The essays of Virginia WoolfHogarth Press, 1986 - 440 pagina's Gathers Virginia Woolf's earliest essays, reviews, and biographical sketches and provide an introduction and background notes. |
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Pagina 161
... mind . For his puns divide themselves into two classes or degrees ; the greater part of them are simply happy matchings of sound in which there is so thin a burden of meaning that the contrast is almost purely verbal . Alas ; they've ...
... mind . For his puns divide themselves into two classes or degrees ; the greater part of them are simply happy matchings of sound in which there is so thin a burden of meaning that the contrast is almost purely verbal . Alas ; they've ...
Pagina 184
... mind take naturally to the epistolary form . We never get from him the impression which the great letter - writers , Lamb or FitzGerald or Mrs Carlyle , ' give us , that the scene which they have in their mind is precisely fit for a ...
... mind take naturally to the epistolary form . We never get from him the impression which the great letter - writers , Lamb or FitzGerald or Mrs Carlyle , ' give us , that the scene which they have in their mind is precisely fit for a ...
Pagina 185
... mind of a country clergyman's wife , that is a piece of impertinence which the succession of the letters completely crushes out of existence . The ' revelation ' which they make is so comprehensive that at the very moment when he shows ...
... mind of a country clergyman's wife , that is a piece of impertinence which the succession of the letters completely crushes out of existence . The ' revelation ' which they make is so comprehensive that at the very moment when he shows ...
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The Essays of Virginia Woolf, 1904-1912, Volume 1;Volumes 1904-1912 Virginia Woolf Geen voorbeeld beschikbaar - 1989 |
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artist beauty beneath Boswell Carlyle character Charles Lamb Charlotte Charlotte Brontë charm Christina Rossetti colour criticism daughter diary Duchess Elizabeth emotions England English eyes fact father feel Fenwick's Career genius George George Gissing gift Gissing give Guardian Henry Henry James human humour husband Ibid imagine impression interest John kind Lady Leonard Woolf Leslie Stephen literary lived London look Lord married Memoirs mind Miss Mme Récamier nature never novel novelist once Parsifal passions perhaps picture poems poet poetry portrait Queen quoted reader Reading Notes MHP reason Sarah Bernhardt scene seems sense Sentimental Shelley Sheridan spirit Stephen story strange talk things Thomas Thomas Carlyle Thomas Hood thought true Vernon Lee Violet Dickinson Virginia Woolf volume VW Essays VW Letters VW's wife woman women words Wordsworth writing wrote