The Kenyon Review, Količina 28John Crowe Ransom Kenyon College, 1966 |
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Zadetki 1–3 od 76
Stran 208
... becoming nothing . Once the imagination has done its work , however , so that , " with its help , I have become what I should become , " it has a right to demand its freedom to play : " for there is no longer any danger that I shall ...
... becoming nothing . Once the imagination has done its work , however , so that , " with its help , I have become what I should become , " it has a right to demand its freedom to play : " for there is no longer any danger that I shall ...
Stran 255
... become discernible : a person idylli- cally free of social obligations who takes notes on the beau- ties of nature ; a visionary de- scribing a mythological uni- verse of the past or a Utopian one of the future ; and an explorer of the ...
... become discernible : a person idylli- cally free of social obligations who takes notes on the beau- ties of nature ; a visionary de- scribing a mythological uni- verse of the past or a Utopian one of the future ; and an explorer of the ...
Stran 343
... become of the lean and spare young man he had been ? What had become of the poet , the bridegroom , the man who hated things to be just so ? He weighed himself on the bathroom scales every morning , the daily ritual of observing his ...
... become of the lean and spare young man he had been ? What had become of the poet , the bridegroom , the man who hated things to be just so ? He weighed himself on the bathroom scales every morning , the daily ritual of observing his ...
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William Fifield | 12 |
Philip Young | 180 |
Alfred Werner | 301 |
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