Critical Approaches to American Literature: Walt Whitman to William FaulknerCrowell, 1965 - American literature |
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Page 23
... seems both evil beyond any rejection and wonderful beyond any acceptance . We cannot help seeing that there is ... seem no more to apply to its whole than our spatial or temporal or causal categories seem to apply to its beginning or its ...
... seems both evil beyond any rejection and wonderful beyond any acceptance . We cannot help seeing that there is ... seem no more to apply to its whole than our spatial or temporal or causal categories seem to apply to its beginning or its ...
Page 137
... seems to arrest the very moment when James turns from comic to tragic irony . For what allows her story to be tragic is precisely this dual aspect of her character , the fact that the moral self- reliance which makes her admirable also ...
... seems to arrest the very moment when James turns from comic to tragic irony . For what allows her story to be tragic is precisely this dual aspect of her character , the fact that the moral self- reliance which makes her admirable also ...
Page 205
... seem rather ineffectual rhetoric -in Frost's poem it seems deliberate poeticizing . And in its context her epigram , " Home is the place where , when you have to go there , they have to take you in , " seems forced , its having become a ...
... seem rather ineffectual rhetoric -in Frost's poem it seems deliberate poeticizing . And in its context her epigram , " Home is the place where , when you have to go there , they have to take you in , " seems forced , its having become a ...
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