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tioned more briefly than they deserve: "French Prose Symbolism," by H. C. Greene, and in fiction "Mary Andrews" by L. P. Haskell, and "One Woman's Comedy," by W. T. Denison. The last are excellent...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 6/1/1894 | See Source »

...fiction of the number, there is once more noticeable an unfortunate lack of originality. The fault in the Advocate stories is not so much in the treatment of the subject as in the subject treated. The articles, at least in the present number, are very well written. It is only the uninteresting assurance of what is to come, that in a measure spoils the pleasure in following the development of a plot...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Advocate. | 4/27/1894 | See Source »

...opening article of the Monthly for April, Professor F. C. de Sumichrast discusses the adaptations to the French of the plays of Shakespeare, and the influence of that great English poet on the French dramatists. The rest of the number is given up to fiction, with articles by L. W. Hopkinson, J. P. Warren, J. Waterman, J. T. Stickney, and J. P. Welsh...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Monthly. | 4/25/1894 | See Source »

...answer to this question Mr. Copeland had collected lists from some thirty persons of different ages and occupations. Some few of these lists he read, after a consideration of the qualities which would in general be demanded of novels which were alone to represent the whole mass of fiction...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Mr. Copeland's Lecture. | 4/17/1894 | See Source »

...brain, in material breadth scarce a span, yet infinite as space and time? and in what, I pray, are those we gravely call historical characters, of which each new historian strains his neck to get a new and different view, in any sense more real than the personages of fiction? Do not serious and earnest men discuss Hamlet as they would Cromwell or Lincoln? Does Caesar, does Alaric, hold existence by any other or stronger tenure than the Christian of Bunyan or the Don Quixote of Cervantes or the Antigone of Sophocles? Is not the history which...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Books and Libraries. | 3/30/1894 | See Source »

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