Samuel Johnson and His TimesBatsford, 1962 - 128 страници |
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Страница 68
... friends , Beauclerk , Langton , and Hawkins . ( The last , ' a most unclubbable man ' , left after a few years . ) To these were added two newer friends of brilliance , Oliver Goldsmith , with whose literary work Johnson was now closely ...
... friends , Beauclerk , Langton , and Hawkins . ( The last , ' a most unclubbable man ' , left after a few years . ) To these were added two newer friends of brilliance , Oliver Goldsmith , with whose literary work Johnson was now closely ...
Страница 110
... friends and contemporaries . To the sturdy and malicious this may be a cause of self - congratulation ; but Johnson ... friend of Lichfield days , Gilbert Walmsley : At this man's table I enjoyed many chearful and instructive hours ...
... friends and contemporaries . To the sturdy and malicious this may be a cause of self - congratulation ; but Johnson ... friend of Lichfield days , Gilbert Walmsley : At this man's table I enjoyed many chearful and instructive hours ...
Страница 111
... friend , the silent and grimy quack physician , that he was thinking . The poem is about all his dead friends , and first among them Henry Thrale , for it was he who had suffered the ' cold gradations of decay ' . Condemn'd to hope's ...
... friend , the silent and grimy quack physician , that he was thinking . The poem is about all his dead friends , and first among them Henry Thrale , for it was he who had suffered the ' cold gradations of decay ' . Condemn'd to hope's ...
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Addison admired Arthur Murphy began better biographical Bishop Boswell Boswell's brewery conversation criminal David Garrick death described Dictionary Dodd Edinburgh edition eighteenth century England English enjoyed essays famous Fanny Burney friends Gabriel Piozzi Garrick George Grub Street happy Hebrides Henry Thrale Hester Lynch Piozzi Highland human imagination interest Jacobite James James Boswell Johnson took Johnson wrote Joseph Nollekens Journal kind knew later learned Lichfield literary criticism literature lived London Lord means melancholy mind moral moralist nature never noble Oxford Piozzi poem poet poetic poetry Pope portrait Pottle poverty praise published Rambler Rasselas religion Samuel Johnson satire Savage sense sentence Shakespeare sloth social Streatham style suffered Swift sympathy talk Tetty thinking Thomas Warton thought tion Tory tradition truth W. G. Hoskins W. K. Wimsatt Whig wisdom words writing