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Full-Text Articles in Arts and Humanities

The Lantern Vol. 39, No. 1, Fall 1972, James Popelka, K. Lee Turner, Richard E. Hankison, Nina Camiel, Randy Sargent, Edmond Knowles, Cheryl Hiltebeitel, Vincent Phillips, Raymond Fleck, Kate Swanson, Henry R. Ellsworth Jr., Mary Spink, Kelly Stewart, Robert J. Micklus, Scott Wagner Oct 1972

The Lantern Vol. 39, No. 1, Fall 1972, James Popelka, K. Lee Turner, Richard E. Hankison, Nina Camiel, Randy Sargent, Edmond Knowles, Cheryl Hiltebeitel, Vincent Phillips, Raymond Fleck, Kate Swanson, Henry R. Ellsworth Jr., Mary Spink, Kelly Stewart, Robert J. Micklus, Scott Wagner

The Lantern Literary Magazines, 1933 to Present

• A Journey Into Darkness
• September 5, 1972
• Atlantic Taperecorder
• Aftermath
• Linda
• Sweet Baby Jane
• The Court of the Ebony Clown
• The Cosmic Band
• Poem to the Dreamer
• Dawn
• Too Bad Life Isn't
• Incident at Tiffany's
• Sonnet
• Infinitas
• Podiatry
• 2 and 4a
• Autistic Autumn
• I Walk Alone
• Eyes---and They Were Empty


Fire, Mildred T. Hunt Jul 1972

Fire, Mildred T. Hunt

BYU Studies Quarterly

No abstract provided.


An Old Woman Clipping Her Nails: An Etching By Rembrandt, Wayne Guymon Jul 1972

An Old Woman Clipping Her Nails: An Etching By Rembrandt, Wayne Guymon

BYU Studies Quarterly

No abstract provided.


Sunday Morning In March, Ted Ridenhour Jul 1972

Sunday Morning In March, Ted Ridenhour

BYU Studies Quarterly

No abstract provided.


The Mantle, Dennis Smith Jul 1972

The Mantle, Dennis Smith

BYU Studies Quarterly

No abstract provided.


Doubt And Faith In Tennyson's Poetry, Martha Wright Jul 1972

Doubt And Faith In Tennyson's Poetry, Martha Wright

Masters Theses & Specialist Projects

Alfred Tennyson, the nineteenth century poetic giant of Victorian England, who served as poet laureate for forty-two years, is best known for his elegy, In Memoriam, The Idylls of the King, and such short poems as "Ulysses," "The Lotos Eaters," "Flower in the Crannied Wall," and "Crossing the Bar." But few readers of his poetry are aware of the frequent use of the words "doubt" and "faith" in these poems, as well as in a number of his other poems. A realization of the extensive use of these words presented the challenge for a study to determine how frequently these …


The Experimentalist, May 1972, The Experimentalist Staff May 1972

The Experimentalist, May 1972, The Experimentalist Staff

The Experimentalist

untitled, Chet Kozlowski
in kingdoms and a jocelyn, Jeff Olma
lobotomy, Jeff Olma Mobius, Barbara McCarroll
i love you, D. Loucks
untitled, D. Loucks
subway songs, Kathleen Casey
And in the End, David Hobkirk
Acause, Gary Jevitt
untitled, Richardouglastewart
Candy Dreams, Chris Tortora
The Ninth Bough, Rodney A. Howe
The black conception, Rodney A. Howe
cats, jody swilky
untitled, Jody Swilky
The Alternative, David Raphael Wang Yueh Fei
(1102-1141), David Raphael Wang
Poem, Robert A. Winfield
Ginsberg’s Velocycle, Robert A. Winfield
Moans, Fleer
untitled, Tree story, Jorne
untitled, Josef
untitled, H.L. Coleman
untitled, Brad Peters
untitled, Brad Peters
hurricane, Jeff …


Symbolism In The Poetry Of William Butler Yeats, Alana White May 1972

Symbolism In The Poetry Of William Butler Yeats, Alana White

Masters Theses & Specialist Projects

This thesis is a study of the development of the symbolic system formulated by William Butler Yeats and his subsequent application of this system to his poetry, with special attention to the rose and the stone. To comprehend and thereby fully appreciate Yeats's poetry requires some knowledge of the forces working together to form the basis of his philosophy and symbolic system. These forces and the system form the subject of the first chapter. Foremost among the many influences are his Irish birth, his associates (among them his father, John Yeats; his uncle, George Pollexfen; John O'Leary; and Madame Helena …


The Lantern Vol. 38, No. 2, Spring 1972, Cheryl Hiltebeitel, Judy Freelin, Mary Spink, Kevin Akey, Sidney Houck, John Abernethy, Terry Tucker, John Kenneth Park, J. Buckwalter, Debbie Henning, Nancy Frye, Judith Grumet, Bob Houle, Michael Coyle, Roger N. Baldwin, Rob Hanlon, Cynthia Fitzgerald, Doug Stewart, Arthur G. Severance, Kate Swanson Apr 1972

The Lantern Vol. 38, No. 2, Spring 1972, Cheryl Hiltebeitel, Judy Freelin, Mary Spink, Kevin Akey, Sidney Houck, John Abernethy, Terry Tucker, John Kenneth Park, J. Buckwalter, Debbie Henning, Nancy Frye, Judith Grumet, Bob Houle, Michael Coyle, Roger N. Baldwin, Rob Hanlon, Cynthia Fitzgerald, Doug Stewart, Arthur G. Severance, Kate Swanson

The Lantern Literary Magazines, 1933 to Present

• Summer II
• For a True Romantic
• The Lyre Neglected
• Hands
• To a Friend
• Sleep
• The Wind's Confusing Sounds
• The Garden
• The Child Has Come Among Us
• The River and the Sea
• The Ice
• La Lamentation de la Fleur
• Nous Sommes
• Upon Becoming
• See!
• Feeling November
• Transience
• Clear
• Isotopes of Reality
• Just Yesterday
• Emergence
• Push
• The Way Love Starts
• Poetic Prosy
• An Agreement
• Spring 1930
• The Summers of '59, '60, '61
• Ode to …


The A.E. Coppard Papers At Syracuse, Arsiné Schmavonian Apr 1972

The A.E. Coppard Papers At Syracuse, Arsiné Schmavonian

The Courier

Some of the most choice collections in the Manuscript Department of Syracuse University Libraries are also among the most modest in extent. The papers of English author and poet A.E. Coppard fit into both categories. Housed comfortably in a single box, fifty-five letters, three short stories in holograph and one speech provide a close look at Coppard's literary theories, criticism, opinions of his own work and that of a few others, reaction to approaches regarding dramatizing, filming or televising his prose works, dealings with publishers, and his activities on behalf of world peace through the Authors' World Peace Appeal in …


1971-1972-Spring Quiz & Quill Magazine, Otterbein English Department Apr 1972

1971-1972-Spring Quiz & Quill Magazine, Otterbein English Department

Quiz and Quill

No abstract provided.


Et Cetera, Marshall University Jan 1972

Et Cetera, Marshall University

Et Cetera

Founded in 1953, Et Cetera is an annual literary magazine that publishes the creative writing and artwork of Marshall University students and affiliates. Et Cetera is free to the Marshall University community.

Et Cetera welcomes submissions in literary and film criticism, poetry, short stories, drama, all types of creative non-fiction, photography, and art.


Bayard Taylor's The Prophet: Mormonism As Literary Taboo; Calaveras County Comes Of Age; The Erosion Of Belief In The Poetry Of Clinton F. Larson, Thomas D. Schwartz Jan 1972

Bayard Taylor's The Prophet: Mormonism As Literary Taboo; Calaveras County Comes Of Age; The Erosion Of Belief In The Poetry Of Clinton F. Larson, Thomas D. Schwartz

Theses and Dissertations

The three papers included in this thesis reflect my development as a graduate student during the course of my master's program at Brigham Young Universtiy. I came to Brigham Young University interested in creative writing and developed a love for research and criticism. My work in nineteenth century American literature led to the first two papers. Both deal with literary history, the first narrow in scope, devoted to a study of the significance of a single play, the second broad in scope, devoted to a study of the unifying thread of anti-sentimentalism in the writings of the major American realists. …


Reflections Of A Lost Harmony In Seventeenth Century Poetry, Cathy Perkins Jan 1972

Reflections Of A Lost Harmony In Seventeenth Century Poetry, Cathy Perkins

Honors Theses

During the seventeenth century man continued to hold onto comfortable old of the "Elizabethan world picture," but the impact of the new science grew steadily. Donne and Wilton both used images from the old world view and the new discoveries; but in the final analysis they both rejected worldly system and turned to faith. Many seventeenth century poets turned to faith, perhaps as an answer to their despair. For Donne and Wilton the harmony was lost. In "The First Anniversary," Donne wrote that harmony had died and that the new ideas made everything questionable. Wilton's Adam and Eve fell from …


The Ancient Mariner's Conversion : Coleridge, Religion, And The Rime, Meta Margaret Lale Jan 1972

The Ancient Mariner's Conversion : Coleridge, Religion, And The Rime, Meta Margaret Lale

University of the Pacific Theses and Dissertations

My thesis that Coleridge employed universal images of the supernatural and traditional Christian symbols to illustrate the Mariner’s religious conversion in The Rime of the Ancient Mariner. The basis for this proposition is that Coleridge made religion the Rime’s theme. The following validations of the religious theme proposal will be offered in these chapters: (1) The religious theme synthesizes two popular but unsatisfactory thematic statements: “estrangement” and “sacramental vision.”; (2) Coleridge’s philosophical system is founded upon the postulation of a supernatural reality. The Mariner’s conversion may be seen as his change from Aristotelian conceptualism (which recognizes one reality - nature) …