Literary Essays |
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Page 44
... sentences start out into being . His strangest fantasies are rich with the spoils of the real world . His art matured with himself ; and who but the most expert of artists could have produced this perfect sentence in The Garden of Cyrus ...
... sentences start out into being . His strangest fantasies are rich with the spoils of the real world . His art matured with himself ; and who but the most expert of artists could have produced this perfect sentence in The Garden of Cyrus ...
Page 103
... sentence , to obtain either the ease or the dis- tinction of the original . The style of Vauvenargues is so simple , following , like all eighteenth - century French , almost the precise run of an English sentence , that nothing more ...
... sentence , to obtain either the ease or the dis- tinction of the original . The style of Vauvenargues is so simple , following , like all eighteenth - century French , almost the precise run of an English sentence , that nothing more ...
Page 129
... sentence as that . It is the sentence , not of a speaker , but of a writer ; and yet , for that very reason , it is delightful , and comes to us charged with a curious sense of emotion , which is none the less real for its elaboration ...
... sentence as that . It is the sentence , not of a speaker , but of a writer ; and yet , for that very reason , it is delightful , and comes to us charged with a curious sense of emotion , which is none the less real for its elaboration ...
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