Johnson History of Rasselas Prince of Abyssinia1958 |
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Pagina 30
... poet , and had soon found the important truth ' that no man was ever great by imitation . He had studied man and nature and all the modes of life , but at last he saw that of a poet so much is required that he convinces Rasselas , if he ...
... poet , and had soon found the important truth ' that no man was ever great by imitation . He had studied man and nature and all the modes of life , but at last he saw that of a poet so much is required that he convinces Rasselas , if he ...
Pagina 62
... poet to nothing can be useless . Whatever is beautiful , and what- ever is dreadful , must be familiar to his imagination : he must be conversant with all that is awfully vast or elegantly little . The plants of the garden , the animals ...
... poet to nothing can be useless . Whatever is beautiful , and what- ever is dreadful , must be familiar to his imagination : he must be conversant with all that is awfully vast or elegantly little . The plants of the garden , the animals ...
Pagina 64
... poet . Proceed with thy narration . ' ' To be a poet , ' said Imlac , ' is indeed very difficult . ' ' So difficult , ' returned the prince , that I will at present hear no more of his labours . Tell me whither you went to when you had ...
... poet . Proceed with thy narration . ' ' To be a poet , ' said Imlac , ' is indeed very difficult . ' ' So difficult , ' returned the prince , that I will at present hear no more of his labours . Tell me whither you went to when you had ...
Termeni și expresii frecvente
Abyssinia Anatomy of Melancholy answered Imlac Arab astronomer Bassa began Boswell Boswell's Cairo CHAPTER choice companions considered conversation curiosity Cymbeline danger death delight desire Dictionary dreadful Egypt endeavoured enjoy entered evil eyes fancy father favour favourite fear felicity folly friends happy valley heard honour hope hour Human Wishes imagination inquire Janissaries Janizaries Johnson defines knowledge labour lady learning less live looked lost maids mankind marriage melan mind misery mountains Mughal nature Nekayah never Nile observed once opinion Paradise Lost passed passion Pekuah Persia pleased pleasure poet Post prince princess Pyramid Rambler Rasselas reason resolved returned sage Samuel Johnson says scrupulosity silent solitude sometimes soon sorrow soul sound of music Streatham suffer suppose talk Thomas Carlyle thou thought travelled Vanity of Human virtue weary wisdom wonder wrote youth