Literary Essays |
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Page 33
... reader can only bow to the judgment of French critics ; but it may be noticed that those who are only acquainted with Rabelais through the translation of Urquhart and Motteux can hardly escape a false impression of the literary quality ...
... reader can only bow to the judgment of French critics ; but it may be noticed that those who are only acquainted with Rabelais through the translation of Urquhart and Motteux can hardly escape a false impression of the literary quality ...
Page 215
... reader of the extraordinary works now being translated by Mrs. Garnett1 would naturally be inclined to take . To the English reader , no less than to the Norwegian critic , what must first be apparent in those works is the strange and ...
... reader of the extraordinary works now being translated by Mrs. Garnett1 would naturally be inclined to take . To the English reader , no less than to the Norwegian critic , what must first be apparent in those works is the strange and ...
Page 276
... reader from another planet might almost , by the aid of these letters alone , infer the French Revolution . Everything has changed ; not only the ' atmosphere , ' the general point of view ; but the very form and manner of the ...
... reader from another planet might almost , by the aid of these letters alone , infer the French Revolution . Everything has changed ; not only the ' atmosphere , ' the general point of view ; but the very form and manner of the ...
Contents
SHAKESPEARES FINAL PERIOD The Independent | 1 |
WORDS AND POETRY The Hogarth Press 1928 | 16 |
RABELAIS The New Statesman Feb 16 1918 CHARAC | 31 |
Copyright | |
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admiration Alzire beauty Beddoes Beyle Beyle's Blake Blake's blank verse Browne Browne's Byron character charming Comedy complete criticism curious Cymbeline death delight Don Gusman doubt dramatic eighteenth century elaborate Elizabethan English essay expression exquisite fact Fanny Burney feeling French genius heart Horace Walpole human humour imagination Inchbald interest Lady Betty Balfour less letters literary literature lived Lord Lytton's Macaulay Macaulay's Madame Madame de Sévigné master Matthew Arnold mind Miss Molière mysterious nature never novels obvious once Othello passage passion perhaps play poems poet poetical poetry Pope Pope's prose Rabelais Racine Racine's reader remarkable romantic seems sense sentence Shakespeare Sir Thomas Browne Sophocles spirit Stendhal story strange style taste things thought tion tragedy true truth Vauvenargues vision Voltaire Walpole Walpole's whole Winter's Tale words writing written wrote Zamore