Publisher's Synopsis
Excerpt from The Novels of Victor Hugo, Vol. 15: Hans of Iceland
Every intellectual effort, be it drama, poem, or romance, must contain three ingredients - what the author has felt, what he has observed, and what he has divined: In a romance particularly, if it is to be a good one, there must be plenty of f eeling and plenty of observation; and those things which are divined must be derived logically, simply, and with no solution of continuity, from those things which are observed and felt.
If we apply this law to Hans of Iceland, we shall readily grasp the chief defect of the book.
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