Newest Questions

1 vote
0 answers
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Who is Mr Epstein?

In book "Five little pigs", there is line Miss Williams says to M. Poirot in book 1, chapter This little pig had none Possibly, So is one of Mr Epstein's statues, I believe Whom is she ...
Akash Jain's user avatar
8 votes
1 answer
372 views

Was his name really “Faustus” in “Clouds of Witness” by Dorothy L. Sayers?

In Clouds of Witness by Dorothy L. Sayers, the Dowager Duchess of Denver makes the following remark: “Well, dear, I thought so. What oft was thought and frequently much better expressed, as Pope says—...
Gareth Rees's user avatar
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6 votes
1 answer
69 views

What was Danglars' plan for imprisoning Dantès in "The Count of Monte Cristo"?

In The Count of Monte Cristo by Alexandre Dumas, Danglars is jealous of his crewmate Dantès and denounces him to the magistrate Villefort as a Bonapartist. This leads to Villefort sending Dantès to ...
minh khoa vu's user avatar
0 votes
0 answers
34 views

Canon and classification of Shakespeare's plays

The First Folio of 1623 classifies Shakespeare's plays under three heads: Comedies, Histories, and Tragedies. Some modern editions of the complete works, such as the RSC's, retain this classification. ...
verbose's user avatar
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3 votes
0 answers
11 views

Point of view in Nella Larsen's Passing

Most of Nella Larsen's Passing is narrated from the third person limited point of view of Irene Redfield. We see people and events as she sees them. Her thoughts and feelings are described, but not ...
verbose's user avatar
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2 votes
0 answers
9 views

How does Passing make use of its epigraph from Countee Cullen's "Heritage"?

Nella Larsen's novel Passing (1929) uses as its epigraph the following quotation from Countee Cullen's celebrated poem "Heritage": One three centuries removed From the scenes his fathers ...
verbose's user avatar
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1 vote
0 answers
11 views

In what ways is Rudolph Fisher the model for Dave Freeland?

One of the minor characters in Nella Larsen's Passing is a writer named Dave Freeland, whom the narrator describes as "the author of novels that revealed a man of perception and a devastating ...
verbose's user avatar
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4 votes
2 answers
2k views

Why is the Macbeth quote about "doth unfix my hair" so important?

I'm confused about what this quote means and why it's popular. Could someone explain it? From Act 1 Scene 3: Macbeth If good, why do I yield to that suggestion whose horrid image doth unfix my hair ...
Spencer Gorse's user avatar
2 votes
1 answer
85 views

What does it mean by "if frappés were plant-based" in Holly?

In chapter 1 (October 17,2012) of Holly by Stephen King, Jorge Castro was kidnapped and put in a cage by his colleagues in the college. And Jorge was provided by Mrs. Harris with something called Ka’...
MT MTESK's user avatar
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7 votes
1 answer
89 views

What does "B-I-T-sweetie" mean in Zora Neale Hurston and Langston Hughes's play "The Mule-Bone"?

This question was originally asked in EL&U but after almost two years sitting in that Stack Exchange no one has been able to offer a definitive answer, although there are some interesting ...
qoheleth's user avatar
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1 vote
0 answers
30 views

Where was the "Hope of the Wicked" passage taken from in the second Before The Incal book?

In the book series "Before The Incal", there is a robot who recites quotes from the current era that are long forgotten in the Incal universe(s). He often quotes the Bible, previously using ...
QikilaKiqila's user avatar
3 votes
0 answers
35 views

Why did the star give the idea of suicide in "The Dreams of a Ridiculous Man" by Fyodor Dostoevsky?

In The Dreams of a Ridiculous Man, written by Fyodor Dostoevsky, there is this quote: As I was thinking about the gas lamps in the street I looked up at the sky. The sky was horribly dark, but one ...
AshishMath's user avatar
5 votes
1 answer
734 views

What was a "silver churn" in the Gilbert and Sullivan opera "Patience"?

In Gilbert and Sullivan's opera Patience we have a song of which the first verse is A magnet hung in a hardware shop, And all around was a loving crop Of scissors and needles, nails and knives, ...
mikado's user avatar
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2 votes
0 answers
56 views

Why did Olga Shartse title her translation of Aitmatov’s novella ‘To Have and to Lose’ and not ‘My Little Poplar in a Red Scarf’?

Chingiz Aitmatov’s 1961 novella Тополёк мой в красной косынке (my little poplar in a red scarf) was translated by Olga Shartse (1989) as To Have and to Lose. The original title is the narrator’s ...
Gareth Rees's user avatar
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5 votes
1 answer
363 views

Which is right, “ever dreams of” or “dreams of ever”, in Byron’s ‘Don Juan’?

In the first (1821) publication of canto 5 of Byron’s Don Juan, stanza 48 reads: Some talk of an appeal unto some passion,     Some to men’s feelings, others to their reason; The last of these was ...
Gareth Rees's user avatar
  • 68.9k
5 votes
1 answer
442 views

Dostoevsky on Tyutchev

I read that Dostoevsky was the first one to call Tyutchev "a poet-philosopher", but no sources were given. Can you cite a reference where Dostoevsky called him that?
Bruno's user avatar
  • 245
4 votes
1 answer
605 views

Shakespeare's use of the word "excursion"

I've come across the word "Excursion" (and plural "Excursions") in stage directions by William Shakespeare, especially in battle or fight scenes. I am not sure I understand what he ...
ccprog's user avatar
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3 votes
0 answers
44 views

Setting in Shirley Jackson's "The Lottery" - background or integral?

I've been having a debate with a colleague whether the setting in Shirley Jackson's short story "The Lottery" is backdrop or integral. These terms, as far as I know and as far as the debate ...
DW256's user avatar
  • 131
3 votes
1 answer
150 views

‘To Certain Critics’ by Countee Cullen

Here’s the poem ‘To Certain Critics’ by Countee Cullen: Then call me traitor if you must, Shout treason and default! Say I betray a sacred trust Aching beyond this vault. I'll bear your censure as ...
Gareth Rees's user avatar
  • 68.9k
2 votes
1 answer
138 views

When is the setting of Aitmatov's "To Have and to Lose"?

Yesterday I read Chingiz Aitmatov's To Have and to Lose (freely available online in English), which was originally published in 1961. How precisely can we figure out when this story is set? The ...
Rand al'Thor's user avatar
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3 votes
1 answer
56 views

What is the meaning and significance of Urmat-ake's phrase to Ilyas?

In Chingiz Aitmatov's To Have and to Lose (freely available online in English), when Ilyas meets the aksakals after getting together with Asel, the elderly driver Urmat-ake greets him as follows: &...
Rand al'Thor's user avatar
  • 79.6k
2 votes
0 answers
27 views

How is Gandhi's influence seen in Bessie Head's fiction?

The Wikipedia page for Bessie Head cites the The Norton Anthology of World Literature (4th ed., 2013) to claim that her work was influenced by Mahatma Gandhi. The page also references an article by ...
verbose's user avatar
  • 35k
6 votes
1 answer
306 views

Short story, possibly by Frank O'Connor, about a boy puzzled by Tennyson

I think, at the age of 9 in 1961, I read a comprehension piece in an English textbook by Ronald Ridout. It was an extract from a short story by, I think, possibly Frank O'Connor. It described the ...
Michael Harvey's user avatar
4 votes
1 answer
581 views

"Unarmed if any meet her" in Emily Dickinson's "The Past is such a curious Creature"

This is poem 1273 in The Poems of Emily Dickinson (1998), edited by R. W. Franklin: The Past is such a curious Creature To look her in the Face A Transport may receipt us Or a Disgrace - Unarmed if ...
MT MTESK's user avatar
  • 693
5 votes
2 answers
156 views

‘Medusa’ by Countee Cullen

Here’s the sonnet ‘Medusa’ (1935) by Countee Cullen: I mind me how when first I looked at her A warning shudder in the blood cried, “Ware! Those eyes are basilisk’s she gazes through, And those are ...
Gareth Rees's user avatar
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1 vote
0 answers
55 views

Novel about a boy walking home after a bus breaks down, then the bus catches up to him

What I remember is the bus breaking down, and the boy chooses to walk the way home. When he has almost arrived home, he realises the bus has caught up with him, and decides to race it the rest of the ...
Richie Bendall's user avatar
9 votes
2 answers
837 views

What does "agai" mean in Aitmatov's "To Have and to Lose"?

In Chingiz Aitmatov's To Have and to Lose - available in English through the Internet Archive - in the not-prologue, the truck driver addresses the speaker as "agai" a number of times. For ...
Mithical's user avatar
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0 votes
0 answers
35 views

Why was Victoria Amelina so "indirect" about which health condition a specific writer had?

Looking at Women Looking at War by Victoria Amelina referred to a writer whose "health was impacted" by trauma: Volodymyr had a disability himself: his health was first impacted by the ...
EJoshuaS - Stand with Ukraine's user avatar
2 votes
1 answer
33 views

Is "The Street of the Involved" available outside of Ukraine?

Looking at Women Looking at War by Victoria Amelina mentions a newly-published nonfiction book The Street of the Involved by Vira Kuryko, which ...told the story of ordinary Soviet people who lived ...
EJoshuaS - Stand with Ukraine's user avatar
5 votes
1 answer
132 views

Why did the spirits visit Scrooge exactly seven years after Marley's death?

In the 1843 novel A Christmas Carol by the British author Charles Dickens the three spirits visited Ebenezer Scrooge exactly seven years after Jacob Marley's death. I know seven is a significant ...
Snack Exchange's user avatar

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