Lectures on the English Comic Writers, and Fugitive WritingsDent, 1963 - 346 oldal |
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1 - 3 találat összesen 37 találatból.
5. oldal
... absurdity of which provokes our spleen or mirth , rather than any serious reflections on it . To explain the nature of laughter and tears , is to account for the condition of human life ; for it is in a manner compounded of these two ...
... absurdity of which provokes our spleen or mirth , rather than any serious reflections on it . To explain the nature of laughter and tears , is to account for the condition of human life ; for it is in a manner compounded of these two ...
8. oldal
... absurdity and propriety in words , looks , and actions . Of these different kinds or degrees of the laughable , the first is the most shallow and short - lived ; for the instant the immediate surprise of a thing's merely happening one ...
... absurdity and propriety in words , looks , and actions . Of these different kinds or degrees of the laughable , the first is the most shallow and short - lived ; for the instant the immediate surprise of a thing's merely happening one ...
151. oldal
... absurdity and prejudice in the world as ever - that there are the same unaccountable per- versities lurking at the ... absurdities of modern manners , they are too shallow and barefaced , and those who affect are too little serious in ...
... absurdity and prejudice in the world as ever - that there are the same unaccountable per- versities lurking at the ... absurdities of modern manners , they are too shallow and barefaced , and those who affect are too little serious in ...
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Gyakori szavak és kifejezések
A. C. Cawley absurdity admiration affectation amusing appearance beauty Beggar's Opera Ben Jonson better Brentford character circumstances comedy comic common Constance Garnett criticism delight Don Quixote Edited English Epicene equally ESSAYS eyes face fancy favourite feeling folly genius gentleman Gerald Bullett Gil Blas give grace Hazlitt heart hero Hogarth Hudibras human humour idea imagination insipid instance interest lady laugh live look Lord Lord Byron lover ludicrous main-chance manners means Millamant mind moral nature never novel object opinion ourselves pain passion person philosopher play pleasure POEMS poet poetry present pretensions principle Rake's Progress reason refinement ridiculous romance satire scene School for Scandal seems self-love sense sentiment Shakspeare shew sort spirit stage story style supposed sympathy Tartuffe Tatler thing thought Tom Jones Translated truth turn vanity vols whole words writers