Andrew Lytle's Fiction: a Traditional ViewStanford University, 1972 - 630 pages |
From inside the book
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Page 156
... turning and leaping in one movement , the Indian hurled himself into the flaming house . lance left Tovar's hand , but it was the cross he saw , by the Indian's side leaning out into the flames , bowing in the windy heat ... The Indian 156.
... turning and leaping in one movement , the Indian hurled himself into the flaming house . lance left Tovar's hand , but it was the cross he saw , by the Indian's side leaning out into the flames , bowing in the windy heat ... The Indian 156.
Page 159
... movement of the spirit foreshadowing all else accomplished by certain his- panic gentlemen in the Eldorado of their wicked dreams . Three tropes , all one in meaning , with the shift in space and fortune manifesting an inner and impious ...
... movement of the spirit foreshadowing all else accomplished by certain his- panic gentlemen in the Eldorado of their wicked dreams . Three tropes , all one in meaning , with the shift in space and fortune manifesting an inner and impious ...
Page 180
... movement of the surface action is cumulative and di- rect : from the drive to the Lake to the retrieving of the game , there is no significant temporal dislocation . The foundations of the boy's illusions are eroded gradually until the ...
... movement of the surface action is cumulative and di- rect : from the drive to the Lake to the retrieving of the game , there is no significant temporal dislocation . The foundations of the boy's illusions are eroded gradually until the ...
Common terms and phrases
Ada Belle agrarian Alchemy Allen Tate Andrew Lytle archetypal artist become Bomar boy's Caroline Gordon character Christian collective unconscious complex consciousness Controlling Image craft creative Cree dark death defines discovery divine drama effect Ellen enveloping action essay eyes Faulkner fictionist final Florida Henry Brent Henry's Hernando de Soto historical illusion imagery imagination incest Indians innocence irony Jack Cropleigh Jack's Jericho Julia Jung Jungian knowledge literal literary Long Night looked Lucius Lytle's fiction Lytle's view Mammy Kate meaning mind Moon's Moon's Inn moral mystery myth Name for Evil narrator nature never NN4S novel Ortiz past Pete Legrand Pleasant point of view present protagonist psychological reader reality rendition Reprinted in Hero scene seems sense Sewanee Review Soto Soto's Southern spiritual story symbol T. S. Eliot tell things tion Tovar tradition Ucita uncon unconscious Vaca Velvet Horn vision wholeness wilderness words writing Ysabel