Critical Approaches to American Literature: Walt Whitman to William FaulknerCrowell, 1965 - American literature |
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Page 49
... Never more shall I escape , never more the reverberations , Never more the cries of unsatisfied love be absent from me . The speaker does not mean that he conceives of himself as a frustrated lover : we remember that , in the time ...
... Never more shall I escape , never more the reverberations , Never more the cries of unsatisfied love be absent from me . The speaker does not mean that he conceives of himself as a frustrated lover : we remember that , in the time ...
Page 66
... never had the slightest interest in the public . Were four poems or five published in her lifetime ? She never felt the temptation to round off a poem for public exhibition . Higginson's kindly offer to make her verse " correct " was an ...
... never had the slightest interest in the public . Were four poems or five published in her lifetime ? She never felt the temptation to round off a poem for public exhibition . Higginson's kindly offer to make her verse " correct " was an ...
Page 162
... never otherwise have done , for she has " let this association give shape and colour to her own existence " ; and her own ultimate identity , both for herself and for him , will be the product of her adven- ture . At the beginning she ...
... never otherwise have done , for she has " let this association give shape and colour to her own existence " ; and her own ultimate identity , both for herself and for him , will be the product of her adven- ture . At the beginning she ...
Contents
до | 1 |
Whitman I | 14 |
Richard P Adams Whitmans Lilacs and the Tradition | 28 |
Copyright | |
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Adam American girl American Literature artist Barnes becomes beginning bird Brett character Clemens Cohn conscience consciousness Cowperwood Crane critics culture Daisy dead death dramatic Dreiser emotion Ernest Hemingway evil experience Ezra Pound fact Faulkner feel Fiction finally Fitzgerald freedom Gatsby Hadleyburg Hemingway Hemingway's Henry James hero Huck and Jim Huck's Huckleberry Finn human ideas imagination innocence Isabel James's kind Leaves of Grass Lilacs lines literary living man's Marcher Mark Twain Mauberley McCaslin meaning mind Modern moral narrator nature Negro Nick Nick Adams novel passage poem poet poetry point of view raft reader Reprinted Robert Frost romantic says Scott Fitzgerald seems sense social society song spirit Stephen Crane story symbol T. S. Eliot tells theme things thought tion Tom's tradition tragic unity Wallace Stevens Walt Whitman Waste Land Whitman wilderness William Faulkner words writing York