Writing and the BodyHarvester Press, 1982 - 142 strán (strany) |
Vyhľadávanie v obsahu knihy
Výsledky 1 - 3 z 41.
Strana 25
... hand we cannot read it as a rhetorical game , for it maintains connections with lived reality , it works on us as ... hand , is read by each of us alone , in bed , in an armchair or in a library . We do nothing with our hands while we ...
... hand we cannot read it as a rhetorical game , for it maintains connections with lived reality , it works on us as ... hand , is read by each of us alone , in bed , in an armchair or in a library . We do nothing with our hands while we ...
Strana 109
... hand he can note down what he sees among the ruins , for he sees different ( and more ) things than do the others ... hands , 109 ' A BIRD WAS IN THE ROOM '
... hand he can note down what he sees among the ruins , for he sees different ( and more ) things than do the others ... hands , 109 ' A BIRD WAS IN THE ROOM '
Strana 125
... hand moved unthinkingly over the paper , forming words . His mov- ing hand was his Autolycus , no longer clearly labelled Fool or disguised heroine , but a being possessed of the instinct for survival and a trust in the bountifulness of ...
... hand moved unthinkingly over the paper , forming words . His mov- ing hand was his Autolycus , no longer clearly labelled Fool or disguised heroine , but a being possessed of the instinct for survival and a trust in the bountifulness of ...
Obsah
The Body in the Library | 1 |
Everything and Nothing | 34 |
Non Ego sed Democritus dixit | 64 |
Autorské práva | |
2 zvyšných častí nezobrazených
Časté výrazy a frázy
able accept action answer artist audience authority aware becomes body bring called child comes course critical culture Dante death doubt dream Eliot everything example exist explore expression fact father feel fiction final followed forces give hand happening human Iago imagination important Kafka keep kind language later Latin leads lectures letter lines lives London look matter meaning merely mind move nature never notes novel once one's Othello perhaps person play plot poem possible precisely present question reader reality relation rhetoric scene seems seen sense Shakespeare Shandy simply someone speak speech stand Sterne story suggest talking tell thing thought tradition Tristram true trust truth turn understand voice Volume whole wonder writing written