Essays by Divers Hands: Being the Transactions of the Royal Society of Literature |
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Seite 6
... effect produced upon him , or her , by poetry was to cause him , or her , to think how much better the thing could be expressed in . prose . Imagine taking Keats's " Ode to Autumn ” 66 " " and expressing it better in prose ! But besides ...
... effect produced upon him , or her , by poetry was to cause him , or her , to think how much better the thing could be expressed in . prose . Imagine taking Keats's " Ode to Autumn ” 66 " " and expressing it better in prose ! But besides ...
Seite 17
... effect upon the reader is one of calm and contemplation , and brings that sense of leisure and repose for which , in these days , we are more and more grateful . The works of W. H. Hudson have this quality . I will conclude with one or ...
... effect upon the reader is one of calm and contemplation , and brings that sense of leisure and repose for which , in these days , we are more and more grateful . The works of W. H. Hudson have this quality . I will conclude with one or ...
Seite 18
... effect : " he who is not familiarized with the finest passages of the finest writers will one day be mortified to observe that his best thoughts are their indifferent ones . ' " " This last word I would say on the pleasure of reading ...
... effect : " he who is not familiarized with the finest passages of the finest writers will one day be mortified to observe that his best thoughts are their indifferent ones . ' " " This last word I would say on the pleasure of reading ...
Seite 25
... effect there if you robbed him of his alexandrines and tripped him at every moment in his accustomed deportment ? Could you expect a French audience to listen to such things ? Certainly it is an English play ; they will look for ...
... effect there if you robbed him of his alexandrines and tripped him at every moment in his accustomed deportment ? Could you expect a French audience to listen to such things ? Certainly it is an English play ; they will look for ...
Seite 26
... effect to that produced by English actors upon an English audience . I said just now that the French critic of to - day would probably condemn such cavalier treatment of the very plot and characters as Dumas and his col- laborator ...
... effect to that produced by English actors upon an English audience . I said just now that the French critic of to - day would probably condemn such cavalier treatment of the very plot and characters as Dumas and his col- laborator ...
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actors admiration Aesop Agnes Sorel alexandrines audience beautiful blank verse brothers Alvarez Quintero Calvisano Carpenedolo century character cher classical contemporaries course critic Cyrano deal dominant comic doubt drama Eclogues emotion English eternal expression feel French Galdós give Gondibert Greek Hamlet HARLEY GRANVILLE-BARKER human ideal instance interest Jane Austen Joan JOHN DRINKWATER labour Landor literary living Lycidas Macbeth Maeterlinck Mantua Milton mind Mocedades modern moral nature never novel paper passion pastoral perhaps phrase Pietōle play play's pleasure of reading poems poet poetic poetry Popian present prose Rhodope rhyme Richepin Roman Roxane scholar sentiment Septimus Shakespeare Society of Literature soul Spanish spirit stage Stoicism talk Tennyson theatre Theocritus Theophilus things thought tion to-day tradition translation Tristram Shandy truth Virgil words Wordsworth writers written young youth Zalamea