The Novel in EnglishR.R. Smith, 1931 - Всего страниц: 395 |
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Стр. 262
... mind may find its choicest pabulum in the reading of events in which the probable is tastefully garnished with the improbable . The adult mind , aware of the eternal appeal of each person's life , eager to inspect it under every glass ...
... mind may find its choicest pabulum in the reading of events in which the probable is tastefully garnished with the improbable . The adult mind , aware of the eternal appeal of each person's life , eager to inspect it under every glass ...
Стр. 277
... mind was a vast and splendid theater for the presentation of plays realistic in the sense that the inspiration , the " wind - blown grain of sand " , came from actual observation , and idealistic in the Emersonian sense of preferring ...
... mind was a vast and splendid theater for the presentation of plays realistic in the sense that the inspiration , the " wind - blown grain of sand " , came from actual observation , and idealistic in the Emersonian sense of preferring ...
Стр. 299
... mind seems to have come from reading Zola , whose passion for ac- curacy and truth stamped a lasting seal upon his eager mind . Making use of his knowledge of student vices , gained at Harvard , he proved himself an apt disciple in ...
... mind seems to have come from reading Zola , whose passion for ac- curacy and truth stamped a lasting seal upon his eager mind . Making use of his knowledge of student vices , gained at Harvard , he proved himself an apt disciple in ...
Содержание
CHAPTER | 3 |
THE FIRST MODERN NOVELISTS | 32 |
THE TRIUMPH OF ROMANTICISM | 77 |
Авторские права | |
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Adventures beauty Brontë Castle characters Charles Charlotte Brontë Clarissa comedy contemporaries Cooper death Defoe Dickens eighteenth century Emily Emily Brontë England English fiction English literature English novel eyes father feeling Fielding Fielding's Frances Burney George Eliot girl Gothic romance Hardy Hawthorne heart Henry Fielding Henry James Herman Melville hero heroine historical romance human humor Jane Austen John Lady later Laurence Sterne less letters literary live London Macmillan manners married Melville Meredith moral narrative Nathaniel Hawthorne nature never novelist Pamela passion picaresque plot popular prose published reader realism Richardson Samuel Richardson satire scenes Scott seems sentimental Shandy short story Smollett spirit Sterne Stevenson style tale Thackeray things Thomas Thomas Hardy thought tion Tobias Smollett Tom Jones University Press Victorian volumes wife William woman women words writing written wrote York and London York Holt York Houghton York Macmillan York Scribners young