Perilous Balance: The Tragic Genius of Swift, Johnson, & SternePrinceton University Press, 1939 - 172 oldal |
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1 - 3 találat összesen 31 találatból.
6. oldal
... wrote tragedy in dramatic form . Apart from the disintegration of tragedy as a form , of the men of his age Swift alone had the emotional and imaginative power of the great Elizabethans , and he wrote prose like a poet . This explains ...
... wrote tragedy in dramatic form . Apart from the disintegration of tragedy as a form , of the men of his age Swift alone had the emotional and imaginative power of the great Elizabethans , and he wrote prose like a poet . This explains ...
23. oldal
... wrote . His satire passes over into tragedy . V Since his whole state of mind is one of negation , our ac- ceptance of Hamlet's death is perhaps the most satisfying reconciliation with the tragic conclusion in all Shakespeare . Death is ...
... wrote . His satire passes over into tragedy . V Since his whole state of mind is one of negation , our ac- ceptance of Hamlet's death is perhaps the most satisfying reconciliation with the tragic conclusion in all Shakespeare . Death is ...
39. oldal
... wrote on the death of his mother in 1710 : ' I have now lost the last barrier between me and death ' ; and Johnson in 1749 : ' [ I ] was afraid your letter brought me ill news of my mother , whose death is one of the few calamities on ...
... wrote on the death of his mother in 1710 : ' I have now lost the last barrier between me and death ' ; and Johnson in 1749 : ' [ I ] was afraid your letter brought me ill news of my mother , whose death is one of the few calamities on ...
Tartalomjegyzék
Vive la Bagatelle Swift and Johnson | 25 |
The Castle of Indolence Johnson | 49 |
Dangerous Prevalence of the Imagination Johnson | 71 |
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Anecdotes Boswell Burton called character comedy complexity dear death delight dramatic effect emotional Essay Eugenius faculty Fanny Burney father fear feel Fourth Voyage frequently friends Garrick give Gulliver Gulliver's Travels Hamlet Hawkins heart hope Houyhnhnms human nature humor ibid ideas imagination Indolence intellectual Johnson and Fanny Johnsonian Miscellanies Jonathan Swift Journal to Eliza Journal to Stella Laurence Sterne Lear Letters live Locke look Lord Measure for Measure melancholy merely Milton mind never night novels once passage passions personality Piozzi pleasure poor Pope Prayers and Meditations Rambler Rasselas reason remarks satire scarce scene self-conscious sense Sentimental Journey serious Sermon Shakespeare Shandeism shewed solitude sorrow soul spirit Stapfer Sterne's Streatham suffering Susannah Swift talk thee thing thou thought Thrale tion tone tragedy tragic Tristram Shandy truth uncle Toby Uncle Toby's Virginia Woolf Walter Shandy Woolf words writes wrote Yahoos
Hivatkozások erre a könyvre
Jonathan Swift and Popular Culture: Myth, Media, and the Man Ann Cline Kelly Nincs elérhető előnézet - 2002 |