Poets and Story-tellersBarnes & Noble, 1961 - 201 pages |
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Page 16
David Cecil. powerful , and with the world at their feet , are in reality no more than puppets in the fingers of a mysterious and irresistible fate . The personal drama is seen as part of a huge impersonal historical process . It is ...
David Cecil. powerful , and with the world at their feet , are in reality no more than puppets in the fingers of a mysterious and irresistible fate . The personal drama is seen as part of a huge impersonal historical process . It is ...
Page 105
... reality . This , we know , is exactly how the news of such a death would be received by such people . Yet we cannot read it without laughing . Even when Jane Austen is not out primarily to make us laugh she never wholly leaves the realm ...
... reality . This , we know , is exactly how the news of such a death would be received by such people . Yet we cannot read it without laughing . Even when Jane Austen is not out primarily to make us laugh she never wholly leaves the realm ...
Page 135
... reality but which also has the shapeliness and continuous significance that are the characteristic beauty of a work of art . Turgenev's Russian sense of reality makes his illusion perfect . Incident and character are photographically ...
... reality but which also has the shapeliness and continuous significance that are the characteristic beauty of a work of art . Turgenev's Russian sense of reality makes his illusion perfect . Incident and character are photographically ...
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Common terms and phrases
action admiration Adolphe æsthetic Antony and Cleopatra Antony's appear artist aspects beauty Branghtons Burney's character charm comedy comic complex convention critic Dalloway death Devil drama Duchess Duchess of Malfi E. M. FORSTER eighteenth-century Elizabethan Ellénore emotion English Evelina experience expression eyes fact Fanny Burney feeling Forster give Gray Gray's hand heart heroine historical House of Gentlefolk Howard's End human humour imagination impression inevitably intensity Jane Austen ladies living Longest Journey looked love-story Mansfield Park mind Miss mood moral mystery nature never novel novelists observation Octavius once passages passion picture Pindaric play plot poem poet poetry Progress of Poesy reader realistic reality relation reveals romantic Russian satirical scene seems sense sensibility Shakespeare significance social soul spirit story success talent taste theme things THOMAS GRAY thought tragedy tragic true Turgenev turn Virginia Woolf virtue vision Webster Wilcox worldly writer