Themes -- Writing/Communication
Writing/Communication: involving why one writes, how one writes, to whom one writes -- or speaks.
Introduction 2
and
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("A succession of imaginary incidents") [1831 only]
Introduction 4
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("Worthy of my parentage") [1831 only]
Introduction 7
and
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("That blank incapability of invention") [1831 only]
Introduction 10
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("My imagination, unbidden, possessed and guided me") [1831 only]
Letter 1.1
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("LETTER")
Letter 2.2
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("Communication")
Letter 2.2
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("Acquainted with more languages")
Letter 4.2
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("A foreign accent")
Letter 4.6
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("Frankly")
Letter 4.6
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("Unparalleled eloquence")
Letter 4.6
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("I have communicated to him without disguise") [1831 only]
Letter 4.9
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("What interest and sympathy")
1.1.5
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("Fairy tale")
1.1.7
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("To pursue my studies alone")
1.2.7
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("I expressed myself in measured terms") [1831 only]
1.3.4
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("I see by your eagerness")
1.3.8
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("The most interesting part of my tale")
1.4.5
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("They hear from you so seldom")
1.4.8
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("Uneasy at your long silence")
1.5.1
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("You will confirm")
1.6.6
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("I fear, my friend")
1.6.8
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("If any other had communicated")
1.6.8
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("I resolved to remain silent")
1.6.11
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("A strange tale")
1.6.12
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("Frankness of disposition")
1.7.2
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("A confused and unintelligible answer")
1.7.5
and
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("I have endeavoured to bestow ")
1.7.10
and
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("Heart-rending eloquence") [1831 only]
2.1.1
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("No language can describe")
2.2.4
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("Miserable beyond all living things")
2.2.7
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("He thus began his tale")
2.3.8
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("To utter sounds")
2.5.1
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("The more moving part of my story")
2.5.2
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("She was neither understood by ... the cottagers")
2.5.3
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("I ardently desired to understand them")
2.5.4
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("Science of letters")
2.5.7
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("Blind vacancy")
2.6.3
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("They will prove the truth of my tale")
2.7.1
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("Books")
2.7.4
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("Your journal")
2.9.7
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("I had no right to claim their sympathies") [1831 only]
3.1.5
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("The journal of Clerval")
3.1.8
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("Tintern Abbey")
3.3.10
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("In proper detail")
3.4.5
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("It never presented itself ... reality")
3.4.7
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("The strange chances that have lately occured")
3.4.7
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("I could send ... illness")
3.4.10
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("I often endeavoured to put an end to the existence")
3.5.6
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("My letter was calm and affectionate")
3.5.7
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("The lessons of my father")
3.6.5
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("They had called me mad")
3.7.9
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("He is eloquent and persuasive")
Walton 1
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("In continuation")
Walton 1
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("Commanded his countenance")
Walton 1
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("The letters of Felix and Safie")
Walton 2
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("Corrected and augmented")
Walton 2
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("In giving the life and spirit")
Walton 2
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("Mutilated one")
Walton 2
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("Interest for my guest")
Walton 2
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("Eloquence")
Walton 2
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("Endeavours to move the passions")
Walton 5
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("You will not hear")
Walton 5
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("The power of his eloquence")
Walton 6
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("I cannot forbear recording it")
Walton 8
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("An eye so full of lofty design")
Walton 10
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("Examining my past conduct")
Walton 11
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("I may still be misled by passion")
Walton 12
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("What a scene has just taken place")
Walton 14
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("His powers of eloquence and persuasion")
Walton 15
and
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("Satisfied that abhorrence and opprobrium should load my memory")