The Search for Good Sense: Four Eighteenth-century Characters: Johnson, Chesterfield, Boswell, GoldsmithCassell, 1958 - 354ÆäÀÌÁö |
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... asked , can one talk to any purpose about the spirits of whole ages ? Certainly it is difficult and dangerous . For example , our shelves groan with works on the spirit of the Renaissance ; yet now we are asked to doubt if the ...
... asked , can one talk to any purpose about the spirits of whole ages ? Certainly it is difficult and dangerous . For example , our shelves groan with works on the spirit of the Renaissance ; yet now we are asked to doubt if the ...
8 ÆäÀÌÁö
... asked in 1741 , at the age of eighty , how he was , could sardonically reply - ' My dear sir , you see I keep hanging on , hanging on . ' Burke , leaving the House , was once asked by the Clerk to stay - ' What business ? ' — ' Oh , sir ...
... asked in 1741 , at the age of eighty , how he was , could sardonically reply - ' My dear sir , you see I keep hanging on , hanging on . ' Burke , leaving the House , was once asked by the Clerk to stay - ' What business ? ' — ' Oh , sir ...
82 ÆäÀÌÁö
... asking— ' What use in knowing that ? There are plenty of industrious pedants who might gain by keeping framed above their ... asked the next best , replied " The life of a bad one ' . But he refused to disguise his boredom at topics more ...
... asking— ' What use in knowing that ? There are plenty of industrious pedants who might gain by keeping framed above their ... asked the next best , replied " The life of a bad one ' . But he refused to disguise his boredom at topics more ...
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The EighteenthCentury Mind PAGE | 1 |
Johnson | 25 |
Lord Chesterfield | 129 |
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