University of Toronto Quarterly, Volume 2University of Toronto Press, 1932 - Canada |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 84
Page 224
... character , in such a world as this it is not ignorance of this book that will crush them down ; there is no refuge but in the will . He cannot praise a fugitive and clois- tered virtue . The main vice he ascribes to his nameless hero ...
... character , in such a world as this it is not ignorance of this book that will crush them down ; there is no refuge but in the will . He cannot praise a fugitive and clois- tered virtue . The main vice he ascribes to his nameless hero ...
Page 237
... character is not so much by explicit description as in action , and especially by the method of direct juxtaposition of absolute con- trasts , plotting , so to speak , the position of a character by referring it simultaneously to two ...
... character is not so much by explicit description as in action , and especially by the method of direct juxtaposition of absolute con- trasts , plotting , so to speak , the position of a character by referring it simultaneously to two ...
Page 347
... character is projected on the stage when it has already reached supreme maturity . The author , by isolating its essential or basic trait , imagines a series of situations each one of which not merely adds to our knowledge of the character ...
... character is projected on the stage when it has already reached supreme maturity . The author , by isolating its essential or basic trait , imagines a series of situations each one of which not merely adds to our knowledge of the character ...
Contents
1932 No | 2 |
The Crisis in the Far East NORMAN MACKENZIE | 3 |
D C TAIT | 21 |
26 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
achieved Alexander Carlyle American amour-propre artist atoms beauty British Canada Canadian Carlyle character China civilization classical College comedy criticism Doll's House economic eighteenth century Eliot Empire England English Epicurus epigrams fact feel force Geetiks genius Goldwin Smith Herrick Hulme human Ibsen idea ideal industry intellectual interest Laodamia Latin League literary literature living Lucretius Marivaux material matter ment mind modern Molière moral Mozart Museum native nature never Newton Ontario passion perhaps philosophy plays poem poet poetry political problems Professor prose Proust reader realize reason Roman Royal Ontario Museums Royal Society Salieri Sartor Sartor Resartus scientific Scott seems sense social soul spirit T. E. Hulme T. S. Eliot theme theory things thought tion to-day trade truth University of Toronto Vergil verse wages whole women words Wordsworth writing