Robert Louis Stevenson: The Critical HeritagePaul Maixner Routledge, 2013-10-31 - 556 psl. The Critical Heritage gathers together a large body of critical sources on major figures in literature. Each volume presents contemporary responses to a writer's work, enabling students and researchers to read the material themselves. |
Knygos viduje
Rezultatai 1–5 iš 84
v psl.
... readers of the period. Evidence of this kind helps us to understand the writer's historical situation, the nature of ... reader will be thereby helped towards an informed understanding of the ways in which literature has been read and ...
... readers of the period. Evidence of this kind helps us to understand the writer's historical situation, the nature of ... reader will be thereby helped towards an informed understanding of the ways in which literature has been read and ...
1 psl.
... readers - at least among those who gave much thought to the rise and fall of critical reputations — would have been ... readers whose knowledge of him was limited. This view was not of course the only view of Stevenson. He continued to ...
... readers - at least among those who gave much thought to the rise and fall of critical reputations — would have been ... readers whose knowledge of him was limited. This view was not of course the only view of Stevenson. He continued to ...
3 psl.
... reader some idea of what the subsequent reaction is against. Until we have experienced these materials directly, the attacks against Stevenson seem unnecessarily fierce and bad tempered. It should be said, too, that much of the comment ...
... reader some idea of what the subsequent reaction is against. Until we have experienced these materials directly, the attacks against Stevenson seem unnecessarily fierce and bad tempered. It should be said, too, that much of the comment ...
4 psl.
... reader is better able to gauge Stevenson's reaction to the judgments of others when something is known of his ... readers and critics. II How did Stevenson see himself in relation to his readers? At the beginning of his career he held ...
... reader is better able to gauge Stevenson's reaction to the judgments of others when something is known of his ... readers and critics. II How did Stevenson see himself in relation to his readers? At the beginning of his career he held ...
8 psl.
... readers and reviewers. P. C. Hamerton wrote a long and genial review of 'Inland Voyage' (No. 5) which was quoted and echoed by ... reader would find the book to his taste. Certain things in particular would not sit well with readers of a ...
... readers and reviewers. P. C. Hamerton wrote a long and genial review of 'Inland Voyage' (No. 5) which was quoted and echoed by ... reader would find the book to his taste. Certain things in particular would not sit well with readers of a ...
Turinys
1 | |
An Inland Voyage 1878 | 47 |
Picturesque Notes 1878 | 59 |
Travels with a Donkey in the Cévennes 1879 | 62 |
Virginibus Puerisque and Other Papers 1881
| 75 |
Familiar Studies of Men and Books 1882 | 94 |
New Arabian Nights 1882 | 106 |
Treasure Island 1883 | 124 |
The Black Arrow 1888 | 316 |
The Wrong Box 1889 | 335 |
The Master of Ballantrae 1889 | 339 |
Ballads 1890 | 369 |
Across the Plains 1892 | 377 |
The Wrecker 1892 | 396 |
Island Nights Entertainments 1893 | 408 |
Catriona 1893 | 423 |
A Childs Garden of Verses 1885 | 146 |
Prince Otto 1885 | 176 |
The Strange Case of Dr Jekylland Mr Hyde 1886 | 199 |
Kidnapped 1886 | 232 |
The Merry Men and Other Tales and Fables 1887 | 249 |
Underwoods1887 | 258 |
Memories and Portraits 1887 | 286 |
The EbbTide 1894 | 449 |
Weir of Hermis ton 1896 | 464 |
St Ives 1897 | 483 |
Select Bibliography | 519 |
Index | 520 |
Kiti leidimai - Peržiūrėti viską
Pagrindiniai terminai ir frazės
admirable adventures appeared Arabian Nights Archer artist Athenaeum beauty Black Arrow boys called Catriona chapters character charm child Cornhill critic David Balfour death delightful Donkey doubt Edinburgh English essays expression fancy feel fiction genius George Meredith give Gosse heart Henley Henry James hero human humour imagination Inland Voyage interest J. A. Symonds Kidnapped less literary literature live Longman's Magazine Master of Ballantrae masterpiece mind moral murder narrative nature never novel novelist Pall Mall Gazette perhaps person pleasure poems poet praise Prince Otto prose reader remarkable Robert Louis Stevenson romance scene seems sense speak spirit Steven story strange style sure tale tell thing thought tion touch Travels Treasure Island true truth UNSIGNED REVIEW verse Villon Virginibus Puerisque vivid volume W. E. HENLEY Weir of Hermiston whole words writing written Wrong Box wrote young