Our greatest masters in works of imagination have obtained such aid for themselves. Shakespeare dug out of such quarries wherever he could find them. Ben Jonson, with heavier hand, built up his structures on his studies of the classics, not thinking it... Picture Making by Photography - Page 67by Henry Peach Robinson - 1884 - 128 pagesFull view - About this book
| Anthony Trollope - Novelists, English - 1883 - 286 pages
...quarries wherever he could find them. Ben Jonson, with heavier hand, built up his structures on his studies of the classics, not thinking it beneath him...to be credited with no more of the work than he has himself produced. I may say also that I have never printed as my own a word that has been written by... | |
| Anthony Trollope - Authors, English - 1883 - 288 pages
...quarries wherever he could find them. Ben Jonson, with heavier hand, built up his structures on his studies of the classics, not thinking it beneath him...to be credited with no more of the work than he has himself produced. I may say also that I have never printed as my own a word that has been written by... | |
| Anthony Trollope - Authors, English - 1883 - 286 pages
...quarries wherever he could find them. Ben Jonson, with heavier hand, built up his structures on his studies of the classics, not thinking it beneath him...to be credited with no more of the work than he has himself produced. I may say also that I have never printed as my own a word that has been written by... | |
| William Crookes, George Wharton Simpson - Photography - 1884 - 858 pages
...to give, without direct acknowledgment, whole pieces translated both from poets and historians, linl in those days no such acknowledgment was usual. Plagiary...be got from reading ! I like to reduce all I have to say to practice, or to give a definite example. I will, t'uerefore, take a poem, and endeavour to... | |
| Anthony Trollope - 1912 - 348 pages
...quarries whenever he could find them. Ben Jonson, with heavier hand, built up his structures on his studies of the classics, not thinking it beneath him...to be credited with no more of the work than he has himself produced. I may say also that I have never printed as my own a word that has been written by... | |
| Andrew H. Miller - Business & Economics - 1995 - 260 pages
...of final keeping of accounts, a rendering of property, honesty, and language; and in it he writes, "I think that an author, when he uses either the words or the plot of another, should own as much" (p. 116). Middlemarch and the solicitudes of material culture In 1863, twelve years after he planned... | |
| William A. Cohen - History - 1996 - 276 pages
...the market,15 Trollope subscribes at least minimally to a Romantic ideology of original authorship: "I think that an author, when he uses either the words...to be credited with no more of the work than he has himself produced. I may say also that I have never printed as my own a word that has been written by... | |
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