Roosevelt: A Study in AmbivalenceJackson Press, Incorporated, 1919 - 159 pages |
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Page 13
... more starkly naked . It is not more audacious . Per- haps my probe sinks in too deep for the comprehension of middle - class intellects . My vocabulary alone suffices to save me from the fate of Theodore Dreiser , ROOSEVELT 13.
... more starkly naked . It is not more audacious . Per- haps my probe sinks in too deep for the comprehension of middle - class intellects . My vocabulary alone suffices to save me from the fate of Theodore Dreiser , ROOSEVELT 13.
Page 14
A Study in Ambivalence George Sylvester Viereck. to save me from the fate of Theodore Dreiser , whose masterly novel , " The Genius " is still on the index . The libido of the Comstockians is limitless . Their verbal paucity is ...
A Study in Ambivalence George Sylvester Viereck. to save me from the fate of Theodore Dreiser , whose masterly novel , " The Genius " is still on the index . The libido of the Comstockians is limitless . Their verbal paucity is ...
Page 45
... Theodore Dreiser's , mine is " the vulgarest voice yet heard in American litera- ture . " * I T may be that the war psychosis will not endure for- ever , that even our Rip Van Winkles , as Shaw has aptly termed the editors of America ...
... Theodore Dreiser's , mine is " the vulgarest voice yet heard in American litera- ture . " * I T may be that the war psychosis will not endure for- ever , that even our Rip Van Winkles , as Shaw has aptly termed the editors of America ...
Page 48
... Theodore Roosevelt , unfortunately , resolutely shut his eyes to the new vision . Though a son of the New World , he made himself the mouthpiece of Old World Imperialism . The very title by which he preferred to be addressed was ...
... Theodore Roosevelt , unfortunately , resolutely shut his eyes to the new vision . Though a son of the New World , he made himself the mouthpiece of Old World Imperialism . The very title by which he preferred to be addressed was ...
Page 50
... Theodore Roosevelt , to whom I herewith yield his accustomed place , the center of the stage . I wish , with no undue humility , that I could eliminate the first person singular from my study ... Theodore Roosevelt I. SCAR WILDE 50 ROOSEVELT.
... Theodore Roosevelt , to whom I herewith yield his accustomed place , the center of the stage . I wish , with no undue humility , that I could eliminate the first person singular from my study ... Theodore Roosevelt I. SCAR WILDE 50 ROOSEVELT.
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Common terms and phrases
287 Fourth Avenue admiration ambivalence American citizen Americans of German attacks attitude ATTORNEY Authors Barbarian Belgium believe Blank blood Britain British Colonel Confessions course Dear Dernburg Edgar Allan Poe EDITOR emotional England English fact fair-weather feel Flame foes Freud friends friendship for Germany genius George Bernard Shaw George Sylvester Viereck German Americans German Propaganda Gertrude Atherton hands hate heart Henri Barbusse Hugo Muensterberg Kaiser Labor Relief leader League of America letter literary Louis Mirror ment mind nation neutrality of China never newspaper Nineveh OFFICE OF GEORGE Oyster Bay PADRAIC PEARSE patriotic Perhaps poems poet poetic Poetry Society political Pro-Germanism professed friendship Psychoanalysis remarkable replied Roose Sagamore Hill seemed Shaw Songs of Armageddon sword Theodore Roosevelt things tion to-day tribute unconscious United Vampire velt verse Viereck:-I Vigilantes violation Whitman Wilson write written York City York Evening Mail