From Dickens to HardyBoris Ford Penguin Books, 1973 - 517 pages |
À l'intérieur du livre
Résultats 1-3 sur 25
Page 152
... intelligence . He eliminates discip- lined intelligence from the world of his novels . Such intelligence would trace motives to their sources in a way that enlightens more than excuses . It knows its own nature accurately and can assess ...
... intelligence . He eliminates discip- lined intelligence from the world of his novels . Such intelligence would trace motives to their sources in a way that enlightens more than excuses . It knows its own nature accurately and can assess ...
Page 178
... intelligence . This really is what Carlyle has asked for - articulate inquiry into the Condition - of - England Question . True the articula- tion has a self - consciousness , an artificiality , which is sometimes more than a little ...
... intelligence . This really is what Carlyle has asked for - articulate inquiry into the Condition - of - England Question . True the articula- tion has a self - consciousness , an artificiality , which is sometimes more than a little ...
Page 322
... intelligence . Writing on literature , education , politics , and religion , he tries to encourage a free play of the mind upon the mate- rial before it and so to help his readers to get rid of any stock notions and pieces of mental ...
... intelligence . Writing on literature , education , politics , and religion , he tries to encourage a free play of the mind upon the mate- rial before it and so to help his readers to get rid of any stock notions and pieces of mental ...
Table des matières
BORIS FORD | 7 |
G D KLINGOPULOS | 59 |
R C CHURCHILL | 119 |
Droits d'auteur | |
17 autres sections non affichées
Expressions et termes fréquents
achievement aesthetic appears architecture artistic attitude Bleak House Brontë Browning Butler Cambridge Carlyle Carlyle's character Charlotte Brontë Chartist Church Chuzzlewit criticism D. H. Lawrence death Dickens Dickens's Disraeli dramatic early effect Emily Emily Brontë emotion England English Literature Essays experience F. R. Leavis feeling fiction gentry George Eliot Gissing Hardy Hardy's Heathcliff History Hopkins human impression intellectual interest kind Kipling later less Letters literary Little Dorrit living Matthew Arnold Meredith Middlemarch mind modern moral Morris nature never Nineteenth Century novel novelist Oxford passion perhaps period poem poet poetic political popular Pre-Raphaelite prose reader reading religious repr Review romantic Rossetti Ruskin Samuel Butler scene seems sense sentiment social society spirit story T. S. Eliot Tennyson Thackeray Thackeray's theme things thought tion tradition Trollope Trollope's utilitarianism verse Victorian architecture vols word writing wrote Wuthering Heights York