Poets and Story-tellers: A Book of Critical EssaysMacmillan Company, 1949 - 201 pages |
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Page 126
... Russian novels are both more realistic and more religious than other novels . There is no doubt about their realism . From Lermontov to Chekov , Russian writers are out to describe ex- perience exactly as it is . Apparently they ...
... Russian novels are both more realistic and more religious than other novels . There is no doubt about their realism . From Lermontov to Chekov , Russian writers are out to describe ex- perience exactly as it is . Apparently they ...
Page 126
... Russian novels are both more realistic and more religious than other novels . There is no doubt about their realism . From Lermontov to Chekov , Russian writers are out to describe_ex- perience exactly as it is . Apparently they ...
... Russian novels are both more realistic and more religious than other novels . There is no doubt about their realism . From Lermontov to Chekov , Russian writers are out to describe_ex- perience exactly as it is . Apparently they ...
Page 127
... Russians : for the Christian religion had soaked itself so deeply into every fibre of Russian society , that to Russians , the soul was as unquestioned a fact as the body . Any true picture of reality must include it . Indeed the soul ...
... Russians : for the Christian religion had soaked itself so deeply into every fibre of Russian society , that to Russians , the soul was as unquestioned a fact as the body . Any true picture of reality must include it . Indeed the soul ...
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action admiration Adolphe Adolphe's æsthetic Antony and Cleopatra appear artist aspects beauty Branghtons Burney's Cecilia character charm civilised comedy comic complex convention convincing critic Dalloway death Delvile describes drama Duchess Duchess of Malfi E. M. FORSTER eighteenth-century Elizabethan Ellénore Emma emotion English novelist episode Evelina experience expression eyes fact Fanny Burney feeling Forster give Gray Gray's heart hero and heroine House of Gentlefolk Howard's End human imagination impression inevitably Jane Austen lady landscape live look Lord Orville love-story Mansfield Park mind Miss mood moral nature never Northanger Abbey novel observation Octavius once passion picture play plot poetry realistic reality relation reveals romantic Russian satirical scene seems sense Sense and Sensibility sensibility sentiment Shakespeare shows significance social soul spirit stir story success talent taste theme things thought Tolstoy tragedy tragic true Turgenev turn Virginia Woolf virtue vision Webster worldly writer young