A History of Literature in America |
Contents
42 | |
51 | |
53 | |
59 | |
65 | |
71 | |
75 | |
76 | |
91 | |
98 | |
110 | |
111 | |
113 | |
118 | |
121 | |
125 | |
127 | |
129 | |
136 | |
148 | |
158 | |
254 | |
266 | |
275 | |
289 | |
298 | |
305 | |
315 | |
327 | |
340 | |
353 | |
355 | |
371 | |
379 | |
395 | |
399 | |
412 | |
421 | |
425 | |
437 | |
439 | |
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
admirable American American Revolution antislavery artistic began beginning BIBLIOGRAPHY BIOGRAPHY AND CRITICISM born Boston Brockden Brown Brook Farm Bryant Calvinistic career Channing character characteristic chief chiefly Civil colonies contemporary Cotton Mather developed Dial Duyckinck eighteenth century Elizabethan Emerson eminent English literature essays expression fact father feel Foley Hart Harvard College Hawthorne Holmes Houghton human humor ideals Irving James James Russell Lowell John John Greenleaf Whittier Knickerbocker later letters lish literary lived Longfellow Lowell lyric Massachusetts Nathaniel Hawthorne native never nineteenth century North American Review novels oratory period phases philosophy poems poet poetry political popular prose published Puritan reform Revolution romantic seems sense social spirit Stedman and Hutchinson stories style temper Theodore Parker things Thoreau throughout Ticknor tion tradition Transcendentalism Transcendentalists Uncle Tom's Cabin Unitarian verse vols volumes Whittier William William Ellery Channing writing wrote Yankee York