Literary Studies and ReviewsFor months six-year-old Ruby Bridges must confront the hostility of white parents when she becomes the first African American girl to integrate Frantz Elementary School in New Orleans in 1960. |
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Page 10
... JOYCE'S ULYSSES 66 · 192 XIX . THE POET AND HIS AGE 208 XX . ET EGO IN ARCADIA • 228 XXI . THEOCRITUS IN CAPRI 241 INDEX OF PROPER NAMES 247 LITERARY STUDIES AND REVIEWS THE I PIERRE DE RONSARD vicissitudes 10 LITERARY STUDIES AND REVIEWS.
... JOYCE'S ULYSSES 66 · 192 XIX . THE POET AND HIS AGE 208 XX . ET EGO IN ARCADIA • 228 XXI . THEOCRITUS IN CAPRI 241 INDEX OF PROPER NAMES 247 LITERARY STUDIES AND REVIEWS THE I PIERRE DE RONSARD vicissitudes 10 LITERARY STUDIES AND REVIEWS.
Page 178
... Joyce , more urbane , less preoccupied with slops and viscera . His scale is more gigantic than anything Miss Sinclair has yet attempted . And he is not merely an impressionist like Miss Richardson . He can be an impressionist , a ...
... Joyce , more urbane , less preoccupied with slops and viscera . His scale is more gigantic than anything Miss Sinclair has yet attempted . And he is not merely an impressionist like Miss Richardson . He can be an impressionist , a ...
Page 179
... Joyce , makes one uneasily conscious that he is engaged in the moral vulgarity of disparaging the universe . M. Proust has the urbanity , the fine manners Nature denied to Mr. Joyce when she gave him genius ; he has the vast scheme of ...
... Joyce , makes one uneasily conscious that he is engaged in the moral vulgarity of disparaging the universe . M. Proust has the urbanity , the fine manners Nature denied to Mr. Joyce when she gave him genius ; he has the vast scheme of ...
Page 181
... Joyce , of Miss Sitwell and Mr. Huxley , of Miss Moore and H. D. , of Jean Cocteau and Paul Morand and T. S. Eliot . They are intellectually contemporaries ; they are post- war ; they are sufficiently unlike each other to reward ...
... Joyce , of Miss Sitwell and Mr. Huxley , of Miss Moore and H. D. , of Jean Cocteau and Paul Morand and T. S. Eliot . They are intellectually contemporaries ; they are post- war ; they are sufficiently unlike each other to reward ...
Page 183
... Joyce may be taken as typical of the best original prose of this school ; the poetry of Mr. Eliot occupies a similar position . The plan of this article forbids discussion of Mr. Eliot's criticism , but it is essential to observe that ...
... Joyce may be taken as typical of the best original prose of this school ; the poetry of Mr. Eliot occupies a similar position . The plan of this article forbids discussion of Mr. Eliot's criticism , but it is essential to observe that ...
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admiration appears beauty Bellay called century character charm classic compared complete contemporary criticism death Dehénault delightful early Eliot Elizabethan England English Epicurean existence expression fact feel France French friends give grand Greek hand happy Hellenics human idea imagination imitation important influence intelligence interesting Italian Italy Joyce kind Landor later Latin learned least less letters lines literary literature lived manner matter means merely mind moral natural never objects obscurity once original Paris passages pastoral perhaps period person philosopher play pleasure poems poet poetry popular possess praise Prince probably prose Proust pure reader reason remarkable respect Ronsard Saint-Simon satire seems sense sonnet style taste things thought tion translation true Ulysses whole wish writing written young
Popular passages
Page 217 - No man could be born a metaphysical poet, nor assume the dignity of a writer by descriptions copied from descriptions, by imitations borrowed from imitations, by traditional imagery and hereditary similes, by readiness of rhyme and volubility of syllables.
Page 111 - I NEVER had any other desire so strong, and so like to covetousness, as that one which I have had always, that I might be master at last of a small house and large garden, with very moderate conveniences joined to them, and there dedicate the remainder of my life only to the culture of them, and study of nature...
Page 216 - They reply that with all this they can do nothing ; that the elements they need for the exercise of their art are great actions, calculated powerfully and delightfully to affect what is permanent in the human soul ; that so far as the present age can supply such actions, they will gladly make use of them ; but that an age wanting in moral grandeur can with difficulty supply such, and an age of spiritual discomfort with difficulty be powerfully and delightfully affected by them.
Page 189 - D'ESCURES. Ep. Oh of what contraries consists a man ! Of what impossible mixtures ! vice and virtue, . , Corruption, and eternnesse, at one time, And in one subject, let together, loose ! We have not any strength but weakens us, No greatness but doth crush us into air. Our knowledges do light us but to err, Our ornaments are burthens : our delights Are our tormentors ; fiends that, raised in fears, At parting shake our roofs about our ears.
Page 144 - Far, far from here, The Adriatic breaks in a warm bay Among the green Illyrian hills ; and there The sunshine in the happy glens is fair, And by the sea, and in the brakes. The grass is cool, the sea-side air Buoyant and fresh, the mountain flowers More virginal and sweet than ours.
Page 189 - Gives too soon Into weak hands, what's thought can be dispensed with Till the refusal propagates a fear.
Page 216 - They do not talk of their mission, nor of interpreting their age, nor of the coming Poet ; all this, they know, is the mere delirium of vanity ; their business is not to praise their age, but to afford to the men who live in it the highest pleasure which they are capable of feeling.
Page 153 - I have no flock : I kill Nothing that breathes, that stirs, that feels the air, The sun, the dew. Why should the beautiful (And thou art beautiful) disturb the source Whence springs all beauty? Hast thou never heard Of Hamadryads ? Rhaicos, Heard of them I have : Tell me some tale about them.
Page 43 - Par le monde volez, Et d'un sifflant murmure L'ombrageuse verdure Doulcement esbranlez, J'offre ces violettes, Ces lis, et ces fleurettes, Et ces roses icy, Ces vermeillettes roses, Tout freschement écloses, Et ces œilletz aussi.