Samuel Johnson and the Life of WritingHarcourt, Brace, Jovanovich, 1971 - 303페이지 |
도서 본문에서
39개의 결과 중 1 - 3개
71 페이지
... kind . One of the faults Johnson finds in Cowley is that he seems occasionally un- aware that each poetic kind requires a different idiom . Cowley , he says , " makes no selection of words . . . . He has given the same diction to the ...
... kind . One of the faults Johnson finds in Cowley is that he seems occasionally un- aware that each poetic kind requires a different idiom . Cowley , he says , " makes no selection of words . . . . He has given the same diction to the ...
118 페이지
... kind is he more a master than of the severe letter , or the letter of abuse . Indeed , his two best - known letters , to James ( " Ossian " ) Macpherson and to Lord Chesterfield , are both of this kind . Both are full of art , but the ...
... kind is he more a master than of the severe letter , or the letter of abuse . Indeed , his two best - known letters , to James ( " Ossian " ) Macpherson and to Lord Chesterfield , are both of this kind . Both are full of art , but the ...
123 페이지
... kind " is to insult the recipient appropriately and plausibly . As genre , it is the dedication turned inside out . A remark made by Johnson to Bennet Langton testifies abundantly to his sense of the precedence of genre even in the ...
... kind " is to insult the recipient appropriately and plausibly . As genre , it is the dedication turned inside out . A remark made by Johnson to Bennet Langton testifies abundantly to his sense of the precedence of genre even in the ...
기타 출판본 - 모두 보기
자주 나오는 단어 및 구문
actual appearance Arthur Murphy audience begin biography Boerhaave boredom Boswell Boswell's Caligula character Chesterfield Christian comic context conventional critical David Garrick death definitions delight Dictionary Dryden Edial eighteenth-century elegy English essay example expected finally Flying-Machine folly Garrick genre goes happiness Henry Thrale hope Human Wishes Idler imagination imitation Imlac ironic irony James Boswell John Johnson says Johnsonian kind labor language learning letter lexicographer Lichfield Lichfield Grammar School literature Lives London Lord Lycidas means mind moral nature never notice obligation occasion once Paradise Lost passage perceive perhaps piety poem poetic poetry Poets prayer Preface quotations Rambler Rasselas reader reason rhetorical Samuel Johnson satire Savage Savage's schemes seems sense Shakespeare skepticism sort style substance Suetonius theme things thought Thrale tion turn Vanity of Human virtue Vitellius W. K. Wimsatt whole words writing written wrote