Samuel JohnsonLongmans, Green, 1955 - 171ÆäÀÌÁö |
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46 ÆäÀÌÁö
... play went into rehearsal , Johnson began to frequent the Green Room at Drury Lane , where the lively talk of the actors and actresses distracted his mind from the melancholy thoughts which so often possessed him . The story goes ...
... play went into rehearsal , Johnson began to frequent the Green Room at Drury Lane , where the lively talk of the actors and actresses distracted his mind from the melancholy thoughts which so often possessed him . The story goes ...
47 ÆäÀÌÁö
... play or writing blank verse dialogue . The plot of Irene is ill - balanced and quite without dramatic tension ; and while there are a few good lines , there is scarcely speech of any length that strikes home to the modern reader . One ...
... play or writing blank verse dialogue . The plot of Irene is ill - balanced and quite without dramatic tension ; and while there are a few good lines , there is scarcely speech of any length that strikes home to the modern reader . One ...
109 ÆäÀÌÁö
... plays sufficient to have damned a lesser poet . Only it was essential that these flaws and blemishes should be regarded in their true proportion . ' The work of a correct and regular writer is a garden accurately formed and diligently ...
... plays sufficient to have damned a lesser poet . Only it was essential that these flaws and blemishes should be regarded in their true proportion . ' The work of a correct and regular writer is a garden accurately formed and diligently ...
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BOSWELL AND THE Life | 1 |
JOHNSONS EARLY YEARS | 9 |
LICHFIELD TO LONDON 2 I | 21 |
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admiration appearance Arthur Murphy asked believe Bennet Langton biography bookseller Boswell's Burke called Chapter Chesterfield conversation criticism David Garrick dear debate delight Dictionary edition Edward Cave eighteenth century English famous Fanny Burney fear feel followed Garrick Gibbon Goldsmith hand happy Hawkins Hebrides Henry Thrale HESTER LYNCH PIOZZI hope Horace Walpole human humour Irene Ivy Lane club James Boswell Johnsonian journal judgement kind known ladies Langton later Latin less letters Lichfield literary lived London Lord Madam Malahide Castle ment mind Murphy nature never once Oxford pension perhaps Piozzi pleasure poem poet poetry Pope preface prose published Rambler Rasselas reader regarded replied Reynolds Samuel Johnson Samuel Richardson says Boswell seems sense Shakespeare sometimes soon Streatham style talk Tetty thought Thrale tion Topham Beauclerk verse wish words writing written wrote