Xavier University Studies, Volumen11Xavier University (New Orleans, La.), 1972 |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 23
Página 18
... fact she enlarged . " Of everything . ” Everything had never even yet seemed to him so incalculably much . " Oh ! " he simply moaned into the gloom ( p . 434 ) . All that Densher had strived for or had been used to striving for was more ...
... fact she enlarged . " Of everything . ” Everything had never even yet seemed to him so incalculably much . " Oh ! " he simply moaned into the gloom ( p . 434 ) . All that Densher had strived for or had been used to striving for was more ...
Página 24
... fact that Cleanth Brooks ignores in his influential reading of the poem . Brooks does not recognize that in " The Canonization " the seriousness of the speaker's address is of a different order from the seriousness of his love that ...
... fact that Cleanth Brooks ignores in his influential reading of the poem . Brooks does not recognize that in " The Canonization " the seriousness of the speaker's address is of a different order from the seriousness of his love that ...
Página 19
... fact of death in the poem , as with the idea of life , is merely the pole of something unbounded and the talk with Stetson is only wistfully of intuitive regeneration . It is the stupendous fact of death that is so conspicuously missing ...
... fact of death in the poem , as with the idea of life , is merely the pole of something unbounded and the talk with Stetson is only wistfully of intuitive regeneration . It is the stupendous fact of death that is so conspicuously missing ...
Contenido
Bill David McDowell The use of Everything in | 13 |
Arthur W Bloom The Theatre of | 29 |
SPRING 1972 | 37 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Xavier University Studies, Volúmenes5-7 Xavier University (New Orleans, La.) Vista de fragmentos - 1966 |
Términos y frases comunes
achieve animal artistic attempt attitude audience Baumbach beloved characters comic plot concept criticism D. H. Lawrence death Donne's dramatic Eastrod Eliot English Enoch Essay everything fictional Flannery Flannery O'Connor Frye genre Gilbert White Hawthorne Haze Haze's Hazel Motes Henry human Ibid INDIANA UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES INDIANENSIS INDIANA UNIVERSITY INDIANENSIS SIGILLUM individual John Donne Kate Croy Kate's lady Lawrence's literary literature living London lovers LUX INDIANENSIS LUX SIGILLUM MDCCCXX ET VERITAS meaning Merton Densher Mime Troupe Miss O'Connor Nathaniel Hawthorne naturalist nature non-mimetic novel Oroonoko Owen Tudor pardon play poem poet poet's poetry R. G. Davis reference relationship rhetorical says Schopenhauer Schopenhauer's sense Shakespeare SIGILLUM ET VERITAS SIGILLUM INDIANENSIS SITATIS Sonnet Sonnet 35 Sonnet 42 speaker Strachy symbol T. S. Eliot theatrical Thoreau thought transcend UNIVERSITATIS LUX UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES INDIANENSIS VERITAS MDCCCXX VERITAS SIGILLUM wardrobe Wise Blood Women in Love writers XAVIER UNIVERSITY STUDIES York