The Life and Work of Ford Madox FordHorizon Press, 1965 - 298 pàgines |
Des de l'interior del llibre
Resultats 1 - 3 de 46.
Pàgina 68
... merely adventure and excitement . Rather it was the living of a life according to a code of morality that was ideal rather than real . This dichotomy was eventually to emerge as Ford's central concern as a novelist . While naturally ...
... merely adventure and excitement . Rather it was the living of a life according to a code of morality that was ideal rather than real . This dichotomy was eventually to emerge as Ford's central concern as a novelist . While naturally ...
Pàgina 113
... merely by dismissing Dowell as a simpleton . Soon enough one realizes that he does not realize the implications of his own passivity and that he misinter- prets the actions of others . Yet he is not wholly a fool . Throughout the novel ...
... merely by dismissing Dowell as a simpleton . Soon enough one realizes that he does not realize the implications of his own passivity and that he misinter- prets the actions of others . Yet he is not wholly a fool . Throughout the novel ...
Pàgina 243
... merely that it would be wiser to avoid world - wide slaughter and misery by getting rid of the machine civilization beforehand . Provence and Great Trade Route are not , however , tracts for the times : they do not propose any doctrines ...
... merely that it would be wiser to avoid world - wide slaughter and misery by getting rid of the machine civilization beforehand . Provence and Great Trade Route are not , however , tracts for the times : they do not propose any doctrines ...
Continguts
One BROWNS AND HUEFFERS | 1 |
Two MARRIAGE | 27 |
Three CONRAD COLLABORATION | 36 |
Copyright | |
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able Allen Tate American amongst Ancient Lights appeared artistic Ashburnham attitude became called characters collaboration cottage course criticism D. H. Lawrence doubtless Dowell editor Edward Garnett England English Review experience Ezra Pound father fiction Ford later Ford Madox Ford Ford Madox Hueffer Ford wrote Ford's France Francis Hueffer French friends Galsworthy German Gertrude Stein Henry James human immense interest Joseph Conrad Joyce Katherine knew Letter from Conrad literary live London Madox Brown magazine March of Literature Marwood Masterman ment merely moved never noted novel novelist Olivet Parade's End Paris poem poetry poets political Pre-Raphaelite prose Provence published realized reminiscences result Richard Aldington rôle Romance Rossetti seems social Soldier soon sort Stella Bowen story Sylvia tetralogy things Tietjens tion took Toulon verse Violet Hunt wanted whole words writing written York young