The Search for Good Sense: Four Eighteenth-century Characters: Johnson, Chesterfield, Boswell [and] GoldsmithCassell, 1958 - 354 pagini |
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Pagina 16
... mean either that it is common among people or things of a given kind ( as good humour seems typical of the English ) ; or it may mean merely that this quality is less uncommon there than elsewhere . It would be a false and flattering ...
... mean either that it is common among people or things of a given kind ( as good humour seems typical of the English ) ; or it may mean merely that this quality is less uncommon there than elsewhere . It would be a false and flattering ...
Pagina 58
... means- is Dr Johnson . " Sir , what Pope means , if he means what he says , both false and foolish . In the first place , ' what oft was thought ' is all the worse for being often thought , because , to be wit , it ought to be newly ...
... means- is Dr Johnson . " Sir , what Pope means , if he means what he says , both false and foolish . In the first place , ' what oft was thought ' is all the worse for being often thought , because , to be wit , it ought to be newly ...
Pagina 149
... means I got many hours in the morning , that my companions lost ; and the want of sleep obliged me to keep good hours the next , or at least the third night .... Know the true value of time ; snatch , seize , and enjoy every moment of ...
... means I got many hours in the morning , that my companions lost ; and the want of sleep obliged me to keep good hours the next , or at least the third night .... Know the true value of time ; snatch , seize , and enjoy every moment of ...
Cuprins
The EighteenthCentury Mind PAGE I | 1 |
Johnson | 25 |
Lord Chesterfield | 129 |
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The Search for Good Sense: Four Eighteenth-century Characters: Johnson ... Frank Laurence Lucas Vizualizare fragmente - 1958 |
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admirable amusing asked Auchinleck become believe blank verse Boswell Boswell's century character charm Corsica criticism curious d'Hermenches daughter dead December 25 doubt Dr Johnson eighteenth eighteenth-century English example Falstaff Fanny Burney father feel fool French Garrick genius 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 Paoli partly passion perhaps Philip Stanhope 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