Modern chivalry or The adventures of Captain Farrago and Teague O'Regan
Added by: jose^miguel | Karma: 0 | Fiction literature | 29 November 2011
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Hugh Henry Brackenridge - Modern chivalry or The adventures of Captain Farrago and Teague O'Regan
This is a rambling, satirical American novel by Hugh Henry Brackenridge, a Pittsburgh writer, lawyer, judge, and justice of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court. The book was first published in 1792.
The hero, Captain John Farrago, is a frontier Don Quixote who leaves on a whim his Western Pennsylvania farm to "ride about the world a little, with his man Teague at his heels, to see how things were going on here and there, and to observe human nature".
This is a rambling, satirical American novel by Hugh Henry Brackenridge, a Pittsburgh writer, lawyer, judge, and justice of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court. The book was first published in 1792.
An evil curse is keeping the last brownie prince from marrying his true love—possibly ending the brownie royal family forever! Moonflower and her friends must race against time to find Paramour, the Goddess of Love, and ask for help in freeing Prince Henry and a fairy named Rose from their magic prisons. But Paramour only grants wishes on a whim, so the fairies must work together to inspire her to help them. Will the fairies win over the good fortune of Paramour or will Henry and Rose be doomed to a life apart?
Henry Pulling, a retired bank manager, meets his old aunt for the first time in over 50 years. She persuades him to travel with her. Through his aunt, a veteran of Europe's hotel bedrooms, Henry joins a shiftless, twilight society coming alive after a dull suburban lifetime.
Profesor Henry 6.0 Słownictwo poziom 3 i 4. Słownictwo specjalistyczne: angielskie słówka i zwroty dla zaawansowanych i osób przygotowujących się CAE i CPE + system inteligentnych powtórek. It's for Polish speakers only.
Portraying the Lady - Technologies of Gender in the Short Stories of Henry James
From Daisy Miller to Isabel Archer to Maisie, female characters dominate the work of Henry James and, often, critical discussion of James's work. Donatella Izzo shifts that discussion to a different, more revealing, plane in this original interpretation of James's short fiction. By redirecting criticism from a biographical emphasis to a focus on James's engagement with the issues of representation, Izzo shows how these short stories actually question and investigate the cultural and ideological practices that produced women, both in literature and in society.