An Approach to LiteratureCleanth Brooks, John Thibaut Purser, Robert Penn Warren Crofts, 1939 |
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Página 20
... present information no single character might have presented - a method impossible to the writer who employs a narrator to whose con- sciousness the presentation of the fiction is bound . The writer who adopts this method may remain en ...
... present information no single character might have presented - a method impossible to the writer who employs a narrator to whose con- sciousness the presentation of the fiction is bound . The writer who adopts this method may remain en ...
Página 134
... present generation would care to resurrect . . . Only a rash soul would picture this old Virginia , with its great plantations , its slaves , its upper class , full of snobbishness and of social oppression , its less fortunate stratum ...
... present generation would care to resurrect . . . Only a rash soul would picture this old Virginia , with its great plantations , its slaves , its upper class , full of snobbishness and of social oppression , its less fortunate stratum ...
Página 168
... present . In popularizing the belief in the future in a crude form we have , I think , a good deal for which to thank Mr. H. G. Wells . His superficial philosophy has had an extensive influence . Whatever Mr. Wells may explicitly ...
... present . In popularizing the belief in the future in a crude form we have , I think , a good deal for which to thank Mr. H. G. Wells . His superficial philosophy has had an extensive influence . Whatever Mr. Wells may explicitly ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
An Approach to Literature Cleanth Brooks,John Thibaut Purser,Robert Penn Warren Vista de fragmentos - 1964 |
An Approach to Literature Cleanth Brooks, John Thibaut Purser, Robert Penn Warren Vista de fragmentos - 1952 |
Términos y frases comunes
American answer Antonius Armstid Arthur Dimmesdale asked beauty Caesar Calhoun called character child Cleopatra culture death Dimmesdale door effect ELVSTED essay eyes face fact feel Flem force frontier Gentleman from San give Gordon hand hath head heart HEDDA Hester Prynne horse human idea interest Jerico Khartoum kind light little Pearl live look Lord Lord Hartington Lord Wolseley Mahdi means ment mind minister MISS TESMAN mother nature never night novel once person piece of fiction play poem poet poetry Porphyria question reader Red Currie Roger Chillingworth scarlet letter scene seemed Sir Evelyn Baring Sir Patrick Spens slavery smile soul stanza stars stood story strange Sudan tell thee theme things thou thought tion true truth turned unto voice whole WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE woman words writer Zobeir