Lectures on the English Comic WritersJ.M. Dent & Sons, Limited, 1930 - 340 oldal |
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1 - 3 találat összesen 36 találatból.
35. oldal
... affectation ; but vanity and affectation , in their most exorbitant and studied excesses , are the ruling principles of society , only in a highly advanced state of civilisation and manners . Man can hardly be said to be a truly ...
... affectation ; but vanity and affectation , in their most exorbitant and studied excesses , are the ruling principles of society , only in a highly advanced state of civilisation and manners . Man can hardly be said to be a truly ...
37. oldal
... affectation of the manners and conversation of fashionable life , and before the distinction between rusticity and elegance , art and nature , was lost ( as it afterwards was ) in a general diffusion of knowledge , and the reciprocal ...
... affectation of the manners and conversation of fashionable life , and before the distinction between rusticity and elegance , art and nature , was lost ( as it afterwards was ) in a general diffusion of knowledge , and the reciprocal ...
95. oldal
... affectation of ease and freedom from affectation . The ice being thus thawed , and the barrier that kept authors at a distance from common sense and feeling broken through , the transition was not difficult from Montaigne and his ...
... affectation of ease and freedom from affectation . The ice being thus thawed , and the barrier that kept authors at a distance from common sense and feeling broken through , the transition was not difficult from Montaigne and his ...
Tartalomjegyzék
LECTURE | 5 |
ON SHAKSPEARE AND BEN JONSON | 30 |
LECTURE III | 49 |
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Gyakori szavak és kifejezések
absurdity admiration affectation amusing appearance beauty Beggar's Opera Ben Jonson better Brentford character circumstances comedy comic common delight Don Quixote English Epicene equally extravagance eyes face Falstaff fancy favourite feeling folly genius gentleman Gil Blas give grace hand heart hero Hogarth Hudibras human humour idea imagination impression insipid instance interest Jem Belcher lady laugh live look Lord Lord Byron lover ludicrous main-chance manners means Millamant mind mistress moral nature never object opinion ourselves pain passion perhaps person philosopher picture play pleasure 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 taste Tatler thee thing thought Tom Jones truth turn vanity vulgar whole WILLIAM HAZLITT words writers