The New Moulton's Library of Literary Criticism: Mid-VictorianChelsea House Publishers, 1985 |
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Resultados 1-3 de 81
Página 4392
... reader love the good people in the tale and hate the bad ones . But the reader of the Deerslayer tale dislikes the good people in it , is indifferent to the others , and wishes they would all get drowned together . 11. They require that ...
... reader love the good people in the tale and hate the bad ones . But the reader of the Deerslayer tale dislikes the good people in it , is indifferent to the others , and wishes they would all get drowned together . 11. They require that ...
Página 4710
... reader , without labour , knows what he means , and knows all that he means . As well as I can remember , he deals with no episodes . I think that any critic , examining his work minutely , would find that every scene , and every part ...
... reader , without labour , knows what he means , and knows all that he means . As well as I can remember , he deals with no episodes . I think that any critic , examining his work minutely , would find that every scene , and every part ...
Página 4790
... readers can look behind them , as one seems to be able to do in looking at a well - painted figure on the canvas . There are others , again , so wooden that no reader expects to find in them any appearance of movement . They are blocks ...
... readers can look behind them , as one seems to be able to do in looking at a well - painted figure on the canvas . There are others , again , so wooden that no reader expects to find in them any appearance of movement . They are blocks ...
Contenido
5932646 | 4245 |
Anne Brontë | 4283 |
William Lisle Bowles | 4290 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 35 secciones no mostradas
Términos y frases comunes
admiration American Anne Brontë appeared artist beauty Byron character Charlotte Brontë charm Coleridge Cooper criticism death Deerslayer delight Douglas Jerrold Edgar Allan Poe Edgar Poe Edinburgh Edinburgh Review effect Emily Brontë English essays expression eyes fact fancy faults feeling fiction Frankenstein friends genius grace heart human humour imagination impression intellectual interest Irving Jane Eyre Jeffrey Joanna Baillie Lady Lady Morgan language Leigh Hunt less Letter literary literature living Lord Lord Byron Macaulay manner Mary Shelley merit mind Miss Moore moral nature never novel passages passion peculiar perhaps person philosophical pleasure Poe's poems poet poetical poetry prose Quincey Quincey's reader Review romance Scott seems sense sentiment Shelley soul spirit story style sympathy taste things thought tion true truth verse volume Washington Irving whole Wilson woman words Wordsworth writings written wrote