American Literary Essays1960 |
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Página 55
... fact , sprouted dully out of the clinging black- green humus below them - stared out at the passer - by with the faintly pained , heavy , incurious unamazement of cattle . The gaze of those marble eyes must have been the first stage in ...
... fact , sprouted dully out of the clinging black- green humus below them - stared out at the passer - by with the faintly pained , heavy , incurious unamazement of cattle . The gaze of those marble eyes must have been the first stage in ...
Página 59
... fact that many people in other lands like them too , and that some of them are nearly as acceptable overseas as they are here at home , does not in any way detract from their obviously American character . It merely serves to remind us ...
... fact that many people in other lands like them too , and that some of them are nearly as acceptable overseas as they are here at home , does not in any way detract from their obviously American character . It merely serves to remind us ...
Página 123
confronted with the fact of physical disintegration . We are not told what to think ; we are told to look at the situa- tion . The framework of the poem is , in fact , the two abstractions , mortality and eternity , which are made to ...
confronted with the fact of physical disintegration . We are not told what to think ; we are told to look at the situa- tion . The framework of the poem is , in fact , the two abstractions , mortality and eternity , which are made to ...
Índice
Introduction | 1 |
Oliver Wendell Holmes 18091894 | 5 |
Washington Irving 17831859 | 16 |
Direitos de autor | |
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Palavras e frases frequentes
Allen Tate Amer American appeared artist beauty become called character consciousness conventional Cooper criticism culture Deerslayer E. B. White effect Emerson Emily Dickinson emotion England English essay experience expression eyes fact feel fiction genius give Hawthorne Henry James human ican ideal ideas images imagination intellectual interest jazz John de Crèvecoeur Karl Shapiro kind language Leaves of Grass less literary literature live look Lowell Mark Twain matter means Melville ment mind Moby Dick moral nature ness never novel novelist Parrington passion perhaps Pierre poem poet poetic poetry political present prose R. P. Blackmur reader reality romance scholar seems sense social society soul speak spirit stand story T. S. Eliot tell theme things Thoreau thought tion tradition true truth ture verse Whitman whole words writing wrote