Dibrugarh University Journal of English Studies, 3. kiadásDepartment of English, Dibrugarh University, 1984 |
Tartalomjegyzék
Ode to a Nightingale and the Keatsean Metaphysic | 1 |
The Jindyworobak Movement in Australian Literature | 12 |
A Study of Pandurang Hari | 22 |
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Aborigines Anglo-Indian Anglo-Indian fiction appear Apthorpe artist assertion and doubt Australian Bearce becomes bird Brideshead Revisited British attitudes Catholic characters Clown comedy comic scenes consciousness contrast culture death Dibrugarh University Doctor Faustus eighteen twenties embodies English Evelyn Waugh evil Excursion experience external witness feeling George Lukács gives Grecian Urn Guy's happiness Hardy's Hockley horrors human relevance Ibid imagination Imperial attitude Indian society Jindy Jindyworobak Jindyworobak movement Keats Keats's land later novels London Lukács M. H. Abrams Mahratta Marlowe Marlowe's Maslova Mephistophilis mind moral nature Nekhlyudov nightingale novelist objectivity P. G. Wodehouse pain Pandurang Hari passions personal testimony play poem poet poet's present prison prophecy and partisanship reader reality Resurrection romantic sense social sorrow soul stanza structure suffering T. S. Eliot Tess Thomas Hardy Tintern Abbey tion Tolstoy Tolstoy's tradition Utilitarian and Evangelical vision Wagner William Wordsworth word writer