Kate’s Reviews > Tending the Heart of Virtue: How Classic Stories Awaken a Child's Moral Imagination > Status Update
Kate
is on page 91 of 330
I smiled the whole way through the section on The Wind in the Willows. I have such a tenderness for this tale. It will always hold my affection. Truly a favorite of mine 😭
“Communion and worship are friendship’s proper end when it is raised to its highest spiritual level.”
“For friendships to prosper, leisure and play are necessary… friendships thrive in the open air and wind and sun.”
— Jul 14, 2025 07:23PM
“Communion and worship are friendship’s proper end when it is raised to its highest spiritual level.”
“For friendships to prosper, leisure and play are necessary… friendships thrive in the open air and wind and sun.”
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Kate’s Previous Updates
Kate
is on page 266 of 330
“… rather, we should turn back to the beginning of the story and read it again, and yet again until, as every parable challenges, it’s readers and listeners to do, we take the fullest possible measure of our own lives, all the while, reminding ourselves: “I am not what I ought to be, I do not the thing I ought to do!”
— Sep 28, 2025 07:55PM
Kate
is on page 255 of 330
“A mind that is able to understand good fiction is one that is “willing to have its sense of mystery deepened by contact with reality and its sense of reality deepened by contact with mystery.”
— Sep 17, 2025 08:12PM
Kate
is on page 181 of 330
“Unsullied beauty is this way. For it possess the power to draw us out of our egocentrism, and then gratitude and empathy for others may move us to act justly and mercifully.”
I have to pick common place quotations out of a hat for this book. They’re as common as red breast robins in the midwest— a wonderful problem for one book to behold.
— Aug 02, 2025 11:52AM
I have to pick common place quotations out of a hat for this book. They’re as common as red breast robins in the midwest— a wonderful problem for one book to behold.
Kate
is on page 142 of 330
“Imagination is a power of discovery, not a power to create. The ladder capacity he reserved to God alone. Nor did MacDonald equate imagination with mere fancy, what we used to call “vain imaginings”. Rather, for him, imagination is a power of perception, a light that illumines the mystery that is hidden beneath visible reality; it is a power to help “see” into the very nature of things…”
— Jul 22, 2025 08:19AM
Kate
is on page 106 of 330
“Bambi was inspired, and said, trembling, “There is Another who is over us all, over us and over him [the man].”
“Now I can go, said the old stag.”
— Jul 16, 2025 05:05AM
“Now I can go, said the old stag.”

