English Studies Today, Volume 2Oxford University Press, 1961 - English language The 1st series consists of papers read at the International Conference of University Professors of English held at magdalen college in 1950; 2d- series consists of lectures and papers read at the 4th- conferences of the International Association of University Professors of English held in 1959- |
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Page 46
... perhaps at the root of what has puzzled many readers about my charac- ters : I have towards people sometimes at the same moment intense interest and stifling boredom , love and strong hate . That this theme , of which I was un ...
... perhaps at the root of what has puzzled many readers about my charac- ters : I have towards people sometimes at the same moment intense interest and stifling boredom , love and strong hate . That this theme , of which I was un ...
Page 224
... Perhaps “ assimilation " would be a less am- biguous term ; everything is assimilated to the state of mind which is the poem's raison d'être . I have already drawn attention to how in both Tennyson and Arnold heroic images are modulated ...
... Perhaps “ assimilation " would be a less am- biguous term ; everything is assimilated to the state of mind which is the poem's raison d'être . I have already drawn attention to how in both Tennyson and Arnold heroic images are modulated ...
Page 250
... Perhaps this means ... " , " It seems ... " , " Possibly it means ... " , " In yourself may possibly mean ... " , etc. On the other hand the interpretations proffered by these commentators are so different one from the other and so ...
... Perhaps this means ... " , " It seems ... " , " Possibly it means ... " , " In yourself may possibly mean ... " , etc. On the other hand the interpretations proffered by these commentators are so different one from the other and so ...
Contents
Switzerland and the EnglishSpeaking World | 13 |
The Style of Criticism | 29 |
The Novelist and the Narrator | 43 |
Copyright | |
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