Lectures on the English Comic WritersG. Cumberlege, Oxford University Press, 1951 - 248 oldal |
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1 - 3 találat összesen 44 találatból.
viii. oldal
... never took kindly to writing as a profession . " Yet the enthusiasm which can overcome these very limita- tions , the genius which his halting sentences never obscure , should by rights , one would imagine , but the 66 66 more endear ...
... never took kindly to writing as a profession . " Yet the enthusiasm which can overcome these very limita- tions , the genius which his halting sentences never obscure , should by rights , one would imagine , but the 66 66 more endear ...
x. oldal
... never in love with life . Brought up in a Unitarian home , and educated for the ministry at a Unitarian college , he early acquired " that passion for truth " and that " incorrigible attachment to a general proposition " which he ...
... never in love with life . Brought up in a Unitarian home , and educated for the ministry at a Unitarian college , he early acquired " that passion for truth " and that " incorrigible attachment to a general proposition " which he ...
xi. oldal
... never enjoyed , the Meaning he had never discovered . Somewhere , in visions he never found language to utter , William Hazlitt had seen God and knew that He was good . For when , at the age of fifty - two , worn out by his own ...
... never enjoyed , the Meaning he had never discovered . Somewhere , in visions he never found language to utter , William Hazlitt had seen God and knew that He was good . For when , at the age of fifty - two , worn out by his own ...
Tartalomjegyzék
LECTURE PAGE | 1 |
ON SHAKESPEARE AND BEN JONSON | 36 |
ON COWLEY BUTLER SUCKLING ETHER | 61 |
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absurdity acters admirable affectation amusing appearance beauty Beggar's Opera Ben Jonson Brass Caleb Williams character comedy comic writer common Congreve critics delightful Dick Don Quixote double entendre dramatic dress elegance Epicene equally excellence extravagance eyes face Falstaff fancy farce feeling folly genius Gil Blas give grace heart Hogarth Hudibras human nature idea imagination imitation insipid instance interest invention Johnson Lady laugh lively look Lord lover ludicrous manners Millamant mind mistress Molière moral never novel object original passion person piece play pleasure plot poet poetry principle Rake's Progress reason refinement ridiculous romantic satire scene School for Scandal seems sense sentiment serious Shakespeare sort Spectator spirit stage story style Tartuffe Tatler thee things thou thought tion Tom Jones truth turn vice vulgar whole wife William Hazlitt wit and humour words Wycherley