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If not for the dog without reason, they would be lost in errancy.
We were never sure whether the sewer should be termed world-project or errancy.
Still, for sheer unerring errancy, I can't recall anything quite so completely realized as this.
He also had a monthly periodical known as Biblical Errancy from 1982 to 1999.
So the rat errates the ratty, illuminating it with errancy.
They try to think about this perspective as an aesthetic perspective, without implying uplift, progress, or errancy.
For the ratty has come-to-be in the errancy where the rat errs and so fosters error.
Bisexuals may well be the ambassadors of errancy, perhaps one day swelling the ranks of deviants to electorally meaningful proportions.
Come-to-be in errancy.
No longer concerned with problems of doctrine and biblical in errancy the Identity groups want to carve out for themselves a separate Aryan state in America.
The Errancy: Poems By Jorie Graham.
Dennis McKinsey, Biblical Errancy Issue 9 - Article focusing on science in the Bible.
Biblical Errancy: Its Philosophical Roots (Zondervan, 1981)
In addition to having editing The Skeptical Review, Till ran the "Errancy" list, which discusses alleged Biblical contradictions and errors.
THE ERRANCY: Poems.
The encyclopedia of Biblical errancy, by C.Dennis McKinsey (Prometheus Books, 1995)
Dennis McKinsey, Biblical Errancy, A Reference Guide, Prometheus Books, (2000)
American Errancy: Empire, Sublimity and Modern Poetry (UCD Press, 2005)
"Dark Hearts: Heidegger, Richardson, and Evil," in From Phenomenology to Thought, Errancy, and Desire, ed.
Jorie Graham, The Errancy: Poems (Ecco), a New York Times "notable book of the year"
Justin Quinn, American Errancy: Empire, Sublimity and Modern Poetry, University College of Dublin Press (scholarship)
From Phenomenology to Thought, Errancy, and Desire : Essays in Honor of William J. Richardson, S.J..
In her 1997 book "The Errancy," Graham wrote of "caustic justice," "scorched comprehension"; in "Black Series," Sheck has "scorched vigilance," "silvery amnesias," "windy contingencies."
In "The Errancy," Jorie Graham's new collection, her first since the acclaimed selected poems of 1995, she continues her minute explorations of regions that most other poets either glance at or ignore altogether.
Palmer admits to a stated "essential errancy of discovery in the poem" that would not necessarily be a "unified narrative explanation of the self", but would allow for itself "cloaked meaning and necessary semantic indirection"