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Logan Pearsall Smith (1865–1946)

Autor von Unforgotten years

41+ Werke 466 Mitglieder 11 Rezensionen Lieblingsautor von 2 Lesern

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Werke von Logan Pearsall Smith

Unforgotten years (1949) 76 Exemplare
On Reading Shakespeare (1933) 43 Exemplare
The English Language (1912) 36 Exemplare
Philadelphia Quaker : the letters of Hannah Whitall Smith (1950) — Herausgeber — 35 Exemplare
Trivia (1902) — Herausgeber — 28 Exemplare
The Golden Grove (1930) — Herausgeber — 23 Exemplare
A treasury of English prose (1943) 12 Exemplare
A Treasury of English Aphorisms (1928) 11 Exemplare
More Trivia (2007) 10 Exemplare

Zugehörige Werke

Die fremde Dienerin (1955) — Mitwirkender — 274 Exemplare
The Looking Glass Book of Stories (1960) — Mitwirkender — 21 Exemplare
Masquerade: Queer Poetry in America to the End of World War II (2004) — Mitwirkender — 19 Exemplare
The Panorama of Modern Literature (1934) — Mitwirkender — 14 Exemplare

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Includes a letter from the author to Dobell
 
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AlexHofmann | Nov 18, 2021 |
Odd snippets of almost dreamlike oddness: musings and thought-experiments.
 
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AgedPeasant | 2 weitere Rezensionen | Aug 24, 2020 |
Son of two American Gurneyite ministers (one disgraced) moves to Europe, learns lapidary writing
 
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PAFM | 2 weitere Rezensionen | Oct 19, 2019 |
[From A Writer’s Notebook, Doubleday & Company, 1949, “1941”, p. 341:]

I have been reading Santayana again. It is a very pleasant exercise, but after you have finished a chapter and stop to ask yourself whether you are the better or the wiser for having read it you hardly know what to answer. He is commonly praised for his fine phrases, but a phrase is fine when it elucidates a meaning; his too often obscure it. He has great gifts, gifts of imagery, of metaphor, of apt simile and of brilliant illustration; but I do not know that philosophy needs the decoration of a luxuriance so lush. It distracts the reader’s attention from the argument and he may well be left with an uneasy feeling that if that were more cogent it would have been stated in a manner less elaborate.

I think Santayana has acquired his reputation in America owing to the pathetically diffident persuasion of Americans that what is foreign must have a value greater than what is native. So they will offer you with pride French Camembert regardless of the fact that their own home-made product is just as good, and generally much better, than the imported. To my mind Santayana is a man who took the wrong turning. With his irony, his sharp tongue, common-sense and worldly wisdom, his sensitive understanding, I have a notion that he could have written semi-philosophical romances after the manner of Anatole France which it would have been an enduring delight to read. He had a wider culture than the Frenchman, a wit as keen, a less circumscribed horizon and an intelligence of a more delicate calibre. It was a loss to American literature when Santayana decided to become a philosopher rather than a novelist. As it is he is most profitably read in the little essays which Pearsall Smith extracted from his works.
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WSMaugham | Sep 13, 2019 |

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Werke
41
Auch von
4
Mitglieder
466
Beliebtheit
#52,775
Bewertung
4.0
Rezensionen
11
ISBNs
43
Sprachen
4
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2

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