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More "Stylist" Quotes from Famous Books



... the stylist's concentration on words which exalts them above the things they body forth. The most vivid and beautiful description of dawn in ...
— The Healthy Life, Vol. V, Nos. 24-28 - The Independent Health Magazine • Various

... fresh point of view, and a radiant style. He has imagination and he understands the gentle art of arranging facts in kaleidoscopic patterns so that they may attract and not repel the reader. America, indeed, has not produced a round dozen authors who equal him as a brilliant stylist with a great deal to say. And yet this man, who wrote some of his best books in the Eighties and who is still alive, has been allowed to drift into comparative oblivion. Even his early reviewers shoved him impatiently aside or ignored him altogether; a writer in "Belford's Magazine" for July, ...
— The Merry-Go-Round • Carl Van Vechten

... would that you in America would take him to heart. He is a tonic, a deep refreshing drink, with a strange and wonderful flavour; he is a mine of new interests, and ways of thought instinctively right. As a simple narrator he is well-nigh unsurpassed; as a stylist he has few, if any, living equals. And in all his work there is an indefinable freedom from any thought of after-benefit—even from the desire that we should read him. He puts down what he sees and feels, out of sheer love of the thing seen, and the ...
— Green Mansions - A Romance of the Tropical Forest • W. H. Hudson

... mask. There are many who see in his poetry only the mask, and who are apparently blind to the passion of sorrowful ecstasy that sets The Wind Among the Reeds apart from every other book that has ever been written in English. They imagine that the book amounts to little more than the attitude of a stylist, a trifler with ...
— Old and New Masters • Robert Lynd

... must; that's all. But that's a small thing. What I really wonder at is that, with all your experience, you are not more of a stylist." ...
— Imaginary Interviews • W. D. Howells

... Finally, his written and spoken language had none of those brilliant and ingenious curiosities of phrase which pleased in literary and fashionable circles. This inexhaustibly prolific writer is not in the least a stylist. In this respect he is inferior to Apuleius, or Tertullian, though he leaves them far behind in the qualities of sincere and deep sentiment, poetic flow, colour, the vividness of metaphor, and, besides, the ...
— Saint Augustin • Louis Bertrand

... lost their force three centuries before. Frederick II. and S. Louis closed the age of the Crusades, the one by striking a bargain with the infidel, the other by snatching at a martyr's crown. AEneas Sylvius Piccolomini was the mirror of his times—a humanist and stylist, imbued with the rhetorical and pseudo-classic taste of the earlier Renaissance. Pius II. is almost an anachronism. The disappointment which the learned world experienced when they discovered that the new Pope, from whom so much had been expected, declined to play the part of their ...
— Renaissance in Italy, Volume 1 (of 7) • John Addington Symonds

... knew what it was, I shouldn't be calling it a mystery," replied Mrs. Postwhistle, who was a stylist in ...
— Tommy and Co. • Jerome K. Jerome









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