University of Toronto Quarterly, Volume 2University of Toronto Press, 1932 - Canada |
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Page 339
... effect on posterity . Dramatic critics , moreover , urge our younger writers to model them- selves on the great craftsmen of the past , forgetting that these , qua geniuses , are supposed to have attained , in their peculiar spheres ...
... effect on posterity . Dramatic critics , moreover , urge our younger writers to model them- selves on the great craftsmen of the past , forgetting that these , qua geniuses , are supposed to have attained , in their peculiar spheres ...
Page 340
... effect , then , of the genius of Racine and Molière was apparently not to fertilize , but to paralyze French tragedy and comedy for well - nigh a century ; to produce , not a galaxy of geniuses but a series of second - rate imitators ...
... effect , then , of the genius of Racine and Molière was apparently not to fertilize , but to paralyze French tragedy and comedy for well - nigh a century ; to produce , not a galaxy of geniuses but a series of second - rate imitators ...
Page 390
... effect precise transfer to the reader . Eliot has followed this programme entirely in the spirit of Hulme though beyond his letter . A very real effect of renovation is produced by the personal rhythm he gives to the conventional ...
... effect precise transfer to the reader . Eliot has followed this programme entirely in the spirit of Hulme though beyond his letter . A very real effect of renovation is produced by the personal rhythm he gives to the conventional ...
Contents
1932 No | 2 |
The Crisis in the Far East NORMAN MACKENZIE | 3 |
D C TAIT | 21 |
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