Renaissance and Modern: Essays in Honor of Edwin M. MoseleySkidmore College, 1976 - 179 pages |
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Page 163
... expression of the deeper self in Toomer and Mansfield . It may be , as in the cases cited , fully described or simply alluded to , as in Mansfield's unfinished " A Married Man's Story " : " I looked at the dead bird . . . and that is ...
... expression of the deeper self in Toomer and Mansfield . It may be , as in the cases cited , fully described or simply alluded to , as in Mansfield's unfinished " A Married Man's Story " : " I looked at the dead bird . . . and that is ...
Page 164
... expression of what one feels and knows appear the con- ditions of vital living , but acceptance and expression seem impossible . What is the meaning of Mansfield's and Toomer's concern with the ineffable , with something that must but ...
... expression of what one feels and knows appear the con- ditions of vital living , but acceptance and expression seem impossible . What is the meaning of Mansfield's and Toomer's concern with the ineffable , with something that must but ...
Page 167
... expression . The major literary weapon for expressing the unexpressable is metaphor . Thus , external action is notably unimportant in Toomer's and Mansfield's works ; frequently metaphor seems to take the place of plot . Even where we ...
... expression . The major literary weapon for expressing the unexpressable is metaphor . Thus , external action is notably unimportant in Toomer's and Mansfield's works ; frequently metaphor seems to take the place of plot . Even where we ...
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action appears Appleton House become birds Bloom Castiglione character Conrad couplet Courtier critical Darl death dramatic dreams Dynamics edition English epic Ernest Hemingway esthetic experience expression eyes Fairfax fantasies father Faulkner feels fiction figures final fish flood garden Gaveston ghosts girl Glenway Wescott Harry Harry's Hemingway Hemingway's hero Holland human images imagination Isabel Thwaites Jean Toomer John Milton Jordan Katherine Mansfield King language Lionel Trilling literary literature Mansfield Maria Marlow Marvell Marvell's Mary Mary's meadow ment metaphor Milton's Milton's narrator mind Miss Brill mock-heroic Molly moral Mortimer Moseley mother narrative nature novel nun's nunnery nuns otherworld Pablo's Paradise Lost piety play poem's poet poet's political Professor Razumov reader reading religious Renaissance response Robert Jordan Russian scene seems sense sexual Shakespeare's Skidmore College sprezzatura stanza Stephen story suggests symbol theme tion Toomer tree Ulysses University Varda Vardaman William William Faulkner woods words York young