Definitions

Sorry, no definitions found. You may find more data at fanshawe.

Etymologies

Sorry, no etymologies found.

Support

Help support Wordnik (and make this page ad-free) by adopting the word Fanshawe.

Examples

  • Yet Fanshawe is worth reading if only because it is, by my reckoning, the first American campus novel, and quite possibly the first on either side of the Atlantic.

    Academic Discourse and Adulterous Intercourse 2006

  • Yet Fanshawe is worth reading if only because it is, by my reckoning, the first American campus novel, and quite possibly the first on either side of the Atlantic.

    Academic Discourse and Adulterous Intercourse 2006

  • Yet Fanshawe is worth reading if only because it is, by my reckoning, the first American campus novel, and quite possibly the first on either side of the Atlantic.

    Academic Discourse and Adulterous Intercourse 2006

  • He adds, "Had 'Fanshawe' been in the hands of more extensive dealers, I do believe it would have paid you a profit;" from which it may be inferred that "Fanshawe" was the anonymous work which had attracted Goodrich's attention.

    Nathaniel Hawthorne George Edward Woodberry 1892

  • In 1828 his first book, "Fanshawe," was published at his own expense.

    The Short-story William Patterson Atkinson

  • "Fanshawe," and a series of short stories, none of which attracted especial attention or gave indication of more than average talent.

    American Men of Mind Burton Egbert Stevenson 1917

  • He adds, “Had 'Fanshawe' been in the hands of more extensive dealers, I do believe it would have paid you a profit;” from which it may be inferred that “Fanshawe” was the anonymous work which had attracted Goodrich's attention.

    Nathaniel Hawthorne Woodberry, George E 1902

  • "Fanshawe" as a whole in all its scenes, whether in the house of the old

    Nathaniel Hawthorne George Edward Woodberry 1892

  • As Mr. Lathrop suggests in that study of his father-in-law which is so subtly appreciative of those vital suggestions apt to escape record and analysis, another part of the truth may lie in the words of "Fanshawe" where Hawthorne expresses the feelings of his hero in a like situation with himself at the end of college days: --

    Nathaniel Hawthorne George Edward Woodberry 1892

  • This was presumably "Fanshawe," which may also have been the novel she recollected his writing to her about while at college.

    Nathaniel Hawthorne George Edward Woodberry 1892

Comments

Log in or sign up to get involved in the conversation. It's quick and easy.