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 50
... reader is satisfactorily yet never grossly ahead . For the contemporary novelist I should suggest two possible courses . He may speak with the ironic interplay of multiple narrations . But here is always the danger of bringing the reader ...
... reader is satisfactorily yet never grossly ahead . For the contemporary novelist I should suggest two possible courses . He may speak with the ironic interplay of multiple narrations . But here is always the danger of bringing the reader ...
Page 73
... reader , as Greg and McKerrow do , is to confuse the function of an author with that of his copyist . It is true most authors are their own copyists , but the talents and training required in the two functions are quite distinct . Yeats ...
... reader , as Greg and McKerrow do , is to confuse the function of an author with that of his copyist . It is true most authors are their own copyists , but the talents and training required in the two functions are quite distinct . Yeats ...
Page 259
... reader . The ' literary ' men , on the other hand , rally round the live sparrow . They galvanize the textual corpse with a transfusion of their own blood and make the rising ghost feel comfortably at home in our modern life , duly ...
... reader . The ' literary ' men , on the other hand , rally round the live sparrow . They galvanize the textual corpse with a transfusion of their own blood and make the rising ghost feel comfortably at home in our modern life , duly ...
Contents
Switzerland and the EnglishSpeaking World | 13 |
The Style of Criticism | 29 |
The Novelist and the Narrator | 43 |
Copyright | |
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achieve Aldhelm Anglo-Saxon Beaumont and Fletcher beauty Beowulf Bromyard Bussy Bussy D'Ambois Bussy's called century Chapman character classical criticism death devil Dickens Dreiser edition England English English Studies epistolary novel evil expression fact Faithful Shepherdess feeling Fletcher Friar's George Chapman George Eliot ghost grammar Grendel Hamlet Heorot hero human Hygelac Ibid ideal imagery innocence interpretation Jane Austen King language Latin Leaves of Grass letter linguistic literary literature London Macbeth meaning metaphor mind modern Montsurry mood moral narrator nature never novel novelist original passage play poem poet poet's poetic poetry prayer present problem quoted reader reality reference rhyme Romola scene seems sense sentence Shakespeare soul speech spirit story style Swiss Switzerland Tamyra theory things thought traditional tragedy translation true truth verb verse Victorian Walt Whitman Whitman words writing Zurich