| Franklin Verzelius Newton Painter - 1897 - 554 str.
...helped me ; he has not influenced me in aesthetics only, but in ethics too, so that I can never again see life in the way I saw it before I knew him." mirror up to nature. Unfortunately, the realists have not, in many cases, been true to their fundamental... | |
| John Clark Ridpath - 1898 - 522 str.
...Howells ; " he has not influenced me in aesthetics only, but ethics, too, so that I can never again see life in the way I saw it before I knew him. Tolstoi awakens in his reader the will to be a man; not effectively, not spectacularly, but simply,... | |
| Franklin Verzelius Newton Painter - 1903 - 600 str.
...helped me ; he has not influenced me in aesthetics only, but in ethics too, so that I can never again see life in the way I saw it before I knew him." As an effort truly to represent life we must acknowledge the worth of realism. In its proper application,... | |
| William Morton Payne - 1904 - 350 str.
...helped me ; he has not influenced me in aesthetics only, but in ethics, too, so that I can never again see life in the way I saw it before I knew him. Tolstoy...He leads you back to the only true ideal, away from that false standard of the gentleman, to the Man who sought not to be distinguished from other men,... | |
| William Morton Payne - 1904 - 346 str.
...helped me; he has not influenced me in aesthetics only, but in ethics, too, so that I can never again see life in the way I saw it before I knew him. tTolstoy awakens in his reader the will to be a man; not effectively, not spectacularly, but simply,... | |
| William Dean Howells - 1910 - 332 str.
...helped me; he has not influenced me in aesthetics only, but in ethics, too, so that I can never again see life in the way I saw it before I knew him. Tolstoy...He leads you back to the only true ideal, away from that false standard of the gentleman, to the Man who sought not to be distinguished from other men,... | |
| Alice Vinton Waite, Edith Mendall Taylor - 1911 - 442 str.
...(1886) BY LEO TOLSTOI (1828-) WD Howells says of his master passion, Tolstoi, that he " awakens in the reader the will to be a man, not effectively, not spectacularly, but simply, really." As one reads Tolstoi's own carefully thought-out sentences on " What is Art ? " one finds this to be... | |
| George Park Fisher, George Burton Adams, Henry Walcott Farnam, Arthur Twining Hadley, John Christopher Schwab, William Fremont Blackman, Edward Gaylord Bourne, Irving Fisher, Henry Crosby Emery, Wilbur Lucius Cross - 1912 - 756 str.
...begin with, has said of Tolstoi, in the charming record of his literary passions, "I can never again see life in the way I saw it before I knew him." I believe, too, that these novels, like all manifestations of energy, serious, sustained, and aspiring,... | |
| Mary Griffin Webb, Edna Lenore Webb - 1914 - 642 str.
...influence of the great Russian writer Tolstoy. "Tolstoy awakens in his readers the will to be a man ; not spectacularly, but simply, really. He leads you back to the only true ideal, away from that false standard of the gentleman, to the Man who sought not to be distinguished from other men,... | |
| Leo Tolstoy - 1917 - 636 str.
...helped me ; he has not influenced me in aesthetics only, but in ethics, too, so that I can never again see life in the way I saw it before I knew him. Tolstoy...He leads you back to the only true ideal, away from that false standard of the gentleman, to the Man who sought not to be distinguished from other men,... | |
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