… as dress. Yesterday Freud was king and the knowing ones had complexes, uncovered surpressed desires, got “psyched,” and … leisurely, and decadent world of Europe’s old culture capitals that was riding insouciant towards its doom in 1914. … real objects in nature, the scornful rejection of “vulgar” common sense and all its data—such were the hurdles over …
Profiles
… saw him publish nearly a book a year. He alternated between comic novels devoted to the lives of comfy-living Englishmen … to Africa, South America, Eastern Europe, and the West Indies, for which he was paid a healthy living wage (Waugh … of Dust , for example, or Adam Fenwick-Symes in Vile Bodies embody both the comic manners and the predilection for …
… walk on crusted snow, or if on the sidewalk— on the points so as not to dull the blades. A curious gait— a boy …
Criticism
… causing intimidation, or otherwise influencing an audience, all in the name of purifying the world. Religious … commended the September 11 bombers and disseminated on his website flyers with a photograph of bin Laden and the World … 9/11 September 11 attacks terrorism religion suicide bomber 266-270 By Jack R. Fischel …
Poetry
… murderous patience, and the pomp Of pain swells like the Indies, or a plum. And there you will stand, as on the Roman … regards you with authority Till you feel like one who has come too late, or improperly clothed, to a party. The doctor … the dancers, and tells you how just last fall Her husband died in Ohio, and damp mists her glasses; She blinks and …
… from the beginning we could avoid all our own mistakes, false steps, tremendous waste, abuses of land and labor. … straight highways of easy grades; bridges planned to accommodate the traffic of years to come; cities located with … cannot regularly afford and seldom sees. His starch diet comes mainly from hard corn, which we call “horse …