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Full-Text Articles in Arts and Humanities
Carnival And Loitering In The Waggoner, Gary Dyer
Carnival And Loitering In The Waggoner, Gary Dyer
English Faculty Publications
No abstract provided.
"'Flight' And 'Pursuit': Fugitive Identity In Bleak House,", Cynthia N. Malone
"'Flight' And 'Pursuit': Fugitive Identity In Bleak House,", Cynthia N. Malone
English Faculty Publications
No abstract provided.
[Review Of] An Annotated Critical Bibliography Of Thomas Hardy, Robert A. Aken
[Review Of] An Annotated Critical Bibliography Of Thomas Hardy, Robert A. Aken
Library Faculty and Staff Publications
No abstract provided.
[Review Of] A Kwic Concordance To Thomas Hardy's Tess Of The D'Urbervilles, Robert A. Aken
[Review Of] A Kwic Concordance To Thomas Hardy's Tess Of The D'Urbervilles, Robert A. Aken
Library Faculty and Staff Publications
No abstract provided.
Materials, Sidney Gottlieb
Materials, Sidney Gottlieb
Communication, Media & The Arts Faculty Publications
Part 1 of the book Approaches to Teaching the Metaphysical Poets, edited by Sidney Gottlieb. The chapter is not an attempt to settle the implicit argument between those who (in the words of one colleague) "most certainly do not believe in using an anthology of seventeenth-century poetry" and those who, for one reason or another, choose to use an anthology. Nor is what follows a comprehensive list of all available editions and anthologies or a fully developed critical review of them. It is, rather, a brief description of those texts mentioned by respondents, including enough information to help …
G. O. Trevelyan: Morality And The ‘Cambridge University Boat Of 1860, Terry L. Meyers
G. O. Trevelyan: Morality And The ‘Cambridge University Boat Of 1860, Terry L. Meyers
Arts & Sciences Articles
"I have recently acquired a letter by the distinguished historian George Otto Trevelyan (1838-1928) that will amuse readers and underline some cherished suppositions about the Victorian Age. It will, moreover, apparently recover several lines suppressed in a modest comic poem of some contemporary interest and fame. I can not, unfortunately, discover to whom the letter was addressed, nor whether any subsequent printing, much less enlargement, of the poem came about. Indeed, I cannot even discover precisely where in the poem Trevelyan was suggesting his lines be placed..."