his doctrine of human indestructibility and imperishability. "Matter", he writes, "through its absolute indestructibility guarantees us [humankind] our indestructibility[,] . . . the conservation of raw matter, . . . the continuation of our essence" (260). At the end of the nineteenth century Nietzsche also proposes a parallel and affirming idea, in his theory of 'Eternal Recurrence'. Nietzsche acknowledges his debt to Heraclitus as well as to Oriental philosophy, particularly Hindu and Buddhist beliefs in the (re)incarnation of all matter, and the total absence of annihilation. Nietzsche adopts a defiant attitude to death, which is reminiscent of Turnlung's own stance. "Death", Nietzsche declares, "has been made into a bitter medicine by narrow pharmacist minds. . . . [O]ne should make a feast out of one's death", and in his doctrine of 'Eternal Recurrence', Nietzsche is positive and bold, like Turnlung. Indeed to Turnlung, life is the same as death, just as time is the same as eternity, and evolution is tantamount to petrification. Every ending has a beginning, just as every beginning has an end. Turnlung apprehends death not only as a source of spiritual life, but of the resurrection of matter as well. He appears to me to believe in the Hindu philosophy of death as positive, as a supreme form of liberation, where the corporeal body of the dead is destroyed without annihilating its soul or essence. In a positive sense then, death symbolizes the transformation of all things, the progress of evolution, and dematerialization. This concept, as Turnlung states, is very different to the Western/Christian philosophy of death as negation, as involving decomposition and the end of anything determinate within a period of time.

A brief account of Turnlung at this point would be helpful in situating his distinctive preoccupation. He is a writer who has made a voyage to America from the "Southern Hemisphere" (55), presumably New Zealand. For him, America is the "country where death appears to be more important than life" (28), and where the "vocabulary of death" is given precedence (29). Turnlung is an aging man, somewhat mad, and on the verge of senility; however he is also one of Frame's boldest visionaries. He asks, "[is] this the state for an old man like myself to be involved with anything but a clear search for death?" (101) Later, he confesses that he is now at the "centre", "the foreground" of death experience, apprehending it "directly" (102), instead of at its "circumference". In leaving the borders for the hub of experience, Turnlung has moved from the exterior to the interior, to contemplation and unity of the self; he has reached the Centre of mystic Nothingness which is, in Oriental thought, a point of spacelessness and timelessness, where species are not fixed, but fluid. Such a movement subverts most ideas of 'reality' in the normal, everyday, practical world, forming instead the visionary dimension of the 'Framean' world. Instead of denying and fearing his approaching death, Turnlung is propelled to confront it head on, and death becomes for him a "twilight preoccupation" (20). With each symptom of old age that assails him, Turnlung gets increasingly prepared to face his death. In Part Two of the novel, "The Bees in the Flowering Currant", Turnlung plans to follow and study the rhythms of his own body in its journey towards death. For him, death is an "ultimate darkness" that requires privileged entry qualifications, and the company of the dead in itself brings a sort of splendour: "I knew that a . . . mystery and exclusiveness surrounded the community of the dying and the dead. I wanted to enter the community of the dying" (28). "It is a consuming mystery, the game to discover the secret, the game of trying to identify the last silence, and, hardest of all, the game of learning to accept and love the silence" (29). Turnlung's journey then is a psychological quest for visionary experience, and interior excursion from fragmentation to entirety, from life to death, or as Delbaere states, "from ego to self, . . . . a journey inwards to the 'antipodes' or the other pole of the self" (173).

Indeed, Turnlung feels the urgency to experience the occult dimension of death, an experience that for him is nourished by imaginative development. As he declares: "the only contract that can be made with death is an imaginative one" (90). As a writer, Turnlung inquires into the nature of words, his "mix of amino acids", in the same way Talbot experiments on his dog. Imagination, for Turnlung, reconciles the "opposing impulses" of life (159), and death to him is the ultimate completion of life, its supreme "finishing touch" (108). Frame has introduced in this novel two different attitudes towards life and death through the juxtaposition of Tunlung -- who studies death artistically-- and Talbot -- who studies it scientifically.

Turnlung is introduced to the reader as a somewhat shadowy, marginalized artist figure: he "write[s] alone", as a "solitary worker" (99). However, he is the 'Framean' seer, the bringer of valuable and original news. Like "a bottle with a message in it" (34), his particular vision brings revelation. He is obsessed with the desire to "kn[o]w" (86) of the essence of things, for access of the secret knowledge of the imagination; he is the "jeweler" (143), the bringer of treasure to whom Frame grants an optimistic vision. In New York he desires "to take a closer look at death. At my [his] own death. I'm an old man, restless as at the commencement of a journey, the search, the discovery" (106). At this point, Turnlung is in the process of freeing himself from the shackles of the manifest world: "soon I shall live in a hollow house listening to the glint of the sun" ('Prologue'). His is a journey of evolution, and dissolution of the self, towards a new and mystical experience of death. The name "Turnlung", according to him, means [a] state of readiness for death", a state which all of us must prepare ourselves to face. It may be interpreted further as a turning, a reversal, a cessation, of the lung's natural activity of expansion and compression which enables breathing, thus bringing about death. Near death, Turnlung is a perfect embodiment of the shadowless state of death, without substance as a physical self (102). His impending death, as he says, will be an act of "vacating" himself (106), in which his soul will journey away from his corporeal body towards the "sanctuary" (145), "the still point of pure vision" (Delbaere 175).

Talbot Edelman, an American, is secondary in function to Turnlung in the novel, but he too is invested with certain visionary properties, though on a smaller scale than Turnlung. Talbot's initial interest in death is spurred on by watching the gradual death of his grandfather at a nursing-home. A doctor by profession himself, Talbot chooses to specialize in the "study of death" (Daughter Buffalo 7) at the Department of Death Studies, in order to practise "the unique art of dying and learn the secrets of death and the dead" (23). He switches over from embryology to death studies, as a result of his growing interest in dying patients at the hospital at which he works. Talbot craves for knowledge about dying and death as much as the 'normal' person craves love and sex (15). He studies "[a]bortion brains" (13), and performs several surgical experiments -- including the removal of one eye -- on his pet dog, Sally, treating her more like a human being than a dog, as Talbot claims (128). Talbot is certainly a bizarre character in the eyes of 'normal' reality. When the dog dies as a result of cumulative internal infections, Talbot hands her over for pathological dissection to his colleagues at the laboratory where he works. He "tampered with her[,]. . . . made corrupting changes". In fact he "did everything to her, except make love" (141), despite his desire to have sexual intercourse with the dog; as he tells Turnlung, "[o]ne does have fantasies sometimes, at times, of penetrating, not always in the habitual places". This is undoubtedly gross bestiality to the reader. However, in half-consciously desiring to copulate with an animal, Talbot may be seen to identify himself with the beast, representing the integration of the human and animal unconscious.

It is not surprising, that with his almost carnal and erotic yearning for death, Talbot is a deviant personality whom the reader may find distasteful or even perverse. However, it is the almost mystical , homosexual relationship between Talbot and Turnlung, which is sustained by a mutual yearning for knowledge of death, that forms one of the interesting aspects of Daughter Buffalo . Talbot yearns for the older man to serve as the object of his death studies; as Talbot states, "I wanted the old [man] to give me free, [his ] death" (20) (emphasis in text); Turnlung, in turn, desires to empty his life in Talbot, to use the younger man as a receptacle to contain the experiences of the concluding phase of his life. In their relationship, love and death merge, as do converse feelings of "grief [and] sadness", on the one hand, and on the other, comfort" (197). Talbot consummates in Turnlung a special kind of love that he cannot realize with his girlfriend Lenore, or any other woman. It is also significant that in his semi-visionary capacity, Talbot offers sporadically to the reader an alternative penetrating reality, as if seen from above, overlooking and viewing all creation, a visionary cognizance that is often surreal in nature: "I saw myself as a pair of tired eyes attached to skin attached to a white-coated body, and if I caught a glimpse of the city it was a dream city like those of cloud seen from the windows of aircraft" (14). More importantly, Talbot is portrayed as the "hunter" pursuing cosmic verities, "the twin trophies of creation and destruction" (15).

Like Talbot, Turnlung claims to have had a death obsession from a young age, when he discovered that cemeteries gave him "relief from the attachments of living" (59). His early death experiences, he says, were shaped by literature, mainly romantic poetry, expressed in the language of cliches. The implication is that poets too have sanitized death, made its reality sentimental and digestible in a similar way to conventional society's language of emptiness, thus "conceal[ing]" (74) the actual 'truth' about death. He is in possession of a collection of deaths that his death education has supplied him with (41). He waits for a death "to give meaning to life", contradicting the conventional concept of death as annihilation, for life relies on death to gain its sustenance (43). The first death experience for Turnlung, it should be noted, was the relatively uncomplicated death of his cat,

a death explained in a simple sentence. The cat is dead. . . . It lay under the flowering currant bush where honeybees swarmed about the clusters of tiny purple bell-like flowers, and for me the purple flowers and golden bees became part of the smell and sight and sound of death, as spring became the season of death. (35-6)

This death, according to Turnlung, was an unsightly incident (like the death of Talbot's dog) because it was treated casually by the other people around him, as though it were insignificant. However for Turnlung the animal's death, in all its spontaneity and earthiness, "was the meeting of its presence and its absence, where before I had known each only separately". In this condition of indifferentiation, there exists for Turnlung an absence of conflicts and contrasts, for spring/life and death/winter coalesce, the season of death and the season of the flowering currant, "presence and absence". For Turnlung, such a realization means "know[ing]" death, a knowledge of the cyclic curve that integrates, not separates, the initial and final stages of life. Death is the complement, not the negation, of life. All of which everyday society attempts -- the "embellishing[,] . . . softening[,] . . . denying[,] . . . or disbelieving" of death -- is not necessary for Turnlung, who simply 'sees' the fact of death and accepts the reality of it through his visionary consciousness.

Indeed for Turnlung, death is a condition to be longed for, as it allows the human and the animal to merge with the natural world, in a state of "unbeing and of unknowing" (60). Thus through his union with nature expressed in the prologue to the novel, Turnlung portrays himself as a man who lives in empathy with nature; he is the natural wild man existing in a state less evolved than the modern urbane 'civilized' man. Talbot observes that Turnlung

was raw, foreign, his accent . . . uncut, . . . , he was from a land which had not yet been glazed with people, where the rivers were only then being 'tamed' to obedience to the hydro-electric impulse or reflex; . . . where clay, not plastic foam, touched the flesh feet standing on the real earth. An unfinished land. (149)

In fact, Turnlung identifies himself with mankind's earlier state, prior to evolution of the homo sapiens ; he is the animal with the visionary "third eye" (170) with a wide peripheral vision and acumen, as opposed to the two eyes of the 'normal' person. He is "contained in the orange and lemon trees" in his garden", and exists parsimoniously without luxury, like trees that grow only a certain number of leaves each year after shedding their old leaves, with no a surplus growth of leaves (120). Later, he is presented imagistically, as a plant: "I am tied down to my stem. Today I, Turnlung, pulled up my roots to inspect them. . . . My green stem had a bitter taste" (33). After his death, he believes that he will carry on a metamorphosized life in plant form, and that he will be part of the larger unities of the universe, "the noon tides of water and grass". For Turnlung "the damp dark places where death is" are nourishing, because he believes that death is an active force that is associated with the colour "green", the colour of renewal and "life" (60). Hence for him, there is a continuation of life "beyond the act of dying", a cycle through destruction, decomposition, and fossilization, finally giving birth to new life, "to fresh grass and yellow buttercups" (75).

The image of "death-light", "the heliocentric place of stone light" that Turnlung refers to in the epilogue (8) to the novel is central to the visionary experience conveyed in the novel. It is undoubtedly an image that concentrates on the sun as Centre, the source of supreme riches and mystical enlightenment. Frame's solar symbolism appears to me to be drawn from the Copernican theory that the planets move in circular paths around the sun, their common centre. Also, the image of "stonelight" appears to originate from the Neolithic priests' observation of the sky, and their working out of a cosmological system of ideas that explained the way in which the heavens and the earth were bound together in an unified sacred order: neolithic stone circles were built "to monitor . . . the turning of the midsummer sun [and] also the rising and setting points of the moon in summer and winter" (see Stover and Kraig 28 & 29). Turnlung's image of "stonelight" thus possibly suggests the stone circles built by the early neolithic peoples of Europe, where the sun, sunlight, and the seasons, played such a vital cosmological role. In this context, it becomes even more significant that the image of "stonelight" is the symbol of the Circle, which Jung took to correspond to the ultimate state of oneness within a person who has achieved inner unity. Death to Turnlung is a movement away from the periphery towards the centre, the source of Creation. In his own death, Turnlung conceives of himself as becoming a religious icon of mythical force, a potent hallowed place to be venerated, a place of permanence and resonance: "his universal echo would be heard in cathedrals -- he would become a cathedral, a mountaintop, a crossroad and cross of bone" (150). Furthermore,Turnlung conceives of the place of stonelight as --

the sanctuary, the place of stone bees and men who place reliance on the noon sun,
where beasts lie warm but have no shadows
and ice is at last unknown. (183)

-- a congenial haven of spaciousness and limitless potentialities, a timeless retreat for the shadowless state of death.

Talbot mentions a "surrender" of the self to "the surrounding death-light, to perceive its shadow in our faces, to take time to consider the silence and the peace" (8). I have stressed how such a "surrender", a prescient 'yielding' to death is the definitive expression of a visionary perception of it, a vision that by that by harmonizing the contraries of life and death, comes to a realization that death is inevitably the source of life and resurrection. Thus, a resignation to dying means finding rebirth in light and clarity. For the visionary then, death is not tantamount to eternal darkness but is, paradoxically, the basis of life. The paradox inherent in "death-light" (8) in the novel speaks of the elimination of dualism and separation, resolving thesis (life) and its antithesis (death) in a union in the mystic Centre. Indeed in mysticism, the antithesis is the complement to, not the denial of, the thesis. Seen as parts of the same cycle, both life and death become elements of the passage of evolution and the metamorphosis of all substances, instead of disintegration and irrevocable annihilation. Thus the state of death is one in which life-forces are transformed from one to the other. This circular form, particularly in Hindu philosophy, signifies eternity, an idea which is echoed in Daughter Buffalo "dead becomes alive, lost is found, empty is filled" (132-33). This is what Turnlung does in the novel: his ultimate aim is to arrive at a visionary notion of opposed predicates as forming an union. In this context, it is possible that Frame has drawn on the Heraclitean theory of the 'oneness', that elements commonly thought of as opposites can in fact be united; that opposites co-exist in what is one and the same. This discovery of 'unity-in-opposites', as Frame seems to say, can be recognized by searching the self.

Talbot's notion of death is intuitive, as "a simple darkness", "a pure personal darkness like the original void of the universe" (14). "[I]n thinking about death I discovered a small area of pure darkness, a sanctuary for the dying" (15), like the darkness that forms the unity of the preconscious totality before the advent of light. This is the original darkness, corresponding to primordial chaos that is impelled towards the creation of a new order of experience, of hidden meaning. This "original void" contains the germs of universal creation, a chaos which encompasses all contesting energies in a condition of undifferentiated dissolution. Such a mystical concept, for Talbot as well as Turnlung, can only be discovered in the imaginative 'sanctuary' that fosters spiritual acumen. Furthermore, the notion of sanctuary is similar to the idea of mystic Nothingness, which suggests a neutrality experienced in the mind when there is an absence of conflicts and contrasts. Because death, in the sanctuary, is a state in which the life-forces are transformed so that death becomes life, and vice-versa, Nothingness indicates eternity, the still point where the powers of life and death fuse in harmony. However as I will show later in this chapter, it is Turnlung, and not Talbot, who ultimately discovers this 'sanctuary'. It is also interesting to note that Talbot's philosophy of death seems to echo the Hindu notion of the original void as opening up to the concepts of immortality, of the advent of new life, instead of just annihilation. Hence Daughter Buffalo, we might say, welds a 'Framean' visionary, cosmological vision of an eternal 'life-in-death' and 'death-in-life' state of being for mankind. Through Turnlung's visionary capacity, the restricting and mundane physical order of the world is transcended, bringing with it a new dimension of being which is palpably a new resurrection and immortality for the human spirit.

Emerging from the notion of indifferentiation between life and death, as Turnlung expresses it, is a wider notion of indifferentiation between all life forms, "people and animals" (137). The "incompatibility" between these two forms that "led to war", Turnlung asserts, must be eliminated. So he and Talbot decide to adopt a baby buffalo, a symbol of their homosexual love. The buffalo consequently becomes their "daughter" (145), as Turnlung arranges for the "custody of his daughter". He becomes the "father of a buffalo" (173):


The paradoxical image of "death-jewel", as epitomized in the buffalo, constitutes an amalgam that enables the synthesis of death with "jewel", with 'treasure' of the imagination, thus speaking of knowledge of death as the superior knowledge, as symbolized in the image of a jewel. This is the kind of mystical apprehension achieved through the synthesis of contradictory elements that Turnlung comes to comprehend.

For it is as though Frame is saying that the animal represents the non-human psyche, the realm of subhuman instincts and the unconscious areas of the mind, and that ultimately the self can re-emerge in any shape, can identify with anything in the universe. Turnlung utters this blurring of boundaries between "dog, man woman, buffalo" (177), just as Part Four of the novel carries a title which obliterates the disparities between "Man, Dog, Buffalo ". Furthermore Turnlung sees himself as a new species of life -- a "Heterodon platyrhinos" (173) -- that may be interpreted creatively as a scientific genus of a new species of life, a merging of heterogenous forms: the amphibious, egg-laying monotreme platypus, and the large, thick-skinned mammal rhinoceros. This is the creature emerging from Turnlung's psychic depths, "the non-human psyche[,] . . . the "world of subhuman instincts[,] . . . [and] the "unconscious areas of the psyche" (Cirlot 13). Turnlung himself is embodied as an animal, and this speaks of the tradition of totemism, which drew up the relationship between man and animal.

The image of the buffalo, I would claim, is a model conception for a liberty gone astray, and a missing concord between man, animal, and environment. The everyday American society demands the banalities of "the American way of life" for the baby buffalo, "to keep it warm, to educate it, to teach it . . . how to procreate, shoot, shit and die; and the catechism of comfort, and how to eradicate, defoliate the forest of Why" (136). However, the image of the mother buffalo and her baby in confinement within cages, voices the antithesis of American values, that is unimaginative, material instead of natural lifestyles. The baby buffalo represents the kind of freedom that is evoked by the expansive, uninhibited, grassy plains of the prairie. After Turnlung's death, Talbot contemplates, "the absent Turnlung and Daughter Buffalo gallivanted through the world of the dead, in the protective custody of death" (202). Then, the Buffalo is part of the visionary's vision, and is a factor in the visionary dimension. Obviously for Turnlung, death is a positive romp of joy through vast, uninhibited tracts of land towards a safe haven of the 'sanctuary', a protected territory where the imagination is granted its powers of creation. Death itself is "a comfortable sheltered place" connected with the symbol of the valley, which is "a neutral zone for the development of all creation" (Cirlot 168). In this space, Turnlung achieves Frame's zenith of mystical knowledge "in the calm of stone, the frozen murmurs of life, squamata, sauria, serpentes ; in the sanctuary" (212) (italics in text), a primeval world of a collective genus of ancient species -- reptiles (squamata ), lizards (sauria ), and snakes (serpentas ) representing the most primitive strata of life. [5,038]

WORKS CITED

Avant, John. 'Review of Daughter Buffalo'. Library Journal 97 (August 1972): 2642.

Choron, Jacques. Death and Western Thought. London: Macmillan, 1963.

Cirlot, J.E. A Dictionary of Symbols. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1971.

Delbaere, Jeanne. 'Turnlung in the Noon Sun: An Analysis of Daughter Buffalo' .The Ring of Fire. Ed. Jeanne Delbaere. Sydney: Dangaroo Press, 1992, 161-176.

Evans, Patrick. 'Alienation and the Imagery of Death: The Novels of Frame'. Meanjin [Australia] 32 (1973): 294-303.

Frame, Janet. Daughter Buffalo. 1972. Auckland: Vintage, 1994.

Jackson, Rosemary. Fantasy: The Literature of Subversion. London & New York: Methuen, 1981.

Rhodes, Winston. Review of Daughter Buffalo. Landfall 27 (1973): 159-163.

Schopenhauer, Arthur, trans. T.B, Haldene and J. Kemp. The World as Will and Idea. Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1948.


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