Tradition and Dream: The English and American Novel from the Twenties to Our Time |
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... E. M. Forster to the regional writers John Hampson , Walter Brierley , Peter Chamberlain and Leslie Halward , with whom he was linked in the so - called Birming- ham Group in the mid - Thirties . Allen's first two novels , Innocence is ...
... E. M. Forster to the regional writers John Hampson , Walter Brierley , Peter Chamberlain and Leslie Halward , with whom he was linked in the so - called Birming- ham Group in the mid - Thirties . Allen's first two novels , Innocence is ...
Page 27
... E. M. Forster , stumbling for a phrase to define its dark magic , applies the word ' prophetic ' . It is the successful use of the constitutive symbol that makes Law- rence the great poetic novelist he is . It enabled him to render the ...
... E. M. Forster , stumbling for a phrase to define its dark magic , applies the word ' prophetic ' . It is the successful use of the constitutive symbol that makes Law- rence the great poetic novelist he is . It enabled him to render the ...
Page 36
... E. M. Forster's five novels , four appeared between 1905 and 1910 , the fifth , A Passage to India , in 1924. In Mr Bennett and Mrs Brown , Virginia Woolf associated Forster with Lawrence , Joyce and herself as one of the novelists ...
... E. M. Forster's five novels , four appeared between 1905 and 1910 , the fifth , A Passage to India , in 1924. In Mr Bennett and Mrs Brown , Virginia Woolf associated Forster with Lawrence , Joyce and herself as one of the novelists ...
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action Afternoon Men American fiction American Novel appeared Appointment in Samarra attitude become behaviour called central character centre comedy comic Communist Compson consciousness contemporary criticism D. H. Lawrence death described Dreiser E. M. Forster Eliot Ellen Glasgow England English novel Eustace existence experience expression eyes fantasy father Faulkner feels Gatsby George Eliot girl Henry hero homosexual human imagination innocence Joyce Lawrence Lewis literary lives London Lonigan look means mind Miss Lonelyhearts moral narrator nature Negro never night novelist passage perhaps political Powys's prose realizes relation rendered romantic satire scarcely scene seems seen sense social society story Studs Studs Lonigan style Sutpen symbol theme things thirties tion Tradition and Dream tragic Ulysses Virginia Virginia Woolf whole wife Willa Cather Winesburg women Women in Love Woolf words writing written Wyndham Lewis young