Casanova in LondonStein and Day, 1971 - 198 páginas "In the New Statesman, TLS, the Spectator, the New York Times and Harper's Bazaar among others, these short pieces appeared in other forms as book reviews, an introduction, etc. but all of them display Mr. Quennell's immanent virtues -- the well-informed insights so pleasantly styled. There are twenty-five figures, chiefly old with the exception of [Robert] Graves and [Evelyn] Waugh, and from both sides of the Channel. The title essay deals with the indignities Casanova suffered in London in 1763 in the hands and even in the bed of a malicious demi-mondame. There's Victor Hugo and George Sand in the setting sun of old age; [André] Gide, married to a woman who aroused devotion but could not awake desire while [James] Boswell, the dissolute, was anything but faithful; [Daniel] Defoe's transformation of Alexander Selkirk's story; Waugh, the 'greatest novelist' of this generation; that lovable old La Rochefoucauld; and the 'magician of pleasure,' [Guillaume] Apollinaire. One or two unknowns, generally speaking, Anthony Hamilton and [Henry] Mayhew and perhaps the Goncourts whose pursuit of l'art pour l'art is like Quennell's, a rebuke to our own 'slovenly and hall-hearted age.' Even in this minimal form, the essays represent a perfectly proportioned judgment and taste."--Kirkus Reviews. |
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Página 133
... sense of humour . That sense of humour does not yet show signs of dating . It would be difficult to improve , for example , as an essay in literary low comedy , on Hamilton's account of how Killigrew and Rochester manage to persuade ...
... sense of humour . That sense of humour does not yet show signs of dating . It would be difficult to improve , for example , as an essay in literary low comedy , on Hamilton's account of how Killigrew and Rochester manage to persuade ...
Página 183
... sense of that formidable divinity : " The woman whom he took to be a Muse , or who was a Muse , turns into a domestic woman and would have him turn simi- larly into a domesticated man .... ' For the White Goddess , he explains , ' is ...
... sense of that formidable divinity : " The woman whom he took to be a Muse , or who was a Muse , turns into a domestic woman and would have him turn simi- larly into a domesticated man .... ' For the White Goddess , he explains , ' is ...
Página 184
... sense of mystery , his instinctive feeling for the numinous ; and he uses the Islamic word baraka , as he once ... sense of wonder . In his own poetry that sense of wonder persists - wonder combined with delight and dread . Like 184.
... sense of mystery , his instinctive feeling for the numinous ; and he uses the Islamic word baraka , as he once ... sense of wonder . In his own poetry that sense of wonder persists - wonder combined with delight and dread . Like 184.
Índice
Acknowledgments | 1 |
The Goncourts | 25 |
Ego Hugo 4555 | 45 |
Direitos de autor | |
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