E.M. Forster: A Literary Life |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 30
Page 55
... experience of Indian affairs but was a quick study . He had had the schoolboy's experience of British anti- Semitism . Now he tended to align himself with the disadvantaged . He believed in the validity of the Empire but wanted the ...
... experience of Indian affairs but was a quick study . He had had the schoolboy's experience of British anti- Semitism . Now he tended to align himself with the disadvantaged . He believed in the validity of the Empire but wanted the ...
Page 73
... experience of the 1857 Mutiny when he harangues Field- ing on the subject of crime in India and tells him to forget the Bhagavad Gita and read the Mutiny records instead , if he really wants to know how to manage India : ' The ...
... experience of the 1857 Mutiny when he harangues Field- ing on the subject of crime in India and tells him to forget the Bhagavad Gita and read the Mutiny records instead , if he really wants to know how to manage India : ' The ...
Page 101
... experience and character ' . Forster respected Barnes's care for the technical details of broadcast- ing and his strictness about scripts and timing . Jean Rowntree , who assisted Barnes , recalls that when Forster finished a broadcast ...
... experience and character ' . Forster respected Barnes's care for the technical details of broadcast- ing and his strictness about scripts and timing . Jean Rowntree , who assisted Barnes , recalls that when Forster finished a broadcast ...
Contents
The Suburban Novels | 8 |
The Indian Novel | 50 |
The BBC Broadcasts | 92 |
Copyright | |
2 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Abinger Edition Ackerley Adela Aldeburgh Aligarh Anglo-Indian audience Aziz Aziz's Barnes became become Benjamin Britten Billy Budd British Britten Broadcasting Cambridge Chandrapore Crewe Culture Darling Diary E. M. Forster Edward Arnold England English Eric Crozier feeling felt fiction Fielden Florence Barger Forster told Forster wrote friends G. M. Trevelyan George Ghalib's Godbole Godbole's Government Grisewood Hardinge Henry Herriton Hindu homosexual Honeychurch Howards End Ibid ideas Imperial kind King's College knew Letters Listener literary literature London Longest Journey Margaret Masood Maurice Men's College Miss Moghul Montagu Morison Muslim never Notebook Journal official opera Oxford P. N. Furbank Passage to India personal relations Peter Grimes Pinmay political Quoted radio Reith Rickie Rickie's Ronny Rooksnest Sassoon Sawston says Service social stories talk thing Third Programme Thornton thought tion Tonbridge Trevelyan Unsigned review Vaishnava Victorian wanted West Hackhurst Wilcox write