Interpreting LiteratureHolt, Rinehart, and Winston, 1985 - 1184 sider |
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Side 253
... stand at all . During the summer before I had left my home town with Harry Whitehead and , with a nigger named Burt , had taken a job as swipe with one of the two horses Harry was campaigning through the fall race meets that year ...
... stand at all . During the summer before I had left my home town with Harry Whitehead and , with a nigger named Burt , had taken a job as swipe with one of the two horses Harry was campaigning through the fall race meets that year ...
Side 302
... stand for another , we call it a symbol . The horse stands for horse sense and operates as a symbol in the poem , as we shall observe later . Not all figures of speech contain symbols , and not all symbols in a poem are embedded in ...
... stand for another , we call it a symbol . The horse stands for horse sense and operates as a symbol in the poem , as we shall observe later . Not all figures of speech contain symbols , and not all symbols in a poem are embedded in ...
Side 380
... stand on its own feet by representing through continued use and common understanding a simple object or a complex ... stands for it , and the device works because the association is universally understood . When Frost says in " Birches ...
... stand on its own feet by representing through continued use and common understanding a simple object or a complex ... stands for it , and the device works because the association is universally understood . When Frost says in " Birches ...
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