| 1903 - 1046 páginas
...consequence. There is simply no limit, in fine, to the misfortune of being tasteless; it doesn't simply disfigure the surface and the fringe of your performance...Fécondité, which are without a sense of the ridiculous, books like Vérité, which are without the finer vision of human experience. It is marked that in each... | |
| 1904 - 704 páginas
...consequence. There is simply no limit, in fine, to the misfortune of being tasteless; it doesn't simply disfigure the surface and the fringe of your performance...life. When you have no taste you have no discretion, and when you have no discretion you perpetrate books like Rome, which are without intellectual modesty;... | |
| 1907 - 1100 páginas
...sentence the natural aversion of the fastidious ar.d cultivated mind for the excesses of M. Zola's art. When you have no taste you have no discretion, which...which are without intellectual modesty, books like Fecundite, which are without a sense of the ridiculous, books like Veritc, which are without the finer... | |
| 1907 - 686 páginas
...Huysmans — the exquisite literary critic that is Huysmans — in the work. If, as Henry James remarks, " When you have no taste you have no discretion — which is the conscience of taste," then Huysmans must be acclaimed a man of unexampled tact. His handling of a wellnigh impossible theme,... | |
| James Huneker - 1909 - 404 páginas
...Huysmans — the exquisite literary critic that is Huysmans — in the work. If, as Henry James remarks: "When you have no taste you have no discretion — which is the conscience of taste," then Huysmans must be acclaimed a man of unexampled tact. His handling of a well-nigh impossible theme,... | |
| James Huneker - 1921 - 428 páginas
...Huysmans — the exquisite literary critic that is Huysmans — in the work. If, as Henry James remarks: "When you have no taste you have no discretion — which is the conscience of taste," then Huysmans must be acclaimed a man of unexampled tact. His handling of a well-nigh impossible theme,... | |
| Henry James - 1914 - 476 páginas
...consequence. There is simply no limit, in fine, to the misfortune of being tasteless; it does not merely disfigure the surface and the fringe of your performance...which are without intellectual modesty, books like "Fecondite," which are without a sense of the ridiculous, books like "Verite," which are without the... | |
| Henry James - 1914 - 482 páginas
...is simply no limit, in fine, to the1 misfortune of being tasteless; it does not merely dis-' figure the surface and the fringe of your performance —...which are without intellectual modesty, books like "Fecondite," which are without a sense of the ridiculous, books like "Verite," which are without the... | |
| James Huneker - 1917 - 390 páginas
...particular sort of writing; that the province of fiction is all life, and he has also wisely remarked that "when you have no taste you have no discretion, which is the conscience of taste," and may we add, when you have no discretion you perpetrate the shocking fiction with which America is deluged... | |
| James Huneker - 1917 - 386 páginas
...writing; that the province of fiction is all life, and he has also wisely remarked that "when you havfc no taste you have no discretion, which is the conscience of taste," and may we add, when you have no discretion you perpetrate the shocking fiction with which America is deluged... | |
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