| George Herbert Palmer - 1918 - 338 str.
...his peculiarities. Announcement of that aim is made in the preface to "Sordello," where he writes: "My stress lay on the incidents in the development of a soul. Little else is worth study." Accordingly Browning pays the least possible attention to outward nature.... | |
| 1918 - 534 str.
...of his peculiarities. Announcement of that aim is made in the preface to Sordetto, where he writes: "My stress lay on the incidents in the development of a soul. Little else is worth study." Accordingly Browning pays the least possible attention to outward nature.... | |
| Robert Browning - 1921 - 1378 str.
...find it. The historical decoration was purposely of no more importance than a background requires; and hindrance interposed. "They climb; life's view is net at on : little else is worth study. I, at least, always thought «o — you, with many known and unknown... | |
| John A. Gregg - 1922 - 264 str.
...event has its value as a symbol of spiritual truth, cp. ch. xvi. 28. Like Robert Browning, he might say "My stress lay on the incidents in the development of a soul : little else is worth study," more powerful] Even than Jacob's own astuteness, cp. I Tim. iv. 8. 13.... | |
| William Valentine Kelley - 1922 - 358 str.
...throbbing life of struggling, tempted, and aspiring men. In the dedication of "Sordello" he wrote : "My stress lay on the incidents in the development of a soul ; little else is worth study ; I at least always thought so." His stress is not on circumstances, situations,... | |
| Percy Stickney Grant - 1922 - 190 str.
...work. "The historical decoration was purposely of no more importance than a background requires, and my stress lay on the incidents in the development of a soul." The only new factors in this story are mechanical ones. In Paracelsus I called attention to a method... | |
| Pierre Dareutiere de Bâcourt, John William Cunliffe - 1923 - 426 str.
...he wished to display "Action in character rather than Character in Action," and he wrote elsewhere, "My stress lay on the incidents in the development of a soul; little else is worth study." With the dramas of both of these poets Maeterlinck was acquainted ; but... | |
| Charles Kenneth Scott-Moncrieff - 1923 - 164 str.
...spirits whose metier is the analysis of difficult souls. Browning wrote in regard to his Bordello : " My stress lay on the incidents in the development of a soul: little else is worth study; I, at 141 least, always thought so." This certainly applies to Proust ;... | |
| John Buchan - 1923 - 746 str.
...Browning afterwards declared, " was purposely of no more importance than a background requires ; and my stress lay on the incidents in the development of a soul ; little else is worth study " (Dedication, 1863). Each of these early poems " is in its different... | |
| Sir Walter Alexander Raleigh, Walter Raleigh - 1926 - 236 str.
...subject, for all his searching and wide intelligence. As he says in the Dedication of Sordello : " My stress lay on the incidents in the development of a soul; little else is worth study." An idealism like this is not liable to the melancholy of the Romantics... | |
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