The Atlantic Literary Review, Volume 2,Edições 3-4Atlantic Publishers and Distributors, 2001 |
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Página 112
... voice " with the remembered complaint- " freeze the nuts off an iron bridge " ( WCS 48 ) . Leibhaver recognizes the voice " for all its new hollowness " and the fingers that " were colder than the night " ( WCS 48 ) . He can also see ...
... voice " with the remembered complaint- " freeze the nuts off an iron bridge " ( WCS 48 ) . Leibhaver recognizes the voice " for all its new hollowness " and the fingers that " were colder than the night " ( WCS 48 ) . He can also see ...
Página 144
... voice ; he is the protagonist and primary focus , and there is a ' heroic paradigm . ' Early American captivity narratives during the 17th to 19th century can be said to be ' travel ' or exploration writings , and they are mostly ...
... voice ; he is the protagonist and primary focus , and there is a ' heroic paradigm . ' Early American captivity narratives during the 17th to 19th century can be said to be ' travel ' or exploration writings , and they are mostly ...
Página 158
... voice , which achieves its most powerful effects through blending first - hand observation with illuminating imagery , is far removed from both the manner of the Victorian traveller and the enfeebled explorer . It is a voice which is ...
... voice , which achieves its most powerful effects through blending first - hand observation with illuminating imagery , is far removed from both the manner of the Victorian traveller and the enfeebled explorer . It is a voice which is ...
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THE ATLANTIC LITERARY REVIEW | 7 |
Viorica Patea | 15 |
R J Ellis | 38 |
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