The English Novel: A Short Critical History |
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Page 240
entertaining Wildeve; it is part of nature's enmity that she should be bitten by the
snake on her way home. But Hardy, as though not wholly convinced himself,
does not know where to stop. He spoils his case by overstatement: when we
learn ...
entertaining Wildeve; it is part of nature's enmity that she should be bitten by the
snake on her way home. But Hardy, as though not wholly convinced himself,
does not know where to stop. He spoils his case by overstatement: when we
learn ...
Page 242
He contains all nature within himself, as a truly great bull might be described as
doing. This almost animal impercipience removes him far away from the tragic
heroes of Shakespeare; and yet, in one respect at any rate, it is Macbeth with
whom ...
He contains all nature within himself, as a truly great bull might be described as
doing. This almost animal impercipience removes him far away from the tragic
heroes of Shakespeare; and yet, in one respect at any rate, it is Macbeth with
whom ...
Page 248
He is saying, in effect, much what Wyndham Lewis has said in The Writer and the
Absolute: ... there is in all those arts which parallel nature something like a law
obliging the artist to a fanatical scrupulosity, as it were a physical incapacity ...
He is saying, in effect, much what Wyndham Lewis has said in The Writer and the
Absolute: ... there is in all those arts which parallel nature something like a law
obliging the artist to a fanatical scrupulosity, as it were a physical incapacity ...
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User Review - stillatim - LibraryThingRemember when literary critics read books and wrote about them? No? Well, I do now. He got a few things wrong - what did these people ever see in H.G. Wells? In Meredith? That they should be put next ... Read full review
Contents
Acknowledgments | 7 |
The Beginnings | 19 |
The Eighteenth Century | 40 |
Copyright | |
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