Tradition and Dream: The English and American Novel from the Twenties to Our Time |
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Page 46
... realize in the last pages , to repeat the same pattern of behaviour towards his son as his father did to him . No less good ... realizes— with some surprise , so unemphatic is Garnett's manner - that in this novel Garnett has become the ...
... realize in the last pages , to repeat the same pattern of behaviour towards his son as his father did to him . No less good ... realizes— with some surprise , so unemphatic is Garnett's manner - that in this novel Garnett has become the ...
Page 324
... realizes : ' Admittedly , like others , he had been in the wrong ... Everybody committed errors and offences . But it was supremely plain to him that everything , without exception , took place as if within a single soul or person ...
... realizes : ' Admittedly , like others , he had been in the wrong ... Everybody committed errors and offences . But it was supremely plain to him that everything , without exception , took place as if within a single soul or person ...
Page 331
... realizes all he has done for her and her family , realizes , too , the confused nature of good and evil , and thanks him . Next night he overhears her refusing a com- paratively wealthy suitor . He stays on in the grocer's shop and a ...
... realizes all he has done for her and her family , realizes , too , the confused nature of good and evil , and thanks him . Next night he overhears her refusing a com- paratively wealthy suitor . He stays on in the grocer's shop and a ...
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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