Speaking of Books and LifeHolt, Rinehart and Winston, 1966 - 279 Seiten Contains 125 of the 900 columns the author produced for the New York Times. |
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Seite 61
... feel that you know him through and through . He was not a conscious artist , as Boswell was , nor was he at war with himself . Unlike Boswell , he suffered no great frustrations , lived into a contented old age , and could be happy in ...
... feel that you know him through and through . He was not a conscious artist , as Boswell was , nor was he at war with himself . Unlike Boswell , he suffered no great frustrations , lived into a contented old age , and could be happy in ...
Seite 82
... feeling , is not , I believe , a complete ex- planation of her popularity , any more than that she spoke , as Mr ... feel most intensely the contrasts on which I have just been speaking , and this susceptibility of theirs is imparted ...
... feeling , is not , I believe , a complete ex- planation of her popularity , any more than that she spoke , as Mr ... feel most intensely the contrasts on which I have just been speaking , and this susceptibility of theirs is imparted ...
Seite 85
... feeling that both he and his public have largely lost . That sense of the divinity in Nature by which Wordsworth was ... feel that Nature is holy and as a modern man you never can . Genuine art is the mirror of genuine feelings , and the ...
... feeling that both he and his public have largely lost . That sense of the divinity in Nature by which Wordsworth was ... feel that Nature is holy and as a modern man you never can . Genuine art is the mirror of genuine feelings , and the ...
Inhalt
Foreword 37 | 3 |
Truth Isnt Always Stranger | 7 |
The Proper Study of Mankind | 41 |
Urheberrecht | |
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