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Robert Penn Warren on Thomas Jefferson on Human Nature

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Abstract:

In this paper I will discuss Brother to Dragons, a poem in which Warren (“R.P.W.) interrogates Thomas Jefferson about his understanding of human nature. In the conclusion I draw together parallels between all three poems

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jefferson (131), warren (76), bd (75), p (71), ii (65), poem (54), robert (35), brother (33), penn (32), man (31), lewi (30), thoma (29), time (28), new (27), dragon (26), histor (25), r.p.w (24), pp (23), human (23), one (23), lilburn (23),
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Name: Southwestern Political Science Association
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Ealy, Steven. "Robert Penn Warren on Thomas Jefferson on Human Nature" Paper presented at the annual meeting of the Southwestern Political Science Association, New Orleans, LA, Fairmont Hotel, Mar 23, 2005 <Not Available>. 2009-05-25 <http://www.allacademic.com/meta/p88775_index.html>

APA Citation:

Ealy, S. , 2005-03-23 "Robert Penn Warren on Thomas Jefferson on Human Nature" Paper presented at the annual meeting of the Southwestern Political Science Association, New Orleans, LA, Fairmont Hotel Online <.PDF>. 2009-05-25 from http://www.allacademic.com/meta/p88775_index.html

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Abstract: In this paper I will discuss Brother to Dragons, a poem in which Warren (“R.P.W.) interrogates Thomas Jefferson about his understanding of human nature. In the conclusion I draw together parallels between all three poems

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Associated Document Available Southwestern Political Science Association

Document Type: .PDF
Page count: 18
Word count: 8617
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ROBERT PENN WARREN'S ENCOUNTER WITH THOMAS JEFFERSON IN BROTHER TO DRAGONSa Steven D. Ealy Senior Fellow Liberty Fund Inc. Time history poetry and identity are intertwined in the thought and writings of Robert Penn Warren. These interconnections are famously encapsulated in Warren's foreword to Brother to Dragons: "If poetry is the little myth we make history is the big myth we live."1 These concerns are found in three of Warren's long poems Brother to Dragons Audubon: A Vision 2
the Past " in New and Selected Essays (New York: Random House 1989) pp. 50-51. 28 "Made by the same Great Spirit and living in the same land with our brothers the red men we consider ourselves as the same family; we wish to live with them as one people and to cherish their interests as our own." 29 Luigi Barzini has suggested that the appropriate translation of Novus ordo seclorum is "The world and history begin with us"


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