In a Fast Coach with a Pretty Woman: Jane Austen and Samuel JohnsonAMS Press, 2002 - 208 страници |
Между кориците на книгата
Резултати 1 - 3 от 37.
Страница 48
... thing open ? Dearest Miss Morland , what ideas have you been admitting ? ( vol . 2 , chap . 10 ; V , 197-98 ) Totally mortified , Catherine swears off the gothic forever . She reprimands herself in language that could have come from ...
... thing open ? Dearest Miss Morland , what ideas have you been admitting ? ( vol . 2 , chap . 10 ; V , 197-98 ) Totally mortified , Catherine swears off the gothic forever . She reprimands herself in language that could have come from ...
Страница 135
... thing easily per- formed , and consider the unsuccessful always as criminal . ( Idler 1 ; Yale Works , II , 5 ) And to a contributor ( unknown ) who chides him for not being idle enough and relates his own brave efforts to read , reply ...
... thing easily per- formed , and consider the unsuccessful always as criminal . ( Idler 1 ; Yale Works , II , 5 ) And to a contributor ( unknown ) who chides him for not being idle enough and relates his own brave efforts to read , reply ...
Страница 145
... thing . Pray do not let them talk of it . That young man ( speaking lower ) is very thoughtless . Do not tell his father , but that young man is not quite the thing . He has been opening the doors very often this evening , and keeping ...
... thing . Pray do not let them talk of it . That young man ( speaking lower ) is very thoughtless . Do not tell his father , but that young man is not quite the thing . He has been opening the doors very often this evening , and keeping ...
Съдържание
My Dear Dr Johnson | 13 |
The Juvenilia Lady Susan and Northanger Abbey | 35 |
Sense and Sensibility | 57 |
Авторско право | |
7 други раздела не са показани
Често срещани думи и фрази
Anne appear Aunt begins Bennet Boswell Catherine chap character civilization Clarendon Press comes Crawford Critical Darcy dear describes desire early Edited Elinor Elizabeth Elton Emma essays eyes face Fanny Fanny's father feelings female fiction fortune Frank girl give hand happy Harriet heart Henry heroine Hill hope human imagination James Jane Austen John Johnsonian Knightley Lady less letter Lives London look manner Mansfield Marianne marriage marry Mary means mind Miss moral mother nature never Notes novel observes once Oxford parents passion perhaps person play pleasure psychological Rambler reason represents Samuel Johnson seemed sense sexual sister social Studies suffer sure thing thought Thrale tion truth turns University Press virtue wishes woman women Woodhouse writing Yale York young