50 9. 15.
Chance (1913) 2. 5. 15.
Victory (1915) 2. 2.50 4.25
[9] New York, Chas. Scribner's Sons, 1915, pp. 1-21.
[10] New York, Dodd, Mead & Co., 1916, pp. 192-217.
[11] Some English Story Tellers: A Book of the Younger Novelists; New
York, Henry Holt & Co., 1912, pp. 1-30.
[12] A Disquisition on Conrad, _Fortnightly Review_, April, 1908.
[13] The Genius of Mr. Joseph Conrad, _North American Review_, June,
1904.
[14] Joseph Conrad: A Study; New York, Doubleday, Page & Co., 1914.
[15] Joseph Conrad; London, Nisbet & Co. (1916).
II
THEODORE DREISER
Sec. 1
Out of the desert of American fictioneering, so populous and yet so
dreary, Dreiser stands up--a phenomenon unescapably visible, but
disconcertingly hard to explain. What forces combined to produce him in
the first place, and how has he managed to hold out so long against the
prevailing blasts--of disheartening misunderstanding and
misrepresentation, of Puritan suspicion and opposition, of artistic
isolation, of commercial seduction? There is something downright heroic
in the way the man has held his narrow and perilous ground, disdaining
all compromise, unmoved by the cheap success that lies so inviting
around the corner.
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