Twelve American writers:
Gespeichert in:
Format: | Buch |
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Sprache: | English |
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New York
Macmillan
1970
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Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | XX,812 S. |
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adam_text | CONTENTS ACKNOWLEDGMENTS iv vii PREFACE RALPH WALDOEMERSON 1 The American Scholar The Poet Experience Thoreau From The Journals, 1825, 1827, 1828, 1832, 1833, 1834, 1835, 1837, 1838, 1839, 1840, 1841, 1842, 1845, 1847, 1848, 1849, 1850, 1851, 1852, 1859, 1861, 1863, 1864, 1865, 1871, 1874 4 13 24 36 Letter to Martin Van Buren Emerson to Walt Whitman 55 57 Poems 58 Each and All The Snow-Storm Concord Hymn Uriel Hamatreya Fable Ode Inscribed to W. H. Channing Merlin Bacchus Nature Days Brahma Two Rivers 46 58 58 59 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 65 66 66 Recognition 66 John Quincy Adams, Diary Entry, August 2, 1840 Thomas Carlyle to Emerson, May 8, 1841 James Russell Lowell, from A Fable for Critics, 1848 James Russell Lowell, from Emerson, the Lecturer, 1861 W. D. Howells, from Literary Friends and Acquaintance, 1894 67 68 68 69 70 Thoreau, from The Journals, May 24, 1853 Hawthorne, from The American Notebooks, August 15, 1842 Hawthorne, from The Old Manse, 1846 Melville to E. A. Duyckinck, March 3, 1849 Whitman, from Specimen Days, September 17, 1881 121 178 181 311 419 ix
CONTENTS x Mark Twain, Speech at the Whittier Birthday Dinner, 1877 James, from Emerson, 1887 Frost, On Emerson, 1948 497 587 669 HENRY DAVID THOREAU 79 Essays 82 A Winter Walk Civil Disobedience The Succession of Forest Trees Poems 82 90 101 108 They Who Prepare My Evening Meal Below I Am a Parcel of Vain Strivings Tied My Life Fias Been the Poem Great God, I Ask Thee for No Meaner Pelf Not Unconcerned Wachusett Rears His Head Smoke Love Equals Swift and Slow Conscience Is Instinct Bred in the House Though All the Fates Should Prove Unkind I Saw a Delicate Flower I Am the Little Irish Boy Indeed Indeed, I Cannot Tell Between the Traveler and the Setting Sun Letters 109 109 110 110 110 110 110 111 111 111 112 112 113 113 Letter to H. G. O. Blake, March 27, 1848 Letter to H. G. O. Blake, November 19, 1856 Letter to H. G. O. Blake, December 6, 1856 113 115 115 From The Journals, 1838, 1839, 1841, 1850,1851, 1852, 1853, 1854, 1856, 1857, 1858, 1859 117 Recognition 123 James Russell Lowell, from Thoreau, 1865 Leon Bazalgette, Imaginary Dialogue between Thoreau and Whitman, 1924 E. B. White, Walden—1954 123 125 127 Emerson, Thoreau W. D. Howells, from Literary Friends and Acquaintance, 1894 Hawthorne, from The American Notebooks, September 1, 1842 Whitman, On Thoreau, 1888 36 70 179 430 NATHANIEL HAWTHORNE My Kinsman, Major Molineaux The Gray Champion Young Goodman Brown 133 136 146 150
x CONTENTS The Birthmark The Artist of the Beautiful 157 165 Criticism 178 From The American Notebooks, August 15, September 1, September 2, 1842 Review of Melville’s Typee From The Old Manse Preface to Twice-Told Tales Preface to The House of the Seven Gables From The English Notebooks, November 20, 1856 Recognition 178 181 181 182 184 185 186 W. D. Howells, James’s Hawthorne, 1880 Emerson, from The Journals, September 4, 1842, May 24, 1864 186 52 W. D. Howells, from Literary Friends and Acquaintance, 1894 70 Poe, Hawthorne’s Tale-Writing, 1842 Melville, Monody, 1891 Melville, Hawthorne and His Mosses, 1850 Melville to Hawthorne, Three Letters, 1851 James, from Hawthorne, Ch. Ill, 1879 243 310 316 313 569 EDGAR ALLAN POE 191 Ligeia The Fall of the Houseof Usher The Man of the Crowd The Oval Portrait The Purloined Letter 195 203 213 217 219 Poems 229 A Dream within a Dream Sonnet—To Science Romance Alone To Helen Israfel The City in the Sea The Sleeper The Valley of Unrest To One in Paradise Sonnet—Silence Dream-Land The Raven Ulalume Eldorado Essays and Criticism Letter to В---Preface to Tales of the Grotesque and Arabesque Hawthorne’s Tale-Writing Marginalia, 1845, 1846, 1848, 1849 The Philosophy of Composition From The Poetic Principle 229 229 230 230 230 231 231 232 233 233 234 234 235 237 239 239 239 243 243 249 253 259
CONTENTS Recognition 261 Charles Baudelaire, from Poe: His Life and Works, 1856 Stéphane Mallarmé, The Tomb of Edgar Poe, 1875 Hart Crane, from The Bridge, 1930 262 263 264 Whitman, from Specimen Days, January 1, 1880 James, An Enthusiasm for Poe, 1876 James, from Hawthorne, Ch. Ill, 1879 418 569 573 HERMAN MELVILLE 265 Bartlehy the Scrivener, A Story of Wall-Street The Encantadas, II: Two Sides to a Tortoise The Encantadas, VIII: Norfolk Isle and the Chola Widow The Lightning-Rod Man The Tartarus of Maids 267 286 289 295 299 Poems 306 The Portent, 1859 The Temeraire A Utilitarian View of the Monitor’s Fight Shiloh, A Requiem (April, 1862) The Maldive Shark The Berg (A Dream) Pebbles, IV, V, VI, VII The Ravaged Villa Monody Lone Founts The Enthusiast Art Letters and Criticism Melville to Evert A. Duyckinck, March 3, 1849 Melville to Evert A. Duyckinck, April 5, 1849 Melville to Nathaniel Hawthorne, April 16[?], 1851 Melville to Nathaniel Hawthorne, June 29, 1851 Melville to Nathaniel Hawthorne, November 17[?], 1851 Hawthorne and His Mosses Recognition 306 307 308 308 308 309 309 309 310 310 310 310 311 311 312 313 314 315 316 326 D. H. Lawrence, from Melville’s “Moby Dick,” 1923 Hart Crane, At Melville’s Tomb, 1926 326 327 Hawthorne, Review of Melville’s Typee, 1846 Hawthorne, from The English Notebooks, November 20, 1856 Faulkner, Interview in New York in Early 1956 181 185 780 WALT WHITMAN 329 Inscriptions 332 One’s-Self I Sing To Foreign Lands 332 333
» CONTENTS To the States Me Imperturbe I Hear America Singing Shut Not Your Doors Poets to Come Song of Myself Song of Myself, Notebook Versions of 1847-1848 Children of Adam Out of the Rolling Ocean the Crowd Ages and Ages Returning at Intervals Once I Pass’d through a Populous City As Adam Early in the Morning Calamus For You О Democracy Of the Terrible Doubt of Appearances Recorders Ages Hence I Saw in Louisiana a Live-Oak Growing Sometimes with One I Love Crossing Brooklyn Ferry Youth, Day, Old Age, and Night Sea-Drift Out of the Cradle Endlessly Rocking As I Ebb’d with the Ocean of Life By the Roadside I Sit and Look Out To the States, To Identify the 16th, 17th, or 18th Presidentiad Drum-Taps Beat! Beat! Drums! Cavalry Crossing a Ford Vigil Strange I Kept on the Field One Night Year That Trembled and Reel’d beneath Me The Wound-Dresser Dirge for Two Veterans Reconciliation Memories of President Lincoln When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom’d Autumn Rivulets There Was a Child Went Forth The City Dead-House Sparkles from the Wheel xiii 333 333 333 334 334 334 372 377 377 378 378 378 378 378 379 379 380 380 380 384 385 385 389 391 391 392 392 392 392 393 393 394 395 396 397 397 403 403 404 404 Passage to India 405 Whispers of Heavenly Death 411 Chanting the Square Deific A Noiseless Patient Spider 411 412
CONTENTS XIV From Nøon to Starry Night 413 To a Locomotive in Winter A Clear Midnight 413 413 Second Annex: Good-Bye My Fancy 413 Good-Bye My Fancy! 413 From The Wound Dresser Letter to William D. O’Connor From Democratic Vistas, The Gilded Age From Specimen Days 414 415 416 417 The Million Dead, Too, Summ’d Up The Real War Will Never Get in the Books Edgar Poe’s Significance A Visit, at the Last, to R. W. Emerson Other Concord Notations Boston Common—More of Emerson 417 417 418 419 420 421 A Backward Glance O’er Travel’d Roads On Thoreau 421 430 Recognition 431 Whitman, as Seen hy Amos Bronson Alcott, October 4, 1856 A Letter of W. B. Yeats, 1894 Ezra Pound, A Pact, 1913 E. B. White, A Classic Waits for Me, With Apologies to Walt Whitman, Plus a Trial Membership in the Classics Club, 1944 431 431 432 Emerson to Whitman, July 21, 1855 Thoreau to H. G. O. Blake, November 19 and December 6, 1856 Leon Bazalgette, Imaginary Conversation between Thoreau and Whitman, 1924 James, from Mr. Walt Whitman, 1865 57 115 125 567 MARK TWAIN [SAMUELLANGHORNE CLEMENS] Stories and Sketches The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County The Story of the Bad Little Boy Who Didn’t Come to Grief Flanníbaí—By a Native Historian A True Story, Repeated Word for Word as I Heard It Baker’s Blue-Jay Yam Old Times on the Mississippi I II A “Cub” Pilot’s Experience; or, Learning the River III The Continued Perplexities of “Cub” Piloting IV The “Cub” Pilot’s Education Nearly Completed V “Sounding.” Faculties Peculiarly Necessary to a Pilot VI Official Rank and Dignity of a Pilot. The Rise and Decadence
of the Pilots Association VII Leaving Port: Racing: Shortening of the River by Cut-Offs: A Steamboat’s Ghost: “Stephen’s” Plan of “Resumption.” De Woman wid de Gold n Arm 432 435 437 437 440 442 443 446 448 449 453 459 465 470 477 485 491
CONTENTS Letter from the Recording Angel A New Year’s Greeting The Five Boons of Life On Literature Speech at the Whittier Birthday Dinner Mark Twain to W. D. Howells, July 21, 1885 The Art of Authorship On Interpreting a Foreign Culture A Fable Recognition XV 492 495 495 497 497 501 502 503 503 505 W. D. Howells, Life and Letters, 1897 505 Eliot, from Introduction to Huckleberry Finn, 1950 Faulkner, Interview in New York in Early 1956 707 779 HENRY JAMES The Author of Beltraffio The Real Thing The Middle Years Notebook and Preface Entries The Author of Beltraffio: Notebook The Author of Beltraffio: Preface The Real Thing: Notebook The Real Thing: Preface The Middle Years: Notebook The Middle Years: Preface 509 514 537 551 562 562 563 563 565 566 566 From Mr. Walt Whitman An Enthusiasm for Poe From Hawthorne, Ch. Ill The Art of Fiction From Emerson From The Lesson of Balzac Correspondence with H. G. Wells, 1915 567 569 569 575 587 587 592 Recognition 596 W. D. Howells, Mr. Henry James’s Later Work, 1903 MaxBeerbohm, The Mote in the Middle Distance: By H*nry J*m*s, 1912 W. H. Auden, Henry James and the Artist in America, 1948 597 604 606 W. D. Howells, James’s Hawthorne, 1880 186 EMILY DICKINSON 24 34 49 59 There is a morn by men unseen Garlands for Queens, may be I never lost as much but twice A little East of Jordan 611 613 613 613 613
XVI CONTENTS 67 Success is counted sweetest 76 Exultation is the going 125 For each extatic instant 126 To fight aloud, is very hrave 128 Bring me the sunset in a cup 130 These are the days when Birds come back 135 Water, is taught by thirst 160 Just lost, when I was saved! 177 Ah, Necromancy Sweet! 187 How many times these low feet staggered 189 It’s such a little thing to weep 193 I shall know why—when Time is over 201 Two swimmers wrestled on the spar 214 I taste a liquor never brewed 216 S afe in their Alabaster Chambers 245 I held a Jewel in my fingers 249 Wild Nights—Wild Nights! 258 There’s a certain Slant of light 276 Many a phrase has the English language 280 I felt a Funeral, in my Brain 290 Of Bronze—and Blaze 292 If your Nerve, deny you 293 I got so I could hear his name 303 The Soul selects her own Society 311 It sifts from Leaden Sieves 313 I should have been too glad, I see 316 The Wind didn’t come from the Orchard—today 318 I’ll tell you how the Sun rose 322 There came a Day at Summer’s full 328 A Bird came down the Walk 338 I know that He exists 341 After great pain, a formal feeling comes 357 God is a distant—stately Lover 376 Of Course—I prayed 387 The Sweetest Heresy recieved 394 ’Twas Love—not me 398 I had not minded—Walls 401 What Soft—Cherubic Creatures 405 It might be lonelier 410 The first Day’s Night had come 412 I read my sentence—steadily 414 ’Twas like a Maelstrom, with a notch 419 We grow accustomed to the Dark 435 Much Madness is divinest Sense 436 The Wind—tapped like a tired Man 448 This was a Poet—It is That 449 I died for Beauty—but was
scarce 450 Dreams—are well—but Waking’s better 451 The Outer—from the Inner 453 Love—thou art high 455 Triumph—may be of several kinds 461 A Wife—at Daybreak I shall be 614 614 614 614 614 615 615 615 615 615 616 616 616 616 616 617 617 617 617 617 618 618 618 618 619 619 619 619 620 620 620 620 621 621 621 621 621 622 622 622 ԵՀՀ 622 623 623 623 623 624 624 624 624 624 625
» CONTENTS 465 I heard a Fly buzz—when I died 469 The Red—Blaze—is the Morning 479 She dealt her pretty words like Blades 480 “Why do I love’’ You, Sir? 483 A Solemn thing within the Soul 502 At least—to pray—is left—is left 505 I would not paint—a picture 507 She sights a Bird—she chuckles 511 If you were coming in the Fall 512 The Soul has Bandaged moments 520 I started Early—Took my Dog 525 I think the Hemlock likes to stand 536 The Heart asks Pleasure—first 540 I took my Power in my Hand 554 The Black Berry—wears a Thorn in his side 556 The Brain, within it’s Groove 569 I reckon—when I count at all 581 I found the words to every thought 585 I like to see it lap the Miles 587 Empty my Heart, of Thee 616 Irose—because He sank 621 I asked no other thing 632 The Brain—is wider than the Sky 640 I cannot live with You 648 Promise This—When You be Dying 664 Of all the Souls that stand create 666 Ah, Teneriffe! 670 One need not be a Chamber—to be Haunted 675 Essential Oils—are wrung 712 Because I could not stop for Death 724 It’s easy to invent a Life 747 It dropped so low—in my Regard 754 My Life had stood—a Loaded Gun 757 The Mountains—grow unnoticed 780 The Truth—is stirless 789 On a Columnar Self 816 A Death blow is a Life blow to Some 832 Soto! Explore thyself! 846 Twice had Summer her fair Verdure 850 I sing to use the Waiting 872 As the Starved Maelstrom laps the Navies 879 Each Second is the last 913 And this of all my Hopes 917 Love—is anterior to Life 942 Snow beneath whose chilly softness 986 A narrow Fellow in the Grass 997 Crumbling is not an instant’s Act 1000 The
Fingers of the Light 1017 To die—without the Dying 1031 Fate slew Him, but He did not drop 1052 I never saw a Moor 1068 Further in Summer than the Birds « xvii 625 625 625 625 626 626 626 626 626 627 627 627 628 628 628 628 628 628 629 629 629 629 629 630 630 631 631 631 631 631 632 632 632 632 632 633 633 633 633 633 633 633 634 634 634 634 634 634 635 635 635 635
CONTENTS xviii 1072 Title divine—ismine! 1078 The Bustle in a House 1082 Revolution is the Pod 1084 At Half past Three, a single Bird 1129 Tell all the Truth but tell it slant 1162 The Life we have is very great 1207 He preached upon “Breadth” till it argued him narrow 1222 A Sparrow took a Slice of Twig 1224 Like Trains of Cars on Tracks of Plush 1226 The Popular Heart is a Cannon first 2235 Like Rain it sounded till it curved 1241 The Lilac is an ancient shrub 1247 To pile like Thunder to it’s close 1275 The Spider as an Artist 1289 Left in immortal Youth 1298 The Mushroom is the Elf of Plants 1311 This dirty—little—Heart 1331 Wonder—is not precisely Knowing 1333 A little Madness in the Spring 1393 Lay this Laurel on the One 1397 It sounded as if the Streets were running 1400 What mystery pervades a well! 1405 Bees are Black, with Gilt Surcingles 1409 Could mortal lip divine 1410 I shall not murmur if at last 1459 Belshazzar had a Letter 1463 A Route of Evanescence 1466 One of the ones that Midas Touched 1540 As imperceptibly as Grief 1551 Those—dying then 1558 Of Death I try to think like this 1670 In Winter in my Room 1695 There is a solitude of space 2721 A face devoid of love or grace 1718 Drowning is not so pitiful 1732 My life closed twice before its close Letters Emily Dickinson to T. W. Higginson, April 25, 1862 Emily Dickinson to T. W. Higginson, December, 1879 Recognition W. D. Howells, from Editor’s Study, 1891 T. W. Higginson, A Visit with Emily Dickinson, 1891 Alice James, A Journal Entry, 1892 Carl Sandburg, Letters to Dead Imagists,1916 Richard Wilbur,
Altitudes, 1956 635 635 636 636 636 636 636 636 636 637 637 637 637 637 637 638 638 638 638 638 638 639 639 639 639 639 639 640 640 640 640 640 641 641 641 641 642 642 643 644 644 647 649 649 650
CONTENTS xix t ŘOBERT FROST 651 Poems A Boy’s Will 653 Into My Own Reluctance North of Boston Mending Wall Home Burial After Apple-Picking Mountain Interval The Road Not Taken Putting in the Seed The Cow in Apple Time ‘Out, Out—’ New Hampshire Fire and Ice Dust of Snow Nothing Gold Can Stay Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening For Once, Then, Something To Earthward West-Running Brook Acceptance Tree at My Window West-Running Brook A Further Range Two Tramps in Mud Time Desert Places A Leaf Treader A Witness Tree Come In The Gift Outright Steeple Bush Directive Choose Something Like a Star Criticism The Constant Symbol On Emerson Recognition Ezra Pound, Review of North of Boston, 1914 Randall Jarrell, The Other Frost, 1953 654 654 654 655 657 658 658 658 658 659 659 659 659 660 660 660 661 661 662 663 663 664 664 664 666 666 666 669 673 673 674 T. S. ELIOT 679 The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock Cousin Nancy 683 685
CONTENTS XX The Hippopotamus Whispers of Immortality Sweeney among the Nightingales The Waste Land Animula Marina The Dry Salvages 685 686 687 687 696 697 697 Criticism 702 Tradition and the Individual Talent From Introduction to Huckleberry Finn The Three Voices of Poetry Recognition E. M. Forster, T. S. Eliot, 1955 W. B. Yeats, Grey, Cold, Dry, 1936 Homage to T. S. Eliot, 1938 Wallace Stevens William Carlos Williams Archibald MacLeish Robert Penn Warren R. T. S. Lowell Hyam Plutzik, For T. S. E. Only, 1955 WILLIAM FAULKNER Stories The Kingdom of God A Louisiana Sheep-Ranch Dry September That Evening Sun Carcassonne Bam Burning The Bear Shingles for the Lord 702 707 708 716 717 720 721 721 722 722 722 723 725 729 730 732 734 740 749 751 761 768 Speech of Acceptance upon the Award of the Nobel Prize for Literature, Delivered in Stockholm on the Tenth of December, 1950 Sherwood Anderson, An Appreciation Interview in New York in Early 1956 775 776 779 Recognition 781 Jean-Paul Sartre, American Novelists in French Eyes, 1946 Robert Penn Warren, William Faulkner, 1946 781 786 SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHIES 797 INDEX OF AUTHORS, TITLES, AND FIRST LINES OF POEMS 807
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spelling | Twelve American writers Ed. by William Merriam Gibson ; George Arms New York Macmillan 1970 XX,812 S. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Literatura Norte Americana larpcal Gibson, William M. Sonstige oth Arms, George Sonstige oth Digitalisierung UB Regensburg - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=004644234&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Twelve American writers Literatura Norte Americana larpcal |
title | Twelve American writers |
title_auth | Twelve American writers |
title_exact_search | Twelve American writers |
title_full | Twelve American writers Ed. by William Merriam Gibson ; George Arms |
title_fullStr | Twelve American writers Ed. by William Merriam Gibson ; George Arms |
title_full_unstemmed | Twelve American writers Ed. by William Merriam Gibson ; George Arms |
title_short | Twelve American writers |
title_sort | twelve american writers |
topic | Literatura Norte Americana larpcal |
topic_facet | Literatura Norte Americana |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=004644234&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
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