November: Lincoln's Elegy at GettysburgIndiana University Press, 2001. 11. 9. - 344ÆäÀÌÁö It begins with the search for hallowed ground, the exact place from which Abraham Lincoln delivered the Gettysburg Address. In bleak November, Kent Gramm makes a pilgrimage to the most famous battleground in American history and over the course of a month transforms his search into a discovery of the meaning of Lincoln's elegy for America's identity. "The month begins with things that perish. But ultimately, November is a journey of hope, as was Lincoln's journey to Gettysburg. So too I will journey to Gettysburg in these pages. Like Lincoln's fellow citizens, I go there to assuage personal grief, to find answers; and I hope, for me as for them, that my personal sorrows become a vehicle for larger answers and a larger purpose. Lincoln addressed their grief, why not mine; he gave his generation purpose, why not ours." |
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... mother in Civil War America would not have found the idea of progress futile or ironic . Abraham Lincoln staked his ... mothers , sisters , and wives are wearing black all across the United States , more vacant chairs stand in darkened ...
... mother's grave . Each year they marched up to the cemetery , and people from town came to see them and to hear the speeches . Ruth knew how to pronounce " Gettysburg " not the way northerners usually do , but as soldiers who had been ...
... mother to mother . There are two kinds of elegies : one is a melancholy contemplation , such as Gray's " Elegy Written in a Country Church - Yard " ; and the other is lament and praise for the dead , ending with comfort and hope — such ...
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1 | |
Brought Forth Pen and Sword | 30 |
NOVEMBER 4 | 41 |
NOVEMBER 5 | 63 |
NOVEMBER 9 | 73 |
NOVEMBER 14 | 84 |
NOVEMBER 15 | 96 |
NOVEMBER 16 | 106 |
NOVEMBER 22 | 182 |
NOVEMBER 23 | 193 |
NOVEMBER 25 | 213 |
NOVEMBER 26 | 228 |
NOVEMBER 27 | 251 |
NOVEMBER 29 | 266 |
NOVEMBER 30 | 273 |
Modernism and Postmodernism | 285 |
NOVEMBER 17 | 119 |
The Gettysburg Address | 131 |
NOVEMBER 20 | 162 |
NOVEMBER 21 | 171 |
Elegy Written in a Country ChurchYard | 298 |
Notes on the Sources | 305 |