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 |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 25
Seite 1074
... universal sway over all men and all places , though it was founded to teach the whole truth as revealed by Christ to all men and until the end of time . The Church is thus the embodiment of the universal and absolutely true religion ...
... universal sway over all men and all places , though it was founded to teach the whole truth as revealed by Christ to all men and until the end of time . The Church is thus the embodiment of the universal and absolutely true religion ...
Seite 1208
... universal American belief in progress . Because the War ended in military victory for the Allies and the United States , the change in the intellectual climate did not come immediately . Disillusionment became general only after it was ...
... universal American belief in progress . Because the War ended in military victory for the Allies and the United States , the change in the intellectual climate did not come immediately . Disillusionment became general only after it was ...
Seite 1366
... universal years , A little seawater to make his tears . Hail , element of earth , receive thy own , And cherish , at thy charitable breast , This man , this mongrel beast : He plows the sand , and , at his hardest need , He sows himself ...
... universal years , A little seawater to make his tears . Hail , element of earth , receive thy own , And cherish , at thy charitable breast , This man , this mongrel beast : He plows the sand , and , at his hardest need , He sows himself ...
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.
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
ain't American Anarchism asked beautiful become believe born Brer Brer Fox Brer Rabbit called century Christian Church civilization common Constitution craft unionism criticism death democracy dream earth economic eyes face fact faith farm father feel fire forces George Santayana give hand Haskins head heart Henry James hope human ideal individual industrial Jack London Jurgis La Follette labor land League of Nations liberty live look man's means ment mind Miniver Miss Miss Spencer Miss Van moral nation nature Negro never night nomic Oakhurst organized Osric Panchevo peace person philosophy poems political President Ragtime religion seemed sense social society song soul spirit stand tell Theodore Roosevelt things thought tion turned United University writing