Thoth, Volumes 11-12Graduate students of the English Department, Syracuse University, 1970 - American literature |
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Page 19
... experience , so that we have in Beowulf the curiously ambivalent effect of man's experience constantly related to nature , while nature , especially in its larger aspects , is at the same time reduced to that same level of experience ...
... experience , so that we have in Beowulf the curiously ambivalent effect of man's experience constantly related to nature , while nature , especially in its larger aspects , is at the same time reduced to that same level of experience ...
Page 30
... experience becomes ultimate in proportion as its boundaries coincide with the limits of his world . Another ambivalence , related to the central nature - experience fusion , is evident here : reference to the large world of nature ...
... experience becomes ultimate in proportion as its boundaries coincide with the limits of his world . Another ambivalence , related to the central nature - experience fusion , is evident here : reference to the large world of nature ...
Page 25
... experiences with the maturer view of present experience . Employing this psychological scheme , Joyce constructs the char- acter of Stephen in a style which itself is a metaphor of the actual experience . Style as metaphor suggests an ...
... experiences with the maturer view of present experience . Employing this psychological scheme , Joyce constructs the char- acter of Stephen in a style which itself is a metaphor of the actual experience . Style as metaphor suggests an ...
Contents
The Concept of Nature in Beowulf Ervene F Gulley | 16 |
Psychological | 31 |
The Criticism of Williams | 40 |
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action Aimwell American artistic Badge of Courage becomes Belinda Beowulf Bloom Book Bookman character Christ Clarissa comic concept Conrad Consul Creeley Creeley's critics Dalloway death Dickens dramatic emotional English epic Epicurus Essays Estella eternity experience Fainall and Marwood Falstaff feel Fiction final Gerard Manley Hopkins Ginsberg heart Heav'n Hector hero Hopkins human imagination inscape instress Introduction irony Jim's John John Engels Jonson Joyce Joyce's language lines Literary Lock Lord Jim Lupus Maggie man's Marlow metaphor Miss Kilman moral narrator nature Nostromo novel Ovid Paterson Peter play Plutzik poem poet Poetaster poetry Pope prose Raintree County reader reality Red Badge Review satire says scene SCraneN seems selving sense Septimus Shakespeare Shawnessy Skrebensky soul speech spirit sprung rhythm Stephen Crane story Studies style sylphs symbolic Syracuse University theme THOTH tion Ursula vision voice Walter Sutton William Carlos Williams words York