The Negro in English Literature: A Critical IntroductionA. H. Stockwell, 1962 - 176 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 30
Page 15
... certainly be the first man of colour to appear in English literature since Anglo - Saxon writers , Chaucer , and Spenser seem to omit him . And the possibilities are not improbable , as the historians well know . The Negro has been a ...
... certainly be the first man of colour to appear in English literature since Anglo - Saxon writers , Chaucer , and Spenser seem to omit him . And the possibilities are not improbable , as the historians well know . The Negro has been a ...
Page 106
... certainly he would have certainly given us poetic flights equal to or superior to those given on the subject by such persons as Blake , Cowper , Burns , and others . The humanitarianism of a poet and critic like Samuel Taylor Coleridge ...
... certainly he would have certainly given us poetic flights equal to or superior to those given on the subject by such persons as Blake , Cowper , Burns , and others . The humanitarianism of a poet and critic like Samuel Taylor Coleridge ...
Page 140
... certainly no question as to James Waite's race , and it would certainly be as preposterous to say that he was not of the Negro race as it would be to say that Conrad knew no American Negroes and therefore did not intend to make James ...
... certainly no question as to James Waite's race , and it would certainly be as preposterous to say that he was not of the Negro race as it would be to say that Conrad knew no American Negroes and therefore did not intend to make James ...
Contents
Preface | 9 |
Shakespeare and the Man of Colour | 23 |
The Negro and Colour in Poetry | 48 |
Copyright | |
3 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
The Negro in English Literature: A Critical Introduction Norman Verrle McCullough No preview available - 1962 |
Common terms and phrases
A. C. Bradley Aaron Amelia anti-slavery asserts beauty Behn Blake Brabantio Carlyle certainly Charles Charles Dickens Chatterton civilised colour Company complexion concerned Critical Review dark Desdemona discussion drama Dying Negro eighteenth century England English literature Englishman essay Ethiope Ethiopian evil exclaims feeling freedom heart human slavery humanitarianism Iago Ibid idea Indian interesting James Boswell James Waite John Klingberg later liberty literature of abolition Little Black Boy Lois Whitney Lord Monboddo major minor Miss Pinkerton Miss Swartz Monthly Review Moor native nature Negro in English Nigger noble savage novel Oroonoko Othello Paul Elmer persons play poem poet Poetical poetry published race references to Negroes Robert Burns Samuel says seems sentiments servant Shakespeare Slave Ship Slave Trade slavery soul speaks stanza tells thee theme Thomas thou tion Titus Titus Andronicus typical virtues W. S. Gilbert West Indies wild William Cowper writers written York