American Literary Essays1960 |
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Página 82
... reader love the good people in the tale and hate the bad ones . But the reader of the Deerslayer tale dislikes the good people in it , is indifferent to the others , and wishes they would all get drowned to- gether . 11. They require ...
... reader love the good people in the tale and hate the bad ones . But the reader of the Deerslayer tale dislikes the good people in it , is indifferent to the others , and wishes they would all get drowned to- gether . 11. They require ...
Página 106
... reader who remem- bers the passage will know that it was he who was meant all the same ; and if the reader does remember it may well occur to him that Melville meant his sentences about greatness and disease to spread throughout the ...
... reader who remem- bers the passage will know that it was he who was meant all the same ; and if the reader does remember it may well occur to him that Melville meant his sentences about greatness and disease to spread throughout the ...
Página 272
... reader of F. R. Leavis ' The Great Tradition . Mr. Leavis ' " great tradition " of the novel is really Anglo - American , and it includes not only Jane Austen , George Eliot , Con- rad , and Henry James but , apparently , in one of its ...
... reader of F. R. Leavis ' The Great Tradition . Mr. Leavis ' " great tradition " of the novel is really Anglo - American , and it includes not only Jane Austen , George Eliot , Con- rad , and Henry James but , apparently , in one of its ...
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