| Thomas Love Peacock - 1875 - 834 sider
...this system, and confined himself to the common business of life. They had little comparative success. Brown's four novels, Schiller's Robbers, and Goethe's...was familiar, those which took the deepest root in his mind, and had the strongest influence in the formation of his character. He was an assiduous student... | |
| Thomas Love Peacock - 1875 - 496 sider
...common business of life. They had little comparative success. Brown's four novels, Schiller's Bobbers, and Goethe's Faust, were, of all the works with which...was familiar, those ' which took the deepest root in his mind, and had the strongest influence in the formation of his character. He was an assiduous student... | |
| Thomas Love Peacock - 1875 - 494 sider
...common business of life. They had little comparative success. ((Brown's four novels, Schiller's Bobbers, and Goethe's Faust, were, of all the works with which...was familiar, those which took the deepest root in his mind^and had the strongest influence in the formation of his character. He_jsas__an, .._, _assidm}us.... | |
| Charles Francis Richardson - 1888 - 1044 sider
...Brockden Brown's sad eye miss. Edward Dowden, in his life of Shelley, tells us that Brown's novels, with Schiller's "Robbers" and Goethe's "Faust," "were —...strongest influence in the formation of his character." That high poet looked beyond the timidly conventional and the obviously apparent, and found a thought-kinsman,... | |
| Halkett Lord, Richard Halkett - 1888 - 572 sider
...Dnwden says: 'Brown's four novels, Schiller's 'Robbers,' and Goethe's 'Faust' were — of all tlie works with which he was familiar— those which took...strongest influence in the formation of his character. AMONO the most important literary events of the season is the arrangement by the Messrs. W. * R. Chambers... | |
| 1888 - 892 sider
...you that Brown's novels, " Faust," and " The Robbers" were the books which took the deepest hold on Shelley's mind and had the strongest influence in the formation of his character, that the Encyclopaedia Britannica calls Brown the precursor and only American rival of Hawthorne, that... | |
| Walter Cochrane Bronson - 1900 - 392 sider
...republished there, and *Jane Talbot was published there first. " Brown's [best] four novels," says Peacock, " Schiller's Robbers, and Goethe's Faust, were, of all...those which took the deepest root in Shelley's mind." — Dowden's life of Shelley, Vol. 1., p. 472. fortunately, is not a permanent and essential feature... | |
| Karl Julius Theodor Zeiger - 1901 - 80 sider
...I, 61. Anm. 2) Peacock sagt (zitiert von Dowden, Shelley I, 472): »Brown's (Charles Brockden Brown) four novels, Schiller's Robbers and Goethe's Faust...strongest influence in the formation of his character". H. Druskowitz hat der Behauptung Peacocks keine Bedeutung zuerkennen wollen, da des Dichters Charakter... | |
| Max Koch - 1901 - 534 sider
...61. Anm. *) Peacock sagt (zitiert von Dowden, Shelley I, 472): „Brown's (Charles Brockden Brown) four novels, Schiller's Robbers and Goethe's Faust...strongest influence in the formation of his character". H. Druskowitz hat der Behauptung Peacocks keine Bedeutung zuerkennen wollen, da des Dichters Charakter... | |
| William Hazlitt - 1904 - 454 sider
...(i8oi),and Jane Talbot (1804). The first four of these are mentioned by Peacock al amongst the book? ' which took the deepest root in Shelley's mind, and had the strongest influence on the formation of his character.' 310. Mr- Coaper. James Fenimore Cooper (1789-1851), whose most... | |
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