Storied Cities: Literary Imaginings of Florence, Venice, and RomeBloomsbury Academic, 1994 - 310 頁 The fabled cities of Italy--Florence, Venice, and Rome--have each acquired a distinctive tradition of literary representation involving characteristic, recurrent motifs and symbolic signatures. A wealth of writing on each is examined in fiction and poetry of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries mainly by British and American authors. Included are works by Robert Browning on Florence and Rome; George Eliot, W.D. Howells, E.M. Forster, and D.H. Lawrence on Florence; Charles Dickens, Thomas Mann, L.P. Hartley, and Anthony Hecht on Venice; Arthur Hugh Clough, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Edith Wharton, and Aldous Huxley on Rome; and Henry James and Bernard Malamud on Florence, Venice, and Rome. |
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第 1 到 3 筆結果,共 62 筆
... seems a fantastic vision , from which the world must at last awake some morning , and find that after all it has only been dreaming , and that there never was any such city " ( 113 ) . " Well might it seem , " says the doyen of ...
... seems . It is the same reassurance that a looking - glass offers us : the guarantee that we are real " ( 150 ) . She ... seem so interfused and , as it were , so consanguineous . All the splendour of light and colour , all the Venetian ...
... seems disquietingly eager to bypass the tinted reality of Rome , if not indeed the great , staining dome of life itself . Hilda is one of the " young and pure " who " may have heard much of the evil of the world , and seem to know it ...
內容
A Tale of Three Cities | 1 |
The Etrurian Athens | 17 |
Robert Brownings Dialectical City | 29 |
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