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. |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 57
Seite 20
... matter how small , no matter how rigidly confined its boundaries may be , he will take into account the full complexity of human na- ture , whether he deals with its manifestations on a high or a low level of human intelligence and ...
... matter how small , no matter how rigidly confined its boundaries may be , he will take into account the full complexity of human na- ture , whether he deals with its manifestations on a high or a low level of human intelligence and ...
Seite 245
... matter of borderlines . Obviously , the critic must sometimes deal with them . If he likes a book or a picture , he may call it good or he may call it great . Where is the di- viding line ? Who can precisely define what constitutes a ...
... matter of borderlines . Obviously , the critic must sometimes deal with them . If he likes a book or a picture , he may call it good or he may call it great . Where is the di- viding line ? Who can precisely define what constitutes a ...
Seite 253
... matter of fact , uses Frost's conception of the figure a poem makes as evidence of the first essential bond he finds between mathematics and the arts : the fact that " discovery in mathematics is not a matter of logic . " Rather , he ...
... matter of fact , uses Frost's conception of the figure a poem makes as evidence of the first essential bond he finds between mathematics and the arts : the fact that " discovery in mathematics is not a matter of logic . " Rather , he ...
Inhalt
Foreword 37 | 3 |
Truth Isnt Always Stranger | 7 |
The Proper Study of Mankind | 41 |
Urheberrecht | |
6 weitere Abschnitte werden nicht angezeigt.
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
achieve American writers artist attitude autobiography aware become believe biography Byron century character column concerned contemporary course creative critics death delight Edith Wharton Ellen Glasgow Emerson English fact feel gift Hemingway Henry Henry James human humor Indian intellectual interest Islandia Jane Austen Jesse Stuart John John Aubrey John Buchan John Marquand journalism kind Kipling least less letters Lewis literary literature lived Longfellow Louis Auchincloss man's Marquand matter merely mind modern mountains nature never novel novelists observed once ourselves perhaps person poem poet poetry prose published question readers reason recent remarks rivers Robert Frost seems sense Shakespeare Sinclair Lewis speak story T. S. Eliot things Thoreau thought tion Tolstoy Trilling true truth understanding West Willa Cather Winslow Homer women words written wrote Wyoming young