Frases de Charles Brockden Brown

Charles Brockden Brown , fue un novelista, editor e historiador estadounidense del primer periodo de esta nación. Es generalmente reconocido por los estudiosos como el más ambicioso y dotado de los novelistas estadounidenses anteriores a James Fenimore Cooper. Practicó con denuedo la novela norteamericana primeriza, que se dio entre 1789 y 1820.

Aunque Brown no fue en modo alguno el primer novelista de América, como algunos críticos afirman, la amplitud y complejidad de sus logros como escritor en varios géneros lo convierten en una figura crucial en la literatura y la cultura de los Estados Unidos en los años 1790s y 1800s, y un importante intelectual con influencia a ambos lados del Atlántico en la era de la Revolución francesa.

Practicó la novela gótica, muy de moda en su tiempo, y sirvió de inspiración a importantes autores como Edgar Allan Poe, Margaret Fuller y Nathaniel Hawthorne.



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✵ 17. enero 1771 – 22. febrero 1810
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Charles Brockden Brown: 18   frases 0   Me gusta

Charles Brockden Brown: Frases en inglés

“In the midst of my despair, I do not disdain to contribute what little I can for the benefit of mankind.”

Wieland; or, the Transformation (1798)
Contexto: I feel little reluctance in complying with your request. You know not fully the cause of my sorrows. You are a stranger to the depth of my distresses. Hence your efforts at consolation must necessarily fail. Yet the tale that I am going to tell is not intended as a claim upon your sympathy. In the midst of my despair, I do not disdain to contribute what little I can for the benefit of mankind. I acknowledge your right to be informed of the events that have lately happened in my family. Make what use of the tale you shall think proper. If it be communicated to the world, it will inculcate the dusty of avoiding deceit. It will exemplify the force of early impressions, and show the immeasurable evils that flow from an erroneous or imperfect discipline.

“I used to suppose that certain evils could never befall a being in possession of a sound mind”

Wieland; or, the Transformation (1798)
Contexto: I used to suppose that certain evils could never befall a being in possession of a sound mind; that true virtue supplies us with energy which vice can never resist; that it was always in our power to obstruct, by his own death, the designs of an enemy who aimed at less than our lives.

“I feel little reluctance in complying with your request. You know not fully the cause of my sorrows. You are a stranger to the depth of my distresses. Hence your efforts at consolation must necessarily fail.”

Wieland; or, the Transformation (1798)
Contexto: I feel little reluctance in complying with your request. You know not fully the cause of my sorrows. You are a stranger to the depth of my distresses. Hence your efforts at consolation must necessarily fail. Yet the tale that I am going to tell is not intended as a claim upon your sympathy. In the midst of my despair, I do not disdain to contribute what little I can for the benefit of mankind. I acknowledge your right to be informed of the events that have lately happened in my family. Make what use of the tale you shall think proper. If it be communicated to the world, it will inculcate the dusty of avoiding deceit. It will exemplify the force of early impressions, and show the immeasurable evils that flow from an erroneous or imperfect discipline.