Walt WhitmanWilson & McCormick, 1884 - Всего страниц: 267 |
Результаты поиска по книге
Результаты 1 – 5 из 46
Стр. 13
... characters . At the death of his own mother he spoke of her , and his sister - in - law Martha , as " the best and sweetest women I ever saw , or ever expect to see . ” Not a little of the significance of the poet's Whitman and G ...
... characters . At the death of his own mother he spoke of her , and his sister - in - law Martha , as " the best and sweetest women I ever saw , or ever expect to see . ” Not a little of the significance of the poet's Whitman and G ...
Стр. 17
... character which has enabled him to persevere for a lifetime in what he has called " carrying out his own ideal . " I have heard him say , more than once , that all the members of his father's family were noted for their resolution ...
... character which has enabled him to persevere for a lifetime in what he has called " carrying out his own ideal . " I have heard him say , more than once , that all the members of his father's family were noted for their resolution ...
Стр. 18
... character of the poet , is that he was brought up on Long Island , or as he often calls it , giving the old Indian name , Paumanok , a peculiar region , over a hundred miles long , " shaped like a fish , plenty of sea - shore , the ...
... character of the poet , is that he was brought up on Long Island , or as he often calls it , giving the old Indian name , Paumanok , a peculiar region , over a hundred miles long , " shaped like a fish , plenty of sea - shore , the ...
Стр. 20
... characters became singularly attached to him . He knew and was sociable with the man that sold peanuts at the corner , and the old woman that dis- pensed coffee in the market . He did not patronize them , they were to him as good as the ...
... characters became singularly attached to him . He knew and was sociable with the man that sold peanuts at the corner , and the old woman that dis- pensed coffee in the market . He did not patronize them , they were to him as good as the ...
Стр. 28
... character something that , for want of a better word , I would call vanity . I think it arose from his superabundant vitality and strength . All through those years he gloried in his health , his magnificent physical proportions , his ...
... character something that , for want of a better word , I would call vanity . I think it arose from his superabundant vitality and strength . All through those years he gloried in his health , his magnificent physical proportions , his ...
Другие издания - Просмотреть все
WALT WHITMAN Richard Maurice 1837-1902 Bucke,Walt 1819-1892 Whitman,Jeannette L. (Jeannette Leonard) Gilder Недоступно для просмотра - 2016 |
Часто встречающиеся слова и выражения
Æschylus American Anthony Comstock appears beauty body Boston Brooklyn called celebrate character criticism death Democracy divine edition EDWARD DOWDEN Emerson equal expression expurgate eyes face feeling genius give grandeur Gray Poet Harlan heard heart Higginson hospitals human indecent intellectual James Harlan knew Leaves of Grass letter literary literature living look M. J. B. BADDELEY means mind modern moral mother nature never night noble obscene Oliver Stevens once passages passion perhaps person pieces poems poet poet's poetic poetry present printed prose published Rabelais reader Review Robert Buchanan Rossetti seems sense Shakespeare shame sing Song soul Specimen Days spirit strong sublime talk things thought tion true utter verse voice volume Walt Whit Walt Whitman Washington whole William Bell Scott woman words wounded writings written York York Tribune