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"I ... hear Time's winged chariot"
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter I
- PREFACE VII
- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS IX
- CONTENTS XI
- ILLUSTRATIONS XVII
- INTRODUCTION XIX
-
ROY BEDICHEK
- Mv friend, Roy Bedichek 1
- "Authentic tidings of invisible things" 13
- There is at least one full man 19
- His kindly nature 21
- This group of three, seated about the evening fire 23
- The desire to excel 25
- Our out-of-doors hotel 27
- SO1 East Twenty-third Street 31
- On top of Callman Mountain 35
- "Look ye also while life lasts" 37
- "Worse ... Football." 39
- Freedom from pretense 42
- "My generation is daubed witlt blood" 45
- No affectation, no defense 54
- "Whitman constantly exposed his soul" 55
- Nature purges, "like great drama" 58
- Bedichek' s rock 62
- "The days of dizzy raptures ... gone" 70
- "Today is life-the rest is nothing" 75
- "I ... hear Time's winged chariot" 78
- We loved him because of his naturalness 81
- Dear Bedi 83
-
WALTER PRESCOTT WEBB
- His first teacher 87
- "Professor, that was purty" 89
- "Does anyone have a reason to suggest?" 91
- A most generous offer 93
- "For years we three sat together" 99
- An unfashionable kind of historian 110
- The Great Plains 114
- The Great Frontier 119
- Webb my teacher 124
- His politics 132
- I was regarded as a bumpkin indeed 135
- Webb as a sinner 136
- Going to places in the pasture 139
- His last project 142
- Meetings in Dallas 144
- Free of both hate and fear 148
- The power of land and the power of mind 152
- To the basic loyalties of life he was true 158
-
J. FRANK DOBIE
- We came from the same range 161
- Poetry in an earthy growl 162
- A quatrain forty years ago 165
- Fellow countryman 167
- Love of life and freedom 175
- I helped Frank Dobie cut down a tree 187
- A mustang in the groves of academe 190
- An enemy of reactionary demagogues 201
- He has never been an exile 204
- A writer loyal to real experience 206
- Dobie revisited 219
- Down a bytrail 224
- Many of his books will endure 229
- Listening with the third ear 232
- Handling the "insult approach" 235
- A question of implications 237
- The universality of Mr. Dobie 239
- "I have that honor" 243
- I have known Frank Dobie for about thirty-five years 252
- I have hem associated with him a good deal since 1914 255
- Acrostic 258
- But the children know 259
- Impressions of a friendship 265
- "I am busy becoming contemporary with myself' 277
- When I heard of Frank Dobie's death 281
- He brought a free man 284
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter I
- PREFACE VII
- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS IX
- CONTENTS XI
- ILLUSTRATIONS XVII
- INTRODUCTION XIX
-
ROY BEDICHEK
- Mv friend, Roy Bedichek 1
- "Authentic tidings of invisible things" 13
- There is at least one full man 19
- His kindly nature 21
- This group of three, seated about the evening fire 23
- The desire to excel 25
- Our out-of-doors hotel 27
- SO1 East Twenty-third Street 31
- On top of Callman Mountain 35
- "Look ye also while life lasts" 37
- "Worse ... Football." 39
- Freedom from pretense 42
- "My generation is daubed witlt blood" 45
- No affectation, no defense 54
- "Whitman constantly exposed his soul" 55
- Nature purges, "like great drama" 58
- Bedichek' s rock 62
- "The days of dizzy raptures ... gone" 70
- "Today is life-the rest is nothing" 75
- "I ... hear Time's winged chariot" 78
- We loved him because of his naturalness 81
- Dear Bedi 83
-
WALTER PRESCOTT WEBB
- His first teacher 87
- "Professor, that was purty" 89
- "Does anyone have a reason to suggest?" 91
- A most generous offer 93
- "For years we three sat together" 99
- An unfashionable kind of historian 110
- The Great Plains 114
- The Great Frontier 119
- Webb my teacher 124
- His politics 132
- I was regarded as a bumpkin indeed 135
- Webb as a sinner 136
- Going to places in the pasture 139
- His last project 142
- Meetings in Dallas 144
- Free of both hate and fear 148
- The power of land and the power of mind 152
- To the basic loyalties of life he was true 158
-
J. FRANK DOBIE
- We came from the same range 161
- Poetry in an earthy growl 162
- A quatrain forty years ago 165
- Fellow countryman 167
- Love of life and freedom 175
- I helped Frank Dobie cut down a tree 187
- A mustang in the groves of academe 190
- An enemy of reactionary demagogues 201
- He has never been an exile 204
- A writer loyal to real experience 206
- Dobie revisited 219
- Down a bytrail 224
- Many of his books will endure 229
- Listening with the third ear 232
- Handling the "insult approach" 235
- A question of implications 237
- The universality of Mr. Dobie 239
- "I have that honor" 243
- I have known Frank Dobie for about thirty-five years 252
- I have hem associated with him a good deal since 1914 255
- Acrostic 258
- But the children know 259
- Impressions of a friendship 265
- "I am busy becoming contemporary with myself' 277
- When I heard of Frank Dobie's death 281
- He brought a free man 284