Lord JimUnwin Hyman, 1988 - 241 psl. |
Knygos viduje
Rezultatai 1–3 iš 83
6 psl.
... says that he and Conrad agreed that good style consisted of ' fresh , usual ' words , and that ' we employed as a rule in writing the language that we employed in talking the one to the other ' . Marlow's idiom could well be that of a ...
... says that he and Conrad agreed that good style consisted of ' fresh , usual ' words , and that ' we employed as a rule in writing the language that we employed in talking the one to the other ' . Marlow's idiom could well be that of a ...
16 psl.
... says that once , at the theatre , he and Conrad felt themselves to be exotic foreigners among the philistine English , and one of them leant towards the other to say ' Doesn't one feel lonely in this beastly country ? '18 Ford is surely ...
... says that once , at the theatre , he and Conrad felt themselves to be exotic foreigners among the philistine English , and one of them leant towards the other to say ' Doesn't one feel lonely in this beastly country ? '18 Ford is surely ...
36 psl.
... says of Henry Fleming : ' he is an initiate . . . into an ironic , indifferent and nihilistic world for , like Conrad's Lord Jim , he has redeemed weakness and cowardice by virtue of an almost absurd act which can nonetheless be read by ...
... says of Henry Fleming : ' he is an initiate . . . into an ironic , indifferent and nihilistic world for , like Conrad's Lord Jim , he has redeemed weakness and cowardice by virtue of an almost absurd act which can nonetheless be read by ...
Turinys
The Critical Reception and Literary Context | 25 |
Composition and Sources of Lord | 49 |
Lord Jim Chapters | 80 |
Autorių teisės | |
Nerodoma skirsnių: 2
Kiti leidimai - Peržiūrėti viską
Pagrindiniai terminai ir frazės
Almayer's Folly artist become Brierly Brown butterfly central Chapter 16 Chapter 20 Chapter 35 Chapter 9 Conrad's novels consciousness Cornelius Crane critics Curle Dain Waris death discussion disgrace Doramin dramatic dream end of Chapter English father feeling fiction figure Ford Ford Madox Ford Ford's French Lieutenant friendship Garnett German skipper guilt Hamlet Heart of Darkness hero Heyst honour human Ian Watt ibid isolated James Jeddah Jewel Jim's story Joseph Conrad judgement jump Karl and Davies letter Lingard literary Lord Jim Malay Archipelago Malays manuscript Marlow mind moral Moser Najder Narcissus Nigger Nostromo novelist omniscient narrator Patna Patusan personality Preface protagonist Razumov reader reality relationship Richard Curle romantic Sarawak says Secret Sharer seems seen sense ship Singapore solidarity spoken narrative Stephen Crane suggest suicide takes tale tell tragedy truth Verleun Victory Western Eyes white Rajah World's Classics edition writing young Zdzisław Najder