American Life in Literature, Volumen1Jay Broadus Hubbell Harper & brothers, 1936 - 849 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 78
Página 318
... manners have neither the regularity and the dignity which they often display amongst aristocratic na- order to speak or act in the same manner : their manners are constantly characterized by a number of lesser diversities , but not by ...
... manners have neither the regularity and the dignity which they often display amongst aristocratic na- order to speak or act in the same manner : their manners are constantly characterized by a number of lesser diversities , but not by ...
Página 319
... manners of aristocracy did not constitute vir- soon as the democratic revolution is com- pleted . It would seem that nothing is more lasting than the manners of an aristocratic class , for they are preserved by that class for some time ...
... manners of aristocracy did not constitute vir- soon as the democratic revolution is com- pleted . It would seem that nothing is more lasting than the manners of an aristocratic class , for they are preserved by that class for some time ...
Página 20
... manner , a manner not self - conscious , artificial , and constrained . It may not be a beautiful manner always , but it is almost always a natural manner , a free and happy manner ; and this gives pleasure . Here we have , undoubtedly ...
... manner , a manner not self - conscious , artificial , and constrained . It may not be a beautiful manner always , but it is almost always a natural manner , a free and happy manner ; and this gives pleasure . Here we have , undoubtedly ...
Contenido
xvi | 3 |
The Settlement of Virginia | 4 |
FELICIA DOROTHEA HEMANS 17931835 | 24 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 72 secciones no mostradas
Términos y frases comunes
American literature beauty Boston called Captain character colonel Colonial dear death Deerslayer divine earth Edgar Allan Poe edition Emerson England English essay eyes fancy father feel friends gave give hand hath Hawthorne head hear heard heart heaven Herman Melville hope hour Indian James Russell Lowell John lady land letter Ligeia light literary live Longfellow look Lowell M. A. DeWolfe Maypole ment Merry Mount mind Moby-Dick Nathaniel Hawthorne nature never night o'er once perhaps Philip Freneau Poe's poem poet poetry political published round seemed shore song soul speak spirit story sweet tell thee things Thomas Holley Chivers thou thought tion truth verse Virginia voice whole wild William Byrd woods words write wrote young ΙΟ