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Articles 31 - 60 of 60
Full-Text Articles in Arts and Humanities
Untitled, Larry Mercure
Wood Sculpture, Anne Clark
Vase, Bonnie Berthaum
Paranoid, Jo Molesworth
Amber Beads, Pauline Skrupskelis
Molly, Norman Goodling
Pilgrimage, Betty Fouch
Odysseus, Jim Albert
Tire And Foliage, Larry Mercure
Sonnet, Sam Pipe
Time Exposure Of Wood Sculpture, Anne Clark
Time Exposure Of Wood Sculpture, Anne Clark
Calliope (1954-2001)
No abstract provided.
Untitled, Lloyd Peterson
The Tower 1962
Parnassus
The 1962 edition of the student literary journal, Parnassus, published by Taylor University in Upland, Indiana.
Only A Question, Richard O'Connor C.S.B.
Conflict, Paul Stein
Part Of An Answer To Melville's "Bartleby", Richard O'Connor C.S.B.
Part Of An Answer To Melville's "Bartleby", Richard O'Connor C.S.B.
The Angle
In lieu of an abstract, below is the essay's first paragraph.
"The land was troubled by a wind, a wind of two years' strength, and it had blown with gathering force for at least that long. A small boy Nameless travelled a roadway that seemed to drive the land along with it, that seemed to give reason and expression to the land. The land seemed made only for the roadway."
Distraction And A Psalm, Robert Kleinhans
Preliminary Pages, No Author
November 1961, Robert Kleinhans
God, Man And The Devil In The Talent Scout, Frank Salamone
God, Man And The Devil In The Talent Scout, Frank Salamone
The Angle
In lieu of an abstract, below is the essay's first paragraph.
"In 1961 a very fine little novel by Romain Gary slipped into publication in the United States almost unnoticed by the reviewers. I feel that the few critics, however, that did discuss the book missed its message. Atlantic Monthly's reviewer, for instance, found the theme of the book to be centered in a denial of the existence of God and the devil: any power attributed by man to the supernatural was merely man's Faith in the words "God" and ''devil.'' Following a semantic approach, the Atlantic reviewer went on …
And Then The Snows Come Quietly, Thomas Mckague
The Race, A. M. Fisher
The Race, A. M. Fisher
The Angle
In lieu of an abstract, below is the essay's first paragraph.
"The road stretches before me into the seemingly endless night. The moon high above my head, casts light to illuminate my way. I am running..."
The False Truth, Alfonso Borrelli
On Seeing Roman Pines, Lawrence C. Fleckenstein
Literary Criticism, Harry A. Salis
Literary Criticism, Harry A. Salis
The Angle
In lieu of an abstract, below is the essay's first paragraph.
"The literary review should be and has been one of the more stimulating and invigorating institutions of literary endeavor. Today the book review has fallen from a position of prominent activity to an amazingly low state of morbid drowsiness. The literary critic vies with his colleagues in bestowing the stamp of approval on as many new books as is humanly possible. The influential book sections of the New York papers now represent a veritable monument to lethargy. The book reviews of at least one national weekly magazine are written …
The Leech, Thomas Mckague
The Leech, Thomas Mckague
The Angle
In lieu of an abstract, below is the essay's first paragraph.
"The road was narrow. It ran through a young innocent woods of birch saplings. The scent of spring, a thick smell of winterbroken, decayed boughs and thawed, rich, warm humus, drifted through the open car window. Pale-yellow morning rays glistened on the chrome hood ornament and dazzled on the white finish of the long, elegant car."
The Test, Alfonso Borrelli
A Boy, Thomas Mckague
Russian Nights, Lawrence C. Fleckenstein
Full Issue, No Author