The American Mind: TRANSITION TO THE MACHINE AGE, 1865-1919. From Leaves of grass. One's self I sing. As I ponder'd in silence. To the states. Poets to come. For you O democracy. To a pupil. Song of myself. Out of the cradle endlessly rocking. A noiseless patient spider. Pioneers! O pioneers. Cavalry crossing a ford. Come up from the fields father. As toilsome I wander'd Virginia's woods. O captain! My captain! When lilacs last in the dooryard bloom'd. On the beach at night. Song of the redwood tree. Spirit that form'd this scene. Nationality and literature. American characterHarry Redcay Warfel, Ralph Henry Gabriel, Stanley Thomas Williams American Book Company, 1937 |
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Seite 930
... human mind in civilized races . The four classes of facts above indicated , and which extend themselves in parallel lines along the pathways of human progress from savagery to 30 civilization , form the principal subjects of discus ...
... human mind in civilized races . The four classes of facts above indicated , and which extend themselves in parallel lines along the pathways of human progress from savagery to 30 civilization , form the principal subjects of discus ...
Seite 1259
... human problem . Human beings have a power and a desire for association and co- operation which has never yet been completely realized . When practiced nobly it represents a close human approach to that which men call the king- dom of ...
... human problem . Human beings have a power and a desire for association and co- operation which has never yet been completely realized . When practiced nobly it represents a close human approach to that which men call the king- dom of ...
Seite 1311
... human needs and , indeed , contradictory to human experience . Though he shun the metaphysical abyss and profess his inability to climb the steeps of mystical insight , he is at one with the saints in his clear perception of the eternal ...
... human needs and , indeed , contradictory to human experience . Though he shun the metaphysical abyss and profess his inability to climb the steeps of mystical insight , he is at one with the saints in his clear perception of the eternal ...
Inhalt
Walt Whitman 18191892 | 833 |
From Leaves of Grass Opinion in | 875 |
O Bury Me Not On the Lone Prairie 881 Business Men and Spec | 886 |
Urheberrecht | |
27 weitere Abschnitte werden nicht angezeigt.
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