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innashpitzberg14 апреля 2013 г.With a relation NOT imaginative to his material the storyteller has nothing whatever to do.
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innashpitzberg14 апреля 2013 г.Читать далееThe truth is that what a happy thought has to give depends immensely on the general turn of the mind capable of it, and on the fact that its loyal entertainer, cultivating fondly its possible relations and extensions, the bright efflorescence latent in it, but having to take other things in their order too, is terribly at the mercy of his mind. That organ has only to exhale, in its degree, a fostering tropic air in order to produce complications almost beyond reckoning. The trap laid for his superficial convenience resides in the fact that, though the relations of a human figure or a social occurrence are what make such objects interesting, they also make them, to the same tune, difficult to isolate, to surround with the sharp black line, to frame in the square, the circle, the charming oval, that helps any arrangement of objects to become a picture. The storyteller has but to have been condemned by nature to a liberally amused and beguiled, a richly sophisticated, view of relations and a fine inquisitive speculative sense for them, to find himself at moments flounder in a deep warm jungle.
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innashpitzberg14 апреля 2013 г.Читать далееThe little ideas one wouldn't have treated save for the design of keeping them small, the developed situations that one would never with malice prepense have undertaken, the long stories that had thoroughly meant to be short, the short subjects that had underhandedly plotted to be long, the hypocrisy of modest beginnings, the audacity of misplaced middles, the triumph of intentions never entertained-with these patches, as I look about, I see my experience paved: an experience to which nothing is wanting save, I confess, some grasp of its final lesson.
This lesson would, if operative, surely provide some law for the recognition, the determination in advance, of the just limits and the just extent of the situation, ANY situation, that appeals, and that yet, by the presumable, the helpful law of situations, must have its reserves as well as its promises. The storyteller considers it because it promises, and undertakes it, often, just because also making out, as he believes, where the promise conveniently drops.7107
innashpitzberg17 августа 2014 г."Never! Well, with ME" said the Duchess with spirit, "she would be all."
"'All' is soon said! Life is composed of many things," Mrs. Brookenham gently rang out.687
innashpitzberg6 сентября 2014 г.We've supposed we've had it all, have squeezed the last impression out of the last disappointment, penetrated to the last familiarity in the last surprise; then some fine day we find that we haven't done justice to life. There are little things that pop up and make us feel again.
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innashpitzberg17 августа 2014 г.Mrs. Brookenham, who had many talents, had none perhaps that she oftener found useful than that of listening with the appearance of being fairly hypnotised.
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innashpitzberg17 августа 2014 г.Exhibition may mean in a "story" twenty different ways, fifty excursions, alternatives, excrescences, and the novel, as largely practised in English, is the perfect paradise of the loose end.
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innashpitzberg27 сентября 2014 г.«You're proud about it-too proud!»
«Well, what if I am?» He looked at her with a complexity of communication that no words could have meddled with. «Pride's all right when it helps one to bear things.»436
innashpitzberg26 сентября 2014 г.«Oh there's no joy without danger» – Mrs. Brook took it up with spirit. «Perhaps one should even say there's no danger without joy.»
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