cover image: The New Review  December 1941

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The New Review December 1941

1941

The usual sources of information are the New York Times and the Herald Tribune which represent the extreme pro-British view ; but as The Weekly Review notes editorials in America are not to be credited with the same influence in America as in England ; the editor of the New York Times is by far not so big a man as his colleague of the London Times. [...] As Jane Austen says the novel is a 'work in which the greatest powers of the mind are displayed in which the most thorough knowledge of human nature the happiest effusions of wit and humour are conveyed to the world in the best chosen language.' °Art is a communication of experience ; the novel is a direct communication of experience. [...] THE FUTURE OF THE RUPEE 461 The question of proper management Of a country's currency has assumed immense importante alike from the depression experiments of the last decade and the present war-time controls. [...] The whole of the social scale is represented—the feudal class the merchants the clergy the artisans the labourers. [...] He loves them all the saint and the sinner the coarse Miller and the studious Clerk the dainty Prioress and the epicurean Franklin.
history
Pages
88
Published in
United Kingdom
SARF Document ID
sarf.120030
Segment Pages Author Actions
This Side and That
441-448 A.S.J. Lallemand view
The Trend of Modern Literature
449-456 V.H. Coelho view
The Future of the Rupee
457-461 R. Krishnamurti view
Chaucer : the Pilgrim Poet
462-472 L. Rodrigues view
The Naval Policy of the Marathas
473-485 B.A. Saletore view
The Real Santa Claus
486-489 J.P. Fonseka view
The Future of Franchise in India
490-504 M. Ruthnaswamy view
Public Water Supply in Madras
505-520 K. Jayaraman view
Mills Versus Handlooms
521-525 N. Sastry view
Some Recent Books
526-528 A.S.J. Lallemand view

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