The English Novel: A Short Critical HistoryA brilliant, critical history of the novel from Bunyan to Lawrence and Joyce. |
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Page 91
But it is fantasy still rooted in the perception of the real, for Beckford's story of the
caliph Vathek's pursuit of knowledge and power, in the course of which, Faustlike
, he sells himself to the powers of evil, is a statement in fable of the author's own ...
But it is fantasy still rooted in the perception of the real, for Beckford's story of the
caliph Vathek's pursuit of knowledge and power, in the course of which, Faustlike
, he sells himself to the powers of evil, is a statement in fable of the author's own ...
Page 117
They differ, of course, in their notions of morals. It is not quite true that for Miss
Austen morals and manners are interchangeable, but the main emphasis in her
work is on manners, which she sees as morals in microcosm. There are, of
course, ...
They differ, of course, in their notions of morals. It is not quite true that for Miss
Austen morals and manners are interchangeable, but the main emphasis in her
work is on manners, which she sees as morals in microcosm. There are, of
course, ...
Page 163
And there was, of course, the occasional novel of distinction by a writer outside
the main tendencies of the age, the perennially delightful novel of Persian life,
J. J. Morier's The Adventures of Hajji Baba, for instance, which appeared in 1824,
...
And there was, of course, the occasional novel of distinction by a writer outside
the main tendencies of the age, the perennially delightful novel of Persian life,
J. J. Morier's The Adventures of Hajji Baba, for instance, which appeared in 1824,
...
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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
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