@Tsundoku both those books were on the curriculum of my 20th-C English literature class as a college sophomore. 2 novels, 2 plays, and a really exciting book of poems—[English Poetry 1918–1960](amazon.com/Penguin-Book-English-Poetry-1918-1960/dp/0140585451/… ed. Kenneth Allott.
The plays were Angkooler by John Osborne and Murder in the Cathedral by Eliot. The novels were so, so very not in the same league as the plays and the poems.
(Angkooler = Look Back in Anger)
I think that's why I tend to enjoy drama and poetry more than I do novels. Plus, the novel wasn't really a thing during the English Renaissance anyway, which was my focus in grad school
@Randal'Thor you'd perhaps be interested to know that the 19th-C English literature class I had as a college frosh included Hardy's Selected Stories ed. John Wain. That's where I first read "The Withered Arm"
@Tsundoku Why?
I had actually read LotF (just for fun) even before the sophomore class; the fact that it was a set text was coincidence.
I had introduced a variable (c) for another unknown length of time in the main-group plotline (while travelling from Efrafa), but now if you do some complicated timeline math using Efrafra patrols that variable can be removed! woohoo!! This is so cool!
Has given my heart
A change of mood
And saved some part
Of a day I had rued
Which figure of speech has been used in this line "A change of mood"?
Poem : Dust of Snow by Robert Frost
I've no idea why that, of all badges, has been so hard to earn here. I'd've expected one of the former mods to have had it at least, but I'm pretty sure even the ones who deleted their accounts never got it on main (one of them got it on meta).
I would love your take on a section I am currently reading about, Sun Tzu’s description of grounds.
He says:
Place your army in deadly peril, and it will survive; plunge it into desperate straits, and it will come off in safety.
He does this, as I understand it, at just the right moment. Howeve...
Walter de la Mare's short poem "Napoleon" goes like this:
What is the world, O soldiers?
It is I:
I, this incessant snow,
This northern sky;
Soldiers, this solitude
Through which we go
Is I.
What is the literary device which identifies the world, snow, sky, and solitude with the speaker? Given ...