The English Novel: A Short Critical HistoryA brilliant, critical history of the novel from Bunyan to Lawrence and Joyce. |
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Page 63
... Smollett stresses the unnaturalness not only by his description but by the words in which he makes the description : half a yard suggests something longer than eighteen inches , fantastically long though that is for a human face ...
... Smollett stresses the unnaturalness not only by his description but by the words in which he makes the description : half a yard suggests something longer than eighteen inches , fantastically long though that is for a human face ...
Page 64
... Smollett attacked his age precisely where it was most vulnerable , where it was dirty and diseased . If we today think of the eighteenth cen- tury in terms of its architecture , then Smollett shows us what lies beyond the sobriety and ...
... Smollett attacked his age precisely where it was most vulnerable , where it was dirty and diseased . If we today think of the eighteenth cen- tury in terms of its architecture , then Smollett shows us what lies beyond the sobriety and ...
Page 72
... Smollett's reasons . With his seamen and avaricious spinsters , hungry for marriage under a cloak of religiosity , Smollett populated a consider- able area of the fiction that was to come . A line of writers about the sea , from Marryat ...
... Smollett's reasons . With his seamen and avaricious spinsters , hungry for marriage under a cloak of religiosity , Smollett populated a consider- able area of the fiction that was to come . A line of writers about the sea , from Marryat ...
Contents
THE BEGINNINGS | 3 |
THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY | 31 |
THE FIRST GENERA | 107 |
Copyright | |
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achievement acters action Adam Bede appear artist become behavior Bennett Brontë called century characters Charlotte Brontë Clayhanger comedy comic Conrad consciousness contemporary criticism D. H. Lawrence described Dickens dramatic E. M. Forster eighteenth-century Elizabethan Emily Brontë England English novel English novelists exist expression fact father feel fiction Fielding Fielding's figure Forster George Eliot Gissing Hardy Hardy's hero heroine human humor imagination instance James James's Jane Austen Jane Eyre Joyce Jude kind Lady later Lawrence less literary lives London Meredith mind Miss Austen moral nature never novelist Oroonoko passion perhaps plot poetry Princess Casamassima prose reader reality Richardson romantic satire scarcely scene Scott seems sense Smollett social society Sons and Lovers story successful symbol Thackeray things tion Tom Jones tragic Trollope Victorian Virginia Woolf whole woman women words writing written wrote Wuthering Heights young