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searching for Walter Jackson Bate 8 found (53 total)

alternate case: walter Jackson Bate

John Keats's 1819 odes (2,921 words) [view diff] exact match in snippet view article find links to article

itself." Writing these poems had a particular influence on Keats, as Walter Jackson Bate explains: However felicitous he may have been in writing them, these
Bosworth Hall (Market Bosworth) (927 words) [view diff] exact match in snippet view article
Clifford, 1955, Young Samuel Johnson, p. 131 Walter Jackson Bate, 1975, Samuel Johnson, p. 130 Walter Jackson Bate, 1975, Samuel Johnson, p. 131 David Nokes
Robert D. Richardson (600 words) [view diff] exact match in snippet view article find links to article
Creative Process. University of Iowa Press. 2009. Splendor of Heart: Walter Jackson Bate and the Teaching of Literature. David R. Godine, Publisher. 2013
An Essay on Criticism (888 words) [view diff] exact match in snippet view article find links to article
Gutenberg (much punctuation is missing) A Study Guide for the Essay, by Walter Jackson Bate An Essay on Criticism public domain audiobook at LibriVox
Nina McConigley (488 words) [view diff] exact match in snippet view article find links to article
National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) Creative Writing Fellowship, 2022 Walter Jackson Bate Fellowship at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, Harvard
Zia Haider Rahman (1,362 words) [view diff] exact match in snippet view article find links to article
Coetzee and Iris Murdoch. Fellowships Rahman received include the Walter Jackson Bate Fellowship at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, Harvard
Isabel Galleymore (464 words) [view diff] exact match in snippet view article find links to article
at the University of Birmingham, UK. In 2022–23, she became the Walter Jackson Bate Fellow at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study at Harvard University
Kubla Khan (12,003 words) [view diff] exact match in snippet view article find links to article
speed of movement matches buoyancy of tone." Following in 1968, Walter Jackson Bate called the poem "haunting" and said that it was "so unlike anything