Interpreting LiteratureHolt, Rinehart, and Winston, 1985 - 1184 sider |
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Side 197
... moved into the spell of some strange , mysterious power . Yet it was as familiar as the sun , and he knew it was the perfectly familiar bingo . The man with the microphone was saying something to the audience as he held out his card . A ...
... moved into the spell of some strange , mysterious power . Yet it was as familiar as the sun , and he knew it was the perfectly familiar bingo . The man with the microphone was saying something to the audience as he held out his card . A ...
Side 384
... moved progressively through the poems by Moore , Dickinson , Eliot , and MacLeish , we have moved away from the older poetry with its conventional techniques and attitudes into modern poetry . We have learned that the language ( the ...
... moved progressively through the poems by Moore , Dickinson , Eliot , and MacLeish , we have moved away from the older poetry with its conventional techniques and attitudes into modern poetry . We have learned that the language ( the ...
Side 414
... moved by Galuppi's toccata to reconsider his devotion to reason and science . Although he has never been out of England , the music paints pictures of old Venice in his mind , Venice the traditional harbor of love and romance- " it's as ...
... moved by Galuppi's toccata to reconsider his devotion to reason and science . Although he has never been out of England , the music paints pictures of old Venice in his mind , Venice the traditional harbor of love and romance- " it's as ...
Indhold
First Impressions | 7 |
Ben Jonson | 8 |
The Results of the Shaping Devices | 15 |
Copyright | |
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Ansley asked began Bill Hutchinson black veil Braggioni Comments and Questions dark Darling death door Dupin E. E. Cummings Emily Dickinson eyes face father feel felt figure free verse Gessler girl gone Goodman Brown hair hand Harrison Bergeron head heard Hooper horse hunger artist irony knew lady laughed Laura light Liharev listening living looked Mama Markheim meaning mind Miniver Mitty morning mother never night pearl Pepé poem poet poetry readers rhyme Roman Fever Salzman Sargeant seemed sense Seryoga Sir Patrick Spens Sister Irene Slade sleep smile sound stood stopped story street Sweet symbol T. S. Eliot talking tell thee thing thou thought told took turned voice wait walked Walter Mitty watched wife woman words writing young Young Goodman Brown