The Great English Short-Story Writers, Volume 1. Коллектив авторов
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In his introduction to
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"The short-story is artificial, and to a considerable degree unnatural. It could hardly be otherwise, for it takes out of our complex lives a single person or a single incident and treats that as if it were complete in itself. Such isolation is not known to nature." – Page 22 of
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For example, the story told by Demodocus of
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From the introduction, by Charles Whibley, to the Tudor Translations' edition by W.E. Henley, of
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The second novel of the second day, and the sixth of the ninth day.
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In the third chapter of
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Compare with Kipling's treatment of a similar theme in
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The
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From
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From