| Edgar Allan Poe, Rufus Wilmot Griswold, Nathaniel Parker Willis, James Russell Lowell - 1850 - 642 pagine
...nothing more than that he differs in his manner or tone, and in his choice of subjects, from any author of their acquaintance — their acquaintance not extending...absolutely identical •with that habitual to Hawthorne. But it is clear that the element of the literary originality is novelty. The element of its appreciation... | |
| Edgar Allan Poe - 1883 - 602 pagine
...nothing more than that he differs in his manner or tone, and in his choice of subjects, from any author of their acquaintance — their acquaintance not extending...absolutely identical with that habitual to Hawthorne. But it is clear that the element of the literary originality is novelty. The element of its appreciation... | |
| 1901 - 562 pagine
...nothing more than that he differs in his manner or tone, and in his choice of subjects, from any other writer of their acquaintance — their acquaintance...some of his works, is absolutely identical with that h ab itual to Hawthorne. But it is clear that the element of literary originality is novelty. The element... | |
| Henry Augustin Beers - 1901 - 452 pagine
...America," Poe acutely pointed out a resemblance between Hawthorne and Tieck; " whose manner," he asserts, " in some of his works, is absolutely identical with that habitual to Hawthorne." One finds a confirmation of this aperfu — or finds, at least, that Hawthorne was attracted by Tieck... | |
| Walter Just - 1910 - 104 pagine
...Ansicht Beldens, daß Poe "might in all honesty and with very little exaggeration say that Tieck's manner, in some of his works, is absolutely identical with that habitual to Hawthorne."4) Es wird wenige deut') Anglia XXIII, S. 399. *) Ludwig Tiecks Schriften XIV, 143. 3) Schönbach,... | |
| Walter Just - 1910 - 112 pagine
...Ansicht Beldens, daß Poe "might in all honesty and with very little exaggeration say that Tieck's mannen in some of his works, is absolutely identical with that habitual to Hawthorne." 4 ) Es wird wenige deut') Anglia XXIII, S. 399. 2 ) Ludwig T i eck s Schriften XIV, 143. •) Schönbach,... | |
| Dorothy Scarborough - 1917 - 352 pagine
...nothing more than that he differs in his manner or tone, and in his choice of subjects, from any author of their acquaintance — their acquaintance not extending...absolutely identical with that habitual to Hawthorne. . . . The critic (unacquainted with Tieck) who reads a single tale by Hawthorne may be justified in... | |
| Fred Lewis Pattee - 1923 - 410 pagine
...of Hawthorne in Tieck, even declaring that all who called him original betrayed their own ignorance, "their acquaintance not extending to the German Tieck,...his works is absolutely identical with that habitual with Hawthorne" — certainly a sweeping statement. A calmer and more truthful criticism came five... | |
| Edgar Allan Poe, Sherwin Cody - 1924 - 516 pagine
...nothing more than that he differs in his manner of tone, and in his choice of subjects, from any author of their acquaintance — their acquaintance not extending...absolutely identical with that habitual to Hawthorne. But it is clear that the element of the literary originality is novelty. The element of its appreciation... | |
| Edgar Allan Poe - 1926 - 230 pagine
...nothing more than that he differs in his manner or \tone, and in his choice of~sub]ects, from any author of their acquaintance — their acquaintance not extending...absolutely identical with that habitual to Hawthorne. But it is clear that the element of the literary originality is novelty. The element of its appreciation... | |
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