The Norton Reader: An Anthology of Expository ProseArthur M. Eastman |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 79
Page 476
... whole , so that it may be taken to represent some other whole whose elements have analogous relations . The reason for using such a form as a symbol is usually that the thing it represents is not perceivable or readily imaginable . We ...
... whole , so that it may be taken to represent some other whole whose elements have analogous relations . The reason for using such a form as a symbol is usually that the thing it represents is not perceivable or readily imaginable . We ...
Page 488
... whole is about . Literature as a whole is not an aggregate of exhibits with red and blue ribbons attached to them , like a cat show , but the range of articulate human imagination as it extends from the height of imaginative heaven to ...
... whole is about . Literature as a whole is not an aggregate of exhibits with red and blue ribbons attached to them , like a cat show , but the range of articulate human imagination as it extends from the height of imaginative heaven to ...
Page 919
... whole a good one , ' he wrote , ' but it is very near to a bad manner indeed , and those characteristics of my style which are most easily copied are the most questionable . ' The same could be said of Gibbon , whose manner , badly ...
... whole a good one , ' he wrote , ' but it is very near to a bad manner indeed , and those characteristics of my style which are most easily copied are the most questionable . ' The same could be said of Gibbon , whose manner , badly ...
Contents
PERSONAL REPORT | 1 |
Maya Angelou High School Graduation | 11 |
Bernadette Devlin Politics in the University | 21 |
Copyright | |
104 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
American animal asked become believe bull bullfighting C. S. Lewis called Chambered Nautilus child E. B. White E. M. Forster English essay Essoins experience expression eyes fact feel felt ghetto girl give hand Henry Reed human ideas Iffley lock imagination Jacob Bronowski James Thurber Jane Austen Junior Johnson kids killed kind knew language literature live look machine matter meaning ment metaphor mind moral mother nature Negro never night once perhaps person play poem poet poetry political prison question seems sense shock simply social society South Los Angeles street symbol talk tarning teach teacher tell things thought tion told turn understand University Watts woman women words write