The Essays of Virginia Woolf: 1904-1912Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1986 - 411 pagina's Collects articles and book reviews by the English novelist. |
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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 sheet ...
... 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 sheet ...
Pagina 270
... mind which are incongruous with the associations raised by another art ; the effort to resolve them into one clear conception is painful , and the mind is constantly woken and disillusioned . Something like this , we imagine , is the ...
... mind which are incongruous with the associations raised by another art ; the effort to resolve them into one clear conception is painful , and the mind is constantly woken and disillusioned . Something like this , we imagine , is the ...
Inhoudsopgave
1905 | 11 |
The Decay of Essaywriting | 24 |
By Beach and Bogland | 37 |
Copyright | |
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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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