The Quarterly Review, Volume 266, Issue 527John Murray, 1936 |
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Page 60
... poetry has been growing ever increasingly isolated from direct contact with contem porary thought and action , while at the same time some thing of that high seriousness ' which has in the past characterised so much of the finest poetry ...
... poetry has been growing ever increasingly isolated from direct contact with contem porary thought and action , while at the same time some thing of that high seriousness ' which has in the past characterised so much of the finest poetry ...
Page 66
... poetry Hardy regarded nature , just as Wordsworth did , with the eye of a poet . However , he drew a very different ... poetry for prose fiction . The medium both of poetry and fiction is words , and in poetry these words achieve their ...
... poetry Hardy regarded nature , just as Wordsworth did , with the eye of a poet . However , he drew a very different ... poetry for prose fiction . The medium both of poetry and fiction is words , and in poetry these words achieve their ...
Page 67
... poetry the full spiritual content of the modern industrial age , and it is in these circumstances that we find the 10 % novel , in the hands of a great artist such as Hardy , invading a territory where poetry formerly reigned alone as ...
... poetry the full spiritual content of the modern industrial age , and it is in these circumstances that we find the 10 % novel , in the hands of a great artist such as Hardy , invading a territory where poetry formerly reigned alone as ...
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adultery agricultural authority Barney Barnato become Briand Britain British cent century Church contempt County Councils court Coxwold criticism death divorce Dorchester House doubt Dr Sterne economic effect Election element England English fact France French G. D. H. Cole Germany Gibbon give Government Grosvenor Grote Gustav Stresemann historian House important India industrial interest Journal to Eliza Labour Party Land Settlement Lawrence Sterne League of Nations less living Lloyd George Locarno London Londonderry House Lord mansion marriage married ment million acres Morrow nature never Nicolson novel novelists once opinion Park Lane Parliament peace perhaps philosophy poetry political politician possible present problem readers realise reason recognised regard religious remains residence result seems sense Sir Austen Sir Richard Grosvenor small-holdings social Street Stresemann tion to-day Vachel Lindsay volume whole wife Woolf writes