The Stylistic Life of Samuel JohnsonRutgers University Press, 1977 - 139 oldal |
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1 - 3 találat összesen 12 találatból.
15. oldal
... completely adequate to the world he describes as he orders the confusing experience and brings it into relation with his life . This is not to say that he feels or we feel that he has communicated fully the experience of a stroke , if ...
... completely adequate to the world he describes as he orders the confusing experience and brings it into relation with his life . This is not to say that he feels or we feel that he has communicated fully the experience of a stroke , if ...
16. oldal
... completely to change his manner to accommodate his change in subject that he creates the sense of an undisrupta- ble verbal life and suggests thereby the magnitude of its opposite , the wordless terror of a stroke . The prayer for ...
... completely to change his manner to accommodate his change in subject that he creates the sense of an undisrupta- ble verbal life and suggests thereby the magnitude of its opposite , the wordless terror of a stroke . The prayer for ...
71. oldal
... completely the knowledge of the real relations between fancy and reality , hope and fulfillment , between expectation and results , promise and performance , Johnson's own relation to what is described seems also self - entan- gled ...
... completely the knowledge of the real relations between fancy and reality , hope and fulfillment , between expectation and results , promise and performance , Johnson's own relation to what is described seems also self - entan- gled ...
Tartalomjegyzék
Reading Johnson in Time | 1 |
Johnson and The Life of Savage | 19 |
Learning to Write Dick Minim | 43 |
Copyright | |
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actions activity amusement appear argument attempts attention becomes beginning Boswell chapter characters claims comforts common completely concerned confidence continued course created criticism danger death defined demonstrates described earlier effect efforts essays example experience expression fact feel finally follow force give given happiness hope human images imagination Imlac implications instance involved Johnson kind knowledge language later learning least less Levet literary live London manner meaning metaphors mind narrative narrator nature never opposed opposite paragraph particular passage phrase pleasure poem poet poetry political position possible praise present Press question Rasselas reader reason relation result Samuel Johnson satire Savage Savage's seems sense sentence sound speak speaker stanza story style success suggest things tion tried turn University values virtue voice whole wish worth writing