The Writer, 25. sējumsThe Writer, 1913 |
No grāmatas satura
1.–5. rezultāts no 44.
1. lappuse
... sent in to a manager by mail has only about one chance in three hundred of reaching the big man at all , and a much smaller chance of ever going into rehearsal . One reason is that so many people are sending plays to managers that the ...
... sent in to a manager by mail has only about one chance in three hundred of reaching the big man at all , and a much smaller chance of ever going into rehearsal . One reason is that so many people are sending plays to managers that the ...
4. lappuse
... sent in payment for sub- scriptions . THE WRITER will be sent only to those who have paid for it in advance . Accounts cannot be opened for subscriptions , and names will not be en- tered on the list unless the subscription order is ...
... sent in payment for sub- scriptions . THE WRITER will be sent only to those who have paid for it in advance . Accounts cannot be opened for subscriptions , and names will not be en- tered on the list unless the subscription order is ...
6. lappuse
... sent him away . He then became a press agent for a carnival show , and traveled all over the United States until the show closed , when he and a partner put out a repertoire show , playing one - week stands in the " tank " towns of the ...
... sent him away . He then became a press agent for a carnival show , and traveled all over the United States until the show closed , when he and a partner put out a repertoire show , playing one - week stands in the " tank " towns of the ...
8. lappuse
... sent to Texas and Mexico at the time of the Madero revolution . It was while on this assignment that he witnessed the riotous expulsion of President Diaz from his capital and followed him to Vera Cruz and thence to Havana on the first ...
... sent to Texas and Mexico at the time of the Madero revolution . It was while on this assignment that he witnessed the riotous expulsion of President Diaz from his capital and followed him to Vera Cruz and thence to Havana on the first ...
20. lappuse
... sent in payment for sub- scriptions . THE WRITER will be sent only to those who have paid for it in advance . Accounts cannot be opened for subscriptions , and names will not be entered on the list unless the subscription order is ...
... sent in payment for sub- scriptions . THE WRITER will be sent only to those who have paid for it in advance . Accounts cannot be opened for subscriptions , and names will not be entered on the list unless the subscription order is ...
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Populāri fragmenti
133. lappuse - ... of fortune, albeit in an extreme degree, or on the other to boldly envisage adverse conditions in the prospect of eventually bringing them to a conclusion. The condition of sleep is similar to, if not indistinguishable from, that of death; and with the addition of finality the former might be considered identical with the latter: so that in this connection it might be argued with regard to sleep that, could the addition be effected, a termination would be put to the endurance of a multiplicity...
99. lappuse - My mind presents just such an assemblage of disjointed specimens of history, ancient and modern ; scraps of poetry picked up from Shakespeare, Cowper, Wordsworth, and Milton ; newspaper topics ; morsels of Addison and Bacon, Latin verbs, geometry, entomology, and chemistry; Reviews and metaphysics, — all arrested and petrified and smothered by the fast-thickening everyday accession of actual events, relative anxieties, and household cares and vexations.
124. lappuse - One reason why a play is easier to write than a novel." That fetched me. I did not want to know "one reason" for so outrageous a stroke of novelist's bluff. But the impetus of my reading carried me on, in spite of the shock; and so I learnt that this one reason is "that a play is shorter than a novel.
22. lappuse - ... interest in writing English. Some little kink in my mind had always made the writing of prose very interesting to me. "I began first to write literary articles, criticisms, and so forth, and presently short imaginative stories in which I made use of the teeming suggestions of modern science. There is a considerable demand for this sort of fiction in Great Britain and America, and my first book, The Time Machine...
105. lappuse - The reason why so few good books are written is that so few people that can write know anything. In general an author has always lived in a room, has read books, has cultivated science, is acquainted with the style and sentiments of the best authors, but he is out of the way of employing his own eyes and ears. He has nothing to hear and nothing to see. His life is a vacuum.
133. lappuse - To be, or the contrary? Whether the former or the latter be preferable would seem to admit of some difference of opinion; the answer in the present case being of an affirmative or of a negative character according as to whether one elects on the one hand to mentally suffer the disfavour of fortune, albeit in an extreme degree, or on the other to boldly envisage adverse conditions in the prospect of eventually bringing them to a conclusion.
182. lappuse - Co., inasmuch as they have also indorsed the very poor paper of . If Whitman had been able (he was not able, for he tried it and failed) to put his thought into artistic verse, he would have attracted little or no attention, perhaps. Where he is fine, he is fine in precisely the way of conventional poets. The greater bulk of his writing is neither prose nor verse, and certainly it is not an improvement on either.
22. lappuse - Englishspeaking world not merely a moderate financial independence, but the utmost freedom of movement and intercourse. A poor man is lifted out of his narrow circumstances into familiar and unrestrained intercourse with a great variety of people. He sees the world; if his work excites interest, he meets philosophers, scientific men, soldiers, artists, professional men, politicians of all sorts, the rich, the great, and he may make such use of them as he can.
182. lappuse - ... shoulder-blades or some abnormal organ to a well-regulated corpse. But he will never be regarded in the same light as Villon.