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Browsing named entities in a specific section of Thomas Wentworth Higginson, The new world and the new book. Search the whole document.
Found 30 total hits in 22 results.
Louis Agassiz (search for this): chapter 17
Alcott (search for this): chapter 17
Bayard (search for this): chapter 17
XVI
On the proposed abolition of the plot
it was said of the romantic Muse in Germany —of the Pegasus, or winged horse of Uhland—that, like its colleague, the famous war-horse Bayard, it possessed all possible virtues and but one fault, that it was dead.
It is in this decisive way that Mr. Howells and others deal with the plot in stories and dramas; they decline to argue the matter, but simply assert that the plot is extinct.
If any one doubts the assertion they would perhaps still decline to argue the matter, and simply extend the assertion to any critic who differed from them, pointing out that he must be dead also.
It may be so, since there may always be room for such a possibility.
Tyrawley and I, said Walpole's old statesman, have been dead these two years; but we don't let anybody know it.
In the matter of literary criticism, however, the fact is just the other way. The critics who cling to the plot are not aware of their own demise; but Mr. Howells has found it out.
W. H. Channing (search for this): chapter 17
Charles Darwin (search for this): chapter 17
Arthur Dimmesdale (search for this): chapter 17
Margaret Fuller (search for this): chapter 17
Grant (search for this): chapter 17
Heinrich Heine (search for this): chapter 17
W. D. Howells (search for this): chapter 17