Samuel JohnsonH. Holt, 1944 - 599페이지 Samuel Johnson was a pessimist with an enormous zest for living. It has been said that no one was ever more typically English and it has also been said that he is one of the world's greatest eccentrics. But no other single trait of his character is quite so striking as the strange combination of deeply pessimistic convictions with an enormous - almost Gargantuan - appetite for learning, for literature, for good company, and for food. The literature surrounding Samuel Johnson is enormous and there is probably no other English man of letters except Shakespeare whom so many people acknowledge as the chief interest in their lives. They not only write books and read papers, they also form clubs, give dinners, stage celebrations, and collect curios. |
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296 페이지
... poetry has continued to be written only rarely . Yet that is the chief reason why we regard the achievement of the poets of Shakespeare's age as so much greater than the achievement of Dryden's . It is not because prose - the use of ...
... poetry has continued to be written only rarely . Yet that is the chief reason why we regard the achievement of the poets of Shakespeare's age as so much greater than the achievement of Dryden's . It is not because prose - the use of ...
468 페이지
... poetry , as such ; for that poetry of emotion which produces in its cultivators and admirers an intensity of excitement , to which language can scarcely afford an utterance , to which art can give no body , and which spreads a dream and ...
... poetry , as such ; for that poetry of emotion which produces in its cultivators and admirers an intensity of excitement , to which language can scarcely afford an utterance , to which art can give no body , and which spreads a dream and ...
470 페이지
... poetry and the poetry of Dryden , Pope , and all their school , is briefly this : their poetry is conceived and composed in their wits , genuine poetry is con- ceived and composed in the soul , " would have seemed to John- son arrant ...
... poetry and the poetry of Dryden , Pope , and all their school , is briefly this : their poetry is conceived and composed in their wits , genuine poetry is con- ceived and composed in the soul , " would have seemed to John- son arrant ...
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The Lichfield Prodigy | 1 |
London or The Full Tide of Human | 27 |
Running About the World | 59 |
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admiration Anna Seward appear Arthur Murphy assume Beauclerk believe Bennet Langton Boswell Hill Boswell Hill-Powell Boswell Hill-Powell ed Boswell's called century certainly character Clifford concerning contemporaries conversation course criticism d'Arblay David Garrick death delight Dictionary doubt Dryden edition essays evidence fact Fanny Burney Garrick gentleman Gentleman's Magazine Hebrides Tour Henry Thrale Horace Walpole human imagination important James Boswell John Johnson journal kind knew lady later learned least less letter Lichfield literary lived London Lord Lucy Porter Malahide Papers merely mind Miscellanies moral nature never occasion once opinion passage perhaps person Piozzi pleasure poem poet poetry Pope possible Powell probably published Queeney Rambler Rasselas reason remarked remembered replied Samuel Samuel Johnson seems sense Shakespeare sometimes sort Streatham suggested talk Tetty things thought Thrale Thraliana tion told Topham Beauclerk Voltaire wife words write wrote