But he is not subtle; and I don't see any internal centre from which springs anything that he does. He will make a great name, but whether he is to distinguish himself solidly as an Artist, I would not willingly prognosticate. The Edinburgh Review: Or Critical Journal - 第 265 頁1917完整檢視 - 關於此書
| George Meredith - 1912 - 354 頁
...Whitestick, Bishop of Londres, ravishes the heroine, is quite marvellous. But he is not subtle; and I don't see any internal centre from which springs...as an Artist, I would not willingly prognosticate. Rossetti is going to illustrate my Cassandra, which pome has taken his heart. I am obliged to make... | |
| George Meredith - 1912 - 708 頁
...Whitestick, Bishop of Londres, ravishes the heroine, is quite marvellous. But he is not subtle; and I don't see any internal centre from which springs...as an Artist, I would not willingly prognosticate. Rossetti is going to illustrate my Cassandra, which pome has taken his heart. To William Hardman. ESHER,... | |
| George Meredith - 1912 - 356 頁
...Whitestick, Bishop of Londres, ravishes the heroine, is quite marvellous. But he is not subtle; and I don't see any internal centre from which springs...as an Artist, I would not willingly prognosticate. Rossetti is going to illustrate my Cassandra, which pome has taken his heart. To William Hardman. ESHEB,... | |
| George Meredith - 1912 - 350 頁
...Whitcstick, Bishop of Londres, ravishes the heroine, is quite marvellous. But he is not subtle ; and I don't see any internal centre from which springs...as an Artist, I would not willingly prognosticate. Rossetti is going to illustrate my Cassandra, which pome has taken his heart. I am obliged to make... | |
| George Meredith - 1912 - 360 頁
...Whitestick, Bishop of Londres, ravishes the heroine, is quite marvellous. But he is not subtle; and I don't see any internal centre from which springs...as an Artist, I would not willingly prognosticate. Rossetti is going to illustrate my Cassandra, which pome has taken his heart. I am obliged to make... | |
| Frank Harris - 1915 - 380 頁
...wield." But many years before he had put his finger on the poet's weakness: Swinburne is not subtle; and I don't see any internal centre from which springs...as an artist I would not willingly prognosticate. No greatness seemed to escape him; his judgments even of Russian writers show the same intuitive appreciation.... | |
| Edmund Gosse - 1917 - 408 頁
...nothing, and he was not so implicitly delighted by Swinburne. He wrote of him: "He is not subtle : and I don't see any internal centre from which springs...as an artist, I would not willingly prognosticate." In this dubious attitude, Meredith remained during the rest of his life ; in fact, why should it be... | |
| Arthur Quiller-Couch - 1918 - 344 頁
...noted) the true tragedy of profligate living is that "it hardens a' within, and petrifies the feeling." But we think George Meredith came nearer to diagnosing...there was no log left "leaning back," in his master Lander's image, with a male, slow, generating core of fire. Set apart Hertha, that glorious poem, Swinburne's... | |
| Stuart Petre Brodie Mais - 1920 - 356 頁
...been. " I don't see any internal centre from which springs anything that he does," writes Meredith. " He will make a great name, but whether he is to distinguish...as an artist I would not willingly prognosticate." " Set apart Hertha, that glorious poem," comments " Q," " Swinburne's own best beloved, and all the... | |
| Stuart Petre Brodie Mais - 1920 - 358 頁
...complete picture of the great poet that he was, and the great prose writer that he might have been. " I don't see any internal centre from which springs anything that he does," writes Meredith. " He will make a great name, but whether he is to distinguish himself solidly as an... | |
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