Essays by Divers HandsOxford University Press, 1970 |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 21
Seite 25
... Proust is addressed to each of us , always at our own level . ' I was much comforted when I read this last line ! I shall confine myself this afternoon to three views of Proust . Perhaps it is too much to hope that my Proust has got ...
... Proust is addressed to each of us , always at our own level . ' I was much comforted when I read this last line ! I shall confine myself this afternoon to three views of Proust . Perhaps it is too much to hope that my Proust has got ...
Seite 27
... Proust mocks the snob- bish ambitions of the Narrator who longs for his grandmother to acknowledge her old friendship with the Marquise de Villeparisis because her position counts for much in the hotel where they are staying . But it is ...
... Proust mocks the snob- bish ambitions of the Narrator who longs for his grandmother to acknowledge her old friendship with the Marquise de Villeparisis because her position counts for much in the hotel where they are staying . But it is ...
Seite 33
... Proust manages to be amusing in describing the scene , though the subject would not seem to be a funny one in itself , and is followed by a long and poignant passage on ... Proust we find warnings , scattered A PERSONAL PROUST 33.
... Proust manages to be amusing in describing the scene , though the subject would not seem to be a funny one in itself , and is followed by a long and poignant passage on ... Proust we find warnings , scattered A PERSONAL PROUST 33.
Inhalt
A NOVELIST AND HIS CHARACTERS | 19 |
Katja Reissner Lecture 1969 | 40 |
Wedmore Memorial Lecture 1968 | 53 |
Urheberrecht | |
5 weitere Abschnitte werden nicht angezeigt.
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Anglo-India Anglo-Irish army artist Bagehot battle beauty Blunden British Brontë Byron called century character Charlotte Charlotte Brontë Charlus child contemporaries critic dark death Dublin E. M. Forster echo Emily Brontë England English essay experience fact fascinating feeling Forster Frederick North Gaelic Gell Greece Greeks Guermantes Hobhouse hope human imagination India invented Ioannina Ireland Irish Jack Clemo Jane Eyre Jean Mouton Lady Lady Morgan later less literary live look Marabar Maria Edgeworth matter Melodic Line memory mind Moore Narrator nature never novel novelist perhaps philhellenes play poem poet poetry political Proust reader Richard Church Robin Flower romantic round Sassoon's scene sense Shandy society Sterne story talk thing thought tourists tradition trench reminiscences Tristram truth Turtons wind words Wordsworth writing written wrote Wuthering Heights Yeats young