The Portable Johnson & BoswellViking Press, 1947 - 762페이지 Two great and vivid personalitites of English letters revealed in their most charactersitc writings; Johnson; critical essays, letters, poems: Boswell; Life of Johnson, Journal of a tour to the Hebrides, and the Dialogue with Rousseau, etc. |
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... never more poignantly than in some of the later letters to Mrs. Thrale . But the less exposed pathos of his life lay in how gratified he was , not by what was extraordi- nary in him , but in what he fancied might seem normal . He ...
... never more poignantly than in some of the later letters to Mrs. Thrale . But the less exposed pathos of his life lay in how gratified he was , not by what was extraordi- nary in him , but in what he fancied might seem normal . He ...
192 페이지
... never shown . No man has a claim to credit upon his own word , when better evidence , if he had it , may be easily produced . But so far as we can find , the Erse language was never written till very lately for the purposes of religion ...
... never shown . No man has a claim to credit upon his own word , when better evidence , if he had it , may be easily produced . But so far as we can find , the Erse language was never written till very lately for the purposes of religion ...
499 페이지
... never retired till want of money obliged him to some new expedient . If he was entertained in a family , nothing was any longer to be regarded there but amuse- ments and jollity ; wherever Savage entered he immedi- ately expected that ...
... never retired till want of money obliged him to some new expedient . If he was entertained in a family , nothing was any longer to be regarded there but amuse- ments and jollity ; wherever Savage entered he immedi- ately expected that ...
목차
Editors Introduction | 1 |
From The Life of Samuel Johnson | 41 |
From The Journal of a Tour to the Hebrides | 376 |
저작권 | |
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acquaintance afterwards appeared asked Beauclerk believe better BOSWELL called censure character Cibber Colley Cibber considered conversation criticism death desire dined dinner drink Dunciad endeavoured favour Garrick gave genius gentleman give Goldsmith happy honour hope humour Iliad imagination JAMES BOSWELL John Johnson kind King knew labour lady Langton learning Lichfield literary live London Lord Lord Bolingbroke Lord Chesterfield Madam mankind manner ment mentioned merit mind morning nature ness never observed once opinion passion perhaps play pleased pleasure poem poet poetry Pope Pope's praise published reason recollect Robert Dodsley ROUSSEAU SAMUEL JOHNSON Savage Scotland seems Shakespeare shewed Sir John Hawkins Sir Joshua Reynolds sometimes Streatham suppose sure talk tell thing thought Thrale tion told truth Tyrconnel verses virtue Voltaire Whig Wilkes wine wish write wrote