Samuel Johnson and His TimesBatsford, 1962 - 128 страници |
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Страница 107
... sense and art : he does not use the word ' artificial ' in a pejorative sense , and always ridicules Rousseauistic sentiments and calls to go ' back to nature ' . For , if ' a just representation of things really existing and actions ...
... sense and art : he does not use the word ' artificial ' in a pejorative sense , and always ridicules Rousseauistic sentiments and calls to go ' back to nature ' . For , if ' a just representation of things really existing and actions ...
Страница 109
... sense of intimacy for which Johnson is unsurpassed . Next , Johnson is concerned with imparting solid information ... sense and vice ; of sense which may be admired but not esteemed , of vice which may be despised , but hardly detested ...
... sense of intimacy for which Johnson is unsurpassed . Next , Johnson is concerned with imparting solid information ... sense and vice ; of sense which may be admired but not esteemed , of vice which may be despised , but hardly detested ...
Страница 123
... sense to advise that it cannot be lived with- out health . Johnson may have been ' very sincere in good principles , without having good practice ' ; perhaps he took exercise only when Thrale made him take it , but he eloquently asked ...
... sense to advise that it cannot be lived with- out health . Johnson may have been ' very sincere in good principles , without having good practice ' ; perhaps he took exercise only when Thrale made him take it , but he eloquently asked ...
Съдържание
Acknowledgment | 6 |
LICHFIELD 17091737 | 14 |
LONDON Lexicographer 17461756 | 38 |
Авторско право | |
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Addison admired Arthur Murphy began better Bishop Boswell Boswell's brewery century character conversation David Garrick death described Dictionary Dodd Edinburgh edition eighteenth eighteenth-century election England English enjoyed essays famous Fanny Burney friends Gabriel Piozzi Garrick genius George happy Hebrides Henry Thrale Highland human imagination interest Jacobite James Boswell Johnson took Johnson wrote Johnson's political Joseph Nollekens Journal kind knew later learned Lichfield literary criticism literature lived London Lord means melancholy mind moral moralist nature never noble Oxford Pembroke College Piozzi poem poet poetic poetry poor Pope portrait Pottle poverty praise published Rambler Rasselas religion Samuel Johnson satire Savage sense sentence Shakespeare sloth social St Clement Danes Streatham Street suffered Swift sympathy talk Tetty thinking Thomas Warton thought tion Tory tradition truth W. K. Wimsatt Whig wisdom words writing