最終更新日:2022/12/24
Extract from a letter to Horace Walpole, written from Florence, in Horace Walpole's Correspondence with Sir Horace Mann, ed. W. S. Lewis, Warren Hunting Smith, and George L. Lam (1960), p. 446. […] You will laugh at me, I suppose, when I say I don't understand Tristram Shandy, because it was probably the intention of the author that nobody should. It seems to me humbugging, if I have a right notion of an art of talking or writing that has been invented since I left England.
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Extract
from
a
letter
to
Horace
Walpole,
written
from
Florence,
in
Horace
Walpole's
Correspondence
with
Sir
Horace
Mann,
ed.
W.
S.
Lewis,
Warren
Hunting
Smith,
and
George
L.
Lam
(1960),
p.
446.
[…]
You
will
laugh
at
me,
I
suppose,
when
I
say
I
don't
understand
Tristram
Shandy,
because
it
was
probably
the
intention
of
the
author
that
nobody
should.
It
seems
to
me
humbugging,
if
I
have
a
right
notion
of
an
art
of
talking
or
writing
that
has
been
invented
since
I
left
England.