Samuel Johnson, 10. kötetTwayne Publishers, 1989 - 206 oldal Provides in-depth analysis of the life, works, career, and critical importance of Samuel Johnson. |
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66. oldal
... reader , “ This is good , that is bad : do this , do not do that " -is the only , or the best , way that literature " instructs " is to make Johnson a far less acute and experienced ob- server of human psychology than he clearly was ...
... reader , “ This is good , that is bad : do this , do not do that " -is the only , or the best , way that literature " instructs " is to make Johnson a far less acute and experienced ob- server of human psychology than he clearly was ...
105. oldal
... reader of Johnson , faced with the challenge of selecting Johnson's greatest single work , may well find himself in the end going back to the Rambler as the most solid example of the essential Johnson . The genre of the periodical essay ...
... reader of Johnson , faced with the challenge of selecting Johnson's greatest single work , may well find himself in the end going back to the Rambler as the most solid example of the essential Johnson . The genre of the periodical essay ...
150. oldal
... reader into contact with reality . This is the highest morality : " Let us endeavour to see things as they are . Whether to see life as it is will give us much consolation , I know not ; but the consolation which is drawn from truth ...
... reader into contact with reality . This is the highest morality : " Let us endeavour to see things as they are . Whether to see life as it is will give us much consolation , I know not ; but the consolation which is drawn from truth ...
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Abyssinia amusing begins biography Boswell Boswell's Britain century chapter Christian death debates Dictionary Donne early edition eighteenth eighteenth-century English essays Fanny Burney feel Gentleman's Magazine George George Strahan happiness Henry Thrale Human Wishes Idler imagery imagination important intellectual interest Irene James James Boswell Jenyns John Johnson Society Johnson wrote Johnson's critical Johnsonian journalism journalistic language later letters Lichfield literary literature Lives London Lord Lycidas means metaphysical poets Milton mind modern moral nature never Oxford pamphlets passage Patriot perhaps pleasure poem poetic poetry Poets political Pope Pope's praise Preface prose published Rambler Rasselas reader remark Samuel Johnson Savage seems sense sermons Shakespeare Sir Dagonet Soame Jenyns sometimes style T. S. Eliot things thought Thrale tion Tory translation University Press Vanity of Human verse virtue Walpole Whig Whiggism words writing young