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 876
... question - I feel the parts harmo- niously blended in my own realization and con- victions , and present them to be ... questions , and the various business and benevolent needs of America , with propositions , remedies , often worth ...
... question - I feel the parts harmo- niously blended in my own realization and con- victions , and present them to be ... questions , and the various business and benevolent needs of America , with propositions , remedies , often worth ...
Seite 957
... question of immigration . The result will be to Europeanize these great districts ; in the broad sense which recognizes the European derivation of American populations . The Western Pacific will remain Asiatic , as it should . The question ...
... question of immigration . The result will be to Europeanize these great districts ; in the broad sense which recognizes the European derivation of American populations . The Western Pacific will remain Asiatic , as it should . The question ...
Seite 984
... question : Why should progress and poverty exist side by side ? The answer. At the beginning of the war the liberals , to whom both Mr. Wilson and Mr. Baker owe their political power , expected this problem to be met with the tact ...
... question : Why should progress and poverty exist side by side ? The answer. At the beginning of the war the liberals , to whom both Mr. Wilson and Mr. Baker owe their political power , expected this problem to be met with the tact ...
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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