Early Cooper and His AudienceColumbia University Press, 1986 - Počet stran: 230 |
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Strana 74
... expression of tenderness , of pleasure , of sorrow , so blended that she retained the recollection of it for life , and fell at her feet . ( Precaution , p . 183 ) Denbigh becomes delirious when fever sets in ; he repeatedly speaks ...
... expression of tenderness , of pleasure , of sorrow , so blended that she retained the recollection of it for life , and fell at her feet . ( Precaution , p . 183 ) Denbigh becomes delirious when fever sets in ; he repeatedly speaks ...
Strana 119
... expression of his belief in a democratic literature . That he preferred Sedgwick's sincere but awkward novel to Irving's smoothly professional sketches is in itself a sufficient indication of the direction of Cooper's imaginative ...
... expression of his belief in a democratic literature . That he preferred Sedgwick's sincere but awkward novel to Irving's smoothly professional sketches is in itself a sufficient indication of the direction of Cooper's imaginative ...
Strana 122
... expression in the recorder of the character , if the language imputed to her be not taken from the original ; and , in relation to the poor creature , it reminds us of those flowers which are said to spring up from the soil recently ...
... expression in the recorder of the character , if the language imputed to her be not taken from the original ; and , in relation to the poor creature , it reminds us of those flowers which are said to spring up from the soil recently ...
Obsah
Toward a Democratic Fiction | 1 |
The Failure of Charles Brockden Brown | 29 |
An American Novel Professedly | 63 |
Autorská práva | |
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