E.M. Forster: A Literary Life |
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Page 62
... play the game of Hindu - Muslim tit - for - tat . There was also the prickly problem of affiliation , the system by which provincial high schools accepted the academic standards of a specific college or university . Increased enrolment ...
... play the game of Hindu - Muslim tit - for - tat . There was also the prickly problem of affiliation , the system by which provincial high schools accepted the academic standards of a specific college or university . Increased enrolment ...
Page 83
... play ' , as Rothenstein had called it , for he immediately recognised its similarities to medi- eval church plays and the parallels between the story of Krishna's birth and that of the birth of Christ . Forster described the cumulative ...
... play ' , as Rothenstein had called it , for he immediately recognised its similarities to medi- eval church plays and the parallels between the story of Krishna's birth and that of the birth of Christ . Forster described the cumulative ...
Page 124
... played a large part in turning him back to England.128 Then in 1944 Forster had been greatly impressed when he heard ... play- ing in towns that had never had opera , of any kind , and gradually they built up an audience for themselves ...
... played a large part in turning him back to England.128 Then in 1944 Forster had been greatly impressed when he heard ... play- ing in towns that had never had opera , of any kind , and gradually they built up an audience for themselves ...
Contents
The Suburban Novels | 8 |
The Indian Novel | 50 |
The BBC Broadcasts | 92 |
Copyright | |
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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