My homeland dream: a trip to my hometown I left the house a few years ago when I was a child and escaped from the smog and poverty that was spreading there. I always knew that I was back time. I do not like the city I brought up; I still wear black and gold every Sunday. Maybe I am satisfied with the place I am and I am enjoying a distant connection with the town. When I return, I will still come back. It was the early summer of Washington State. Pink and white apple flowers spread on the earth and warm air fell to the waterfall.
In his childhood, John Steinbeck had dreamed of becoming a writer. But this young desire is more than just a dream. This is the goal of shaping his life. Even if he is a boy, he writes with a little time every day. When the rest of the neighbor was sleeping, he was sitting in his room for several hours of short story, and he only submitted anonymously. His early material was often rejected, but he was still fearless. After making "B" through high school, Steinbeck entered Stanford University. He went on to university there for five years, but he could not meet the graduation requirement. Steinbeck participated in writing courses at several universities in Stanford University and published articles in literary journals, but when he posted his creative work in the magazine he just refused.
Bryant and his family moved to a new house at the age of two. His childhood home William Karen Bryant Homestead is currently a museum. After working for two years at Williams College, he studied the law at Worthington, Massachusetts, Bridgewater and entered the court in 1815. Then he walked 7 miles a day from Cummington and began practicing in nearby Plainfield. In a certain walk in December 1815, he noticed the birds were flying over the horizon; his sight made him enough to write "waterbirds" to him
https://sites.google.com/site/usingliteraturetodream/home/literary-periods-in-chronological-order/native-american-literature-redetermined-1650/the-colonial-period-1650-1800/the-romantic- 1800 - 1840