Johnson the Essayist: His Opinions on Men, Morals, and MannersHaskell House, 1966 - 285페이지 |
도서 본문에서
22개의 결과 중 1 - 3개
107 페이지
... tell lies for the advantage of his country ; a news - writer is a man without virtue , who writes lies at home for his own profit . To these compositions is required neither genius nor knowledge , neither industry nor sprightliness ...
... tell lies for the advantage of his country ; a news - writer is a man without virtue , who writes lies at home for his own profit . To these compositions is required neither genius nor knowledge , neither industry nor sprightliness ...
139 페이지
... tell how often , amidst the ecstasies of an opera , she shall pity those friends whom she has left behind . Her hope of giving pain is seldom disappointed ; the affected indifference of one , the faint congratulations of another , the ...
... tell how often , amidst the ecstasies of an opera , she shall pity those friends whom she has left behind . Her hope of giving pain is seldom disappointed ; the affected indifference of one , the faint congratulations of another , the ...
213 페이지
... tell him that the flame had caught so many houses on both sides , that the inhabitants were confounded , and began to think of rather escaping with their lives than saving their dwellings . What you tell me , says Gelidus , is very ...
... tell him that the flame had caught so many houses on both sides , that the inhabitants were confounded , and began to think of rather escaping with their lives than saving their dwellings . What you tell me , says Gelidus , is very ...
기타 출판본 - 모두 보기
자주 나오는 단어 및 구문
¹ Boswell's ¹ Idler ¹ Rambler 19 entertaining Abraham Hayward Addison Adventurer amusing beauty Boswell censure character Chesterfield City considered contempt conversation Countess of Ossory crime criticism daughter death Dr Johnson eighteenth century elegance endeavour English Essays eyes Farington fear fortune friends Frolick G. K. Chesterton genius gentleman give happy honour hope Horace Walpole human Ibid imagination Johnson Birkbeck Hill JOHNSON THE ESSAYIST labour lady language learning letter live London Lord mankind manners marriage ment MICHIGAN mind misery moral nature never numbers observed opinion pass passions Pastoral Pastoral poetry perhaps philosopher pleasure Poets praise publick Rasselas reason rural Samuel Johnson seldom shepherd Sir Leslie Stephen sometimes Spectator sport Squire style suffer talk Tatler thought Thrale tion trade triplets truth UNIVE vanity virtue woman women wonder words writes wrote younger