College English Association Critic, Volumes 33-35Department of English, Texas A & M University, 1970 |
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... question still remains : to be or not to be . It remains a question because the play has not answered it . It has merely shown us why it is a question . Hamlet is ultimately evasive because what it is about is evasive ; and it is this ...
... question still remains : to be or not to be . It remains a question because the play has not answered it . It has merely shown us why it is a question . Hamlet is ultimately evasive because what it is about is evasive ; and it is this ...
Página 38
... question , not an answer , and by abandoning the answers imposed on existence by his questers , he only the more emphasized the final question . " - This , if I have stated it correctly , is the argument of The Ironic Diagram as set ...
... question , not an answer , and by abandoning the answers imposed on existence by his questers , he only the more emphasized the final question . " - This , if I have stated it correctly , is the argument of The Ironic Diagram as set ...
Página 24
... questions . The first question to ask is , " What questions can I ask myself about this poem ? " A good question for a starter might be , " Who is speaking in this poem ? " To say that Shakespeare is speaking in Sonnet CXVI is naive ...
... questions . The first question to ask is , " What questions can I ask myself about this poem ? " A good question for a starter might be , " Who is speaking in this poem ? " To say that Shakespeare is speaking in Sonnet CXVI is naive ...
Conteúdo
CRITIC | 2 |
An Official Journal of The College English Association | |
Volume 33 | 33 |
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American literature anthology Barnes & Noble bibliography biography Black Blake CEA Critic Centenary College century chapter character classroom College English Association Conrad contemporary course culture D. H. Lawrence death discussion Donald drama Earle Labor Edited Editor EDWARD HUBERMAN Eliot essays ethnic experience Faulkner George Hawthorne Henry Hightower human introduction Jack London James John Johnson Joseph Conrad Journal language Library literary lives London major meaning Melville Melville's metaphor mind minireviews modern myth Newark novel novelists Oakland University Oscar Cargill Oxford paper perhaps play poem poet poetry problems Professor published question reader relevance Robert Robert Lowell Romantic scholars science fiction selections sense Shakespeare short stories sonnet Stephen Crane style suggest teacher teaching theme things University Press Updike vision volume W. B. Yeats William words Wright State University writing Yeats Yeats's York