Essays by Divers Hands: Being the Transactions of the Royal Society of Literature of the United KingdomOxford University Press, 1972 |
Im Buch
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Seite 9
... become a prison for the modern actor who is impelled to seek an interpretation for the role that without one seems only words . Who has not groaned in spirit at the productions where it has soon become all too clear that the actor has ...
... become a prison for the modern actor who is impelled to seek an interpretation for the role that without one seems only words . Who has not groaned in spirit at the productions where it has soon become all too clear that the actor has ...
Seite 40
... become unreadable ( or at least unread ) . The other reason , not directly connected with my subject , is that , like Emerson , he wrote in sentences and not in paragraphs , so that one becomes exhausted by hopping from one sentence to ...
... become unreadable ( or at least unread ) . The other reason , not directly connected with my subject , is that , like Emerson , he wrote in sentences and not in paragraphs , so that one becomes exhausted by hopping from one sentence to ...
Seite 71
... become highly bureaucratic documents . In recent years they have made no attempt to convey the feeling of the discussion or to pick out its sharp points . On the contrary , they smooth them off . They are essentially directed towards ...
... become highly bureaucratic documents . In recent years they have made no attempt to convey the feeling of the discussion or to pick out its sharp points . On the contrary , they smooth them off . They are essentially directed towards ...
Inhalt
Giff Edmonds Memorial Lecture 1971 | 17 |
Marie Stopes Memorial Lecture 1970 | 47 |
Don Carlos Coloma Memorial Lecture 1971 | 63 |
Urheberrecht | |
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admiration Angrian autobiography Bagehot believe biography brother Byron Byronic hero called Carlyle century character Charlotte Charlotte Brontë Christie Coleridge Conrad Coriolanus course D. H. Lawrence death described Dickens dramatic Emily Brontë emotional English essay experience fact feel fiction freedom genius Grasmere Halifax heart Heathcliff Henry James hero imagination Jane Austen John Synge Lady later LECTURE This lecture letter literary living look Lord Macbeth Mandarin marriage Mary Maugham memory mind mother nature never novel passage passion perhaps play poem poetry portrait prose reader relationship rhythm Scott Scott Fitzgerald seems sense Shakespeare Shakespearian Sir Walter sister Society Sons and Lovers soul speak story style Synge Synge's T. S. Eliot things thou thought tion Tolstoy Trollope true truth voice Waverley whole wild William and Dorothy words Wordsworth writing written wrote Wuthering Heights young Zamorna