Co., inasmuch as they have also indorsed the very poor paper of . If Whitman had been able (he was not able, for he tried it and failed) to put his thought into artistic verse, he would have attracted little or no attention, perhaps. Where he is fine,... The Writer - 180. lappuse1913Pilnskats - Par šo grāmatu
 | Ferris Greenslet - 1908 - 404 lapas
...paper of . If Whitman had been able (he was not able, for he tried it and failed) to put his thought into artistic verse, he would have attracted little...and certainly it is not an improvement on either. A glorious line now and then, and a striking bit of color here and there, do not constitute a poet... | |
 | 1908 - 982 lapas
...paper of . If Whitman had been able (he was not able, for he tried it and failed) to put his thought into artistic verse, he would have attracted little...and certainly it is not an improvement on either. A glorious line now and then, and a striking bit of color here and there, do not constitute a poet... | |
 | 1908 - 1006 lapas
...paper of . If Whitman had been able (he was not able, for he tried it and failed) to put his thought into artistic verse, he would have attracted little...and certainly it is not an improvement on either. A glorious line now and then, and a striking bit of color here and there, do not constitute a poet... | |
 | Elizabeth Deering Hanscom - 1908 - 400 lapas
...paper of . If Whitman had been able (he was not able, for he tried it and failed) to put his thought into artistic verse, he would have attracted little...writing is neither prose nor verse, and certainly is not an improvement on either. A glorious line now and then, and a striking bit of color here and... | |
 | Francis Fisher Browne, Scofield Thayer, Waldo Ralph Browne - 1909 - 330 lapas
...story-teller." Walt Whitman he rated not high among poets. " The greater bulk of his writing," he declares, " is neither prose nor verse, and certainly it is not an improvement on either. A glorious line now and then, and a striking bit of color here and there, do not constitute a poet... | |
 | Elizabeth Deering Hanscom - 1910 - 516 lapas
...piper of , If Whitman had been able, (he wns not able, for he tried it and f.iileil) to put his thought into artistic verse, he would have attracted little or no attention, perhaps. Where he is tine, he is tine in precisely the way of conventional poets. The greater bulk of his writing is neither... | |
| |