Генри Джеймс

A Little Tour of France


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       Henry James

      A Little Tour of France

      Published by Good Press, 2019

       [email protected]

      EAN 4057664597229

       Preface

       Introductory

       Chapter i

       Chapter ii

       Chapter iii

       Chapter iv

       Chapter v

       Chapter vi

       Chapter vii

       Chapter viii

       Chapter ix

       Chapter x

       Chapter xi

       Chapter xii

       Chapter xiii

       Chapter xiv

       Chapter xv

       Chapter xvi

       Chapter xvii

       Chapter xviii

       Chapter xix

       Chapter xx

       Chapter xxi

       Chapter xxii

       Chapter xxiii

       Chapter xxiv

       Chapter xxv

       Chapter xxvi

       Chapter xxvii

       Chapter xxviii

       Chapter xxix

       Chapter xxx

       Chapter xxxi

       Chapter xxxii

       Chapter xxxiii

       Chapter xxxiv

       Chapter xxxv

       Chapter xxxvi

       Chapter xxxvii

       Chapter xxxviii

       Chapter xxxix

       Chapter xl

       Table of Contents

      Preface

      The notes presented in this volume were gathered, as will easily be perceived, a number of years ago and on an expectation not at that time answered by the event, and were then published in the United States. The expectation had been that they should accompany a series of drawings, and they themselves were altogether governed by the pictorial spirit. They made, and they make in appearing now, after a considerable interval and for the first time, in England, no pretension to any other; they are impressions, immediate, easy, and consciously limited; if the written word may ever play the part of brush or pencil, they are sketches on "drawing-paper" and nothing more. From the moment the principle of selection and expression, with a tourist, is not the delight of the eyes and the play of fancy, it should be an energy in every way much larger; there is no happy mean, in other words, I hold, between the sense and the quest of the picture, and the surrender to it, and the sense and the quest of the constitution, the inner springs of the subject—springs and connections social, economic, historic.

      One must really choose, in other words, between the benefits of the perception of surface—a perception, when fine, perhaps none of the most frequent—and those of the perception of very complex underlying matters. If these latter had had, for me, to be taken into account, my pages would not have been collected. At the time of their original appearance the series of illustrations to which it had been their policy to cling for countenance and company failed them, after all, at the last moment, through a circumstance not now on record; and they had suddenly to begin to live their little life without assistance. That they have seemed able in any degree still to prolong even so modest a career might