The Search for Good Sense: Four Eighteenth-century Characters: Johnson, Chesterfield, Boswell [and] GoldsmithMacmillan, 1958 - 354 pagini |
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Pagina 2
... sense of contact and sympathy with Homer, despite three thousand years, than with Hitler. And yet even with the best loved figures of the past what gulfs can suddenly open, what baffling differences of feeling rise up to sunder age from ...
... sense of contact and sympathy with Homer, despite three thousand years, than with Hitler. And yet even with the best loved figures of the past what gulfs can suddenly open, what baffling differences of feeling rise up to sunder age from ...
Pagina 19
... sense must constantly cry out , like the wise old Cynic at the fair , ' Immortal Gods , what a mass of things that Diogenes does not need ! ' Knowledge too includes a large and crowded Vanity Fair . It seems to me , then , mere common sense ...
... sense must constantly cry out , like the wise old Cynic at the fair , ' Immortal Gods , what a mass of things that Diogenes does not need ! ' Knowledge too includes a large and crowded Vanity Fair . It seems to me , then , mere common sense ...
Pagina 32
Alte ediții - Afișează-le pe toate
The Search for Good Sense: Four Eighteenth-Century Characters: Johnson ... F. L. Lucas Previzualizare limitată - 2015 |
The Search for Good Sense: Four Eighteenth-century Characters: Johnson ... Frank Laurence Lucas Vizualizare fragmente - 1958 |
The Search for Good Sense: Four Eighteenth-Century Characters: Johnson ... F. L. Lucas Nu există previzualizare disponibilă - 2015 |
Termeni și expresii frecvente
admirable amusing asked Auchinleck become believe biography Boswell Boswell's century character charm Corsica criticism curious d'Hermenches daughter dead December 25 doubt Dr Johnson eighteenth eighteenth-century English example F. L. LUCAS Fanny Burney father feel fool French Garrick Gibbon Goldsmith Graces Gray happy heart Henry Thrale Hester Thrale Horace Walpole human Hume humour imagine James Boswell John Johnson Journal lady later laugh least less letter living London Lord Chesterfield Macaulay Margaret marriage married mind Miss Mme du Deffand Montesquieu never once passion perhaps person Philip Stanhope Piozzi poem poet poetry political poor praise Rambler Rasselas reason recorded remains Reynolds Rousseau seems sense Shakespeare smile sometimes strange style talk Temple things thought Thrale tion to-day told true truth vanity verse Voltaire wife wish woman wonder words write wrote young Zélide