(adjective) deficient in color; wan / (adjective) lacking sparkle or liveliness; dull
Only in very expert hands could it be made to transcend its humble origin—the pallid poetry of eighteenth-century France
on Russian elegies
Only in very expert hands could it be made to transcend its humble origin—the pallid poetry of eighteenth-century France
on Russian elegies
(noun) a colonnade or covered ambulatory especially in classical architecture and often at the entrance of a building
my livid light flitted across the six-pillared white portico at the back of my uncle’s mute, shuttered manor
my livid light flitted across the six-pillared white portico at the back of my uncle’s mute, shuttered manor
the leaf or leaflike part of a palm, fern, or similar plant
every whiff of damp leaf, every autumn-rusted frond of fern in the St. Petersburg countryside
every whiff of damp leaf, every autumn-rusted frond of fern in the St. Petersburg countryside
loud, reverberating, and often melancholy
her high-school-girlish prose could evoke with plangent strength
her high-school-girlish prose could evoke with plangent strength
(noun) loss of consciousness resulting from insufficient blood flow to the brain; faint / (noun) the loss of one or more sounds or letters in the interior of a word (as in fo'c'sle for forecastle)
The break in my own destiny affords me in retrospect a syncopal kick that I would not have missed for worlds
not entirely sure
The break in my own destiny affords me in retrospect a syncopal kick that I would not have missed for worlds
not entirely sure
(noun) a room or unfinished part of a house just under the roof
Current prose and poetry, brilliant planets and pale galaxies, flowed by the casement of my garret night after night
Current prose and poetry, brilliant planets and pale galaxies, flowed by the casement of my garret night after night
to bend the knee; to be humbly obedient or respectful
Only much later, in the forties, did some of those writers finally discover a definite slope down which to slide in a more or less genuflectory attitude.
Only much later, in the forties, did some of those writers finally discover a definite slope down which to slide in a more or less genuflectory attitude.
the part of theology concerned with death, judgment, and the final destiny of the soul and of humankind
Bunin, a spry old gentleman, with a rich and unchaste vocabulary, was puzzled by my irresponsiveness to the hazel grouse of which I had had enough in my childhood and exasperated by my refusal to discuss eschatological matters
Bunin, a spry old gentleman, with a rich and unchaste vocabulary, was puzzled by my irresponsiveness to the hazel grouse of which I had had enough in my childhood and exasperated by my refusal to discuss eschatological matters
(adjective) deficient in color; wan / (adjective) lacking sparkle or liveliness; dull
we emerged into the pallid bleakness of a Paris winter day
we emerged into the pallid bleakness of a Paris winter day
loud, reverberating, and often melancholy
His plangent tonalities I shall never forget, nor shall I ever forgive myself the ill-tempered review in which I attacked him for trivial faults in his unfledged verse
His plangent tonalities I shall never forget, nor shall I ever forgive myself the ill-tempered review in which I attacked him for trivial faults in his unfledged verse