The Thomas Hardy Society Review, Volume 1,Edição 1Thomas Hardy Society., 1975 |
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Página 57
... experience , and uses that experience as material for creative literary work , he cannot afford , without being untrue to himself , to sidestep the issue and some- how leave himself out of the finished product . That is what Hardy did ...
... experience , and uses that experience as material for creative literary work , he cannot afford , without being untrue to himself , to sidestep the issue and some- how leave himself out of the finished product . That is what Hardy did ...
Página 278
... experience , so that sympathy and even identification become possible . Perhaps they are closer to Hardy's experience too ! But there is more to it than this , though it is something more easily felt than analysed . It comes out of the ...
... experience , so that sympathy and even identification become possible . Perhaps they are closer to Hardy's experience too ! But there is more to it than this , though it is something more easily felt than analysed . It comes out of the ...
Página 307
... experience of Hardy on his visit to Findon . The clue lies in the manuscript Memories of Findon by a resident there , Jane Wakeham Millen ( 1870-1942 ) , who describes an experience of her childhood . ' I remember the hounds at the ...
... experience of Hardy on his visit to Findon . The clue lies in the manuscript Memories of Findon by a resident there , Jane Wakeham Millen ( 1870-1942 ) , who describes an experience of her childhood . ' I remember the hounds at the ...
Outras edições - Ver tudo
The Thomas Hardy Society Review, Volume 1,Edição 10 Thomas Hardy Society Visualização de excertos - 1984 |
The Thomas Hardy Society Review, Volume 1,Edição 2 Thomas Hardy Society Visualização de excertos - 1976 |
The Thomas Hardy Society Review, Volume 1,Edição 3 Thomas Hardy Society Visualização de excertos - 1977 |
Palavras e frases frequentes
Alec Angel appears Arabella Bathsheba beautiful biographical Boldwood chapter characters Christminster church Clym critics d'Urbervilles dance death Desperate Remedies Dorchester Dorset County dramatic Dynasts edition Egdon Emma English essays Eustacia F. B. Pinion feeling Felice Festival fiction Fitzpiers Florence Gabriel Giles Gittings HARDY SOCIETY REVIEW Hardy wrote Hardy's novels Harold Orel heath Henchard interest J. O. Bailey Jude the Obscure Jude's Lady Laodicean later lectures letter literary living London lovers Macmillan Madding Crowd Marty Max Gate Mayor of Casterbridge Melbury nature never notes novelist Paula play poem poet poetry present prose publication published Puddletown reader reference Retty's Phases Return Robert Gittings scene seems Somerset St Juliot Stancy stanza Stinsford story Sturminster Newton suggest T. E. Lawrence Tess Tess's theme Thomas Hardy Society thought Toller Whelme trees Tryphena walk Well-Beloved Wessex Weymouth woman Woodlanders words writing written young