The Search for Good Sense: Four Eighteenth-century Characters: Johnson, Chesterfield, Boswell, GoldsmithCassell, 1958 - 354ÆäÀÌÁö |
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61 ÆäÀÌÁö
... believe that this life is happy , but they believe it only while they are saying it , and never yet produced conviction in a single mind . ' Never in a single mind ? It is something that Johnson admitted the ' philosophers ' to believe ...
... believe that this life is happy , but they believe it only while they are saying it , and never yet produced conviction in a single mind . ' Never in a single mind ? It is something that Johnson admitted the ' philosophers ' to believe ...
65 ÆäÀÌÁö
... believe that he would have become any less generous or compassionate ; though he might have ceased to be so prudish as to scold Hannah More for having read Tom Jones . It may , of course , be pleaded that many eminent minds have ...
... believe that he would have become any less generous or compassionate ; though he might have ceased to be so prudish as to scold Hannah More for having read Tom Jones . It may , of course , be pleaded that many eminent minds have ...
275 ÆäÀÌÁö
... believe in this gulf . From Hodge to Homer I do not believe that Nature makes a sudden leap at any point in the ascending scale of human qualities . No doubt , in works to which we apply the terms ' genius ' or ' inspiration ' there is ...
... believe in this gulf . From Hodge to Homer I do not believe that Nature makes a sudden leap at any point in the ascending scale of human qualities . No doubt , in works to which we apply the terms ' genius ' or ' inspiration ' there is ...
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The EighteenthCentury Mind PAGE | 1 |
Johnson | 25 |
Lord Chesterfield | 129 |
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