Letters to X from H.J. MassinghamBooks for Libraries Press, 1967 - 298 páginas |
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Página 103
... language ( speech , as it were , in a dressing - gown ) falls away into a looseness and waste that the widest and most generous canons of art cannot admit . Hardy , of course , uses something of the same method , but hardly ever without ...
... language ( speech , as it were , in a dressing - gown ) falls away into a looseness and waste that the widest and most generous canons of art cannot admit . Hardy , of course , uses something of the same method , but hardly ever without ...
Página 166
... language at the beginning of the seventeenth century was at its maturest development , highly cultivated and yet free on the other hand from the cliché of eld and over- practice , and on the other from the necessary but waste- ful and ...
... language at the beginning of the seventeenth century was at its maturest development , highly cultivated and yet free on the other hand from the cliché of eld and over- practice , and on the other from the necessary but waste- ful and ...
Página 183
... language by speaking of tears as " walking baths , compendious oceans . " When he strains or perverts a figure it is not out of wantonness , but because his painfully struggling idea can only grope a contorted way to life . It is ...
... language by speaking of tears as " walking baths , compendious oceans . " When he strains or perverts a figure it is not out of wantonness , but because his painfully struggling idea can only grope a contorted way to life . It is ...
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