The Mid-eighteenth CenturyClarendon Press, 1979 - 671 páginas |
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Página 188
... sense over delicacy ; and though , having achieved it , she ' could cry for downright joy ' , her attitude and that of Cecil , her accomplice in teasing out the absurd tangles of the situation , has been one of bluff common sense : Your ...
... sense over delicacy ; and though , having achieved it , she ' could cry for downright joy ' , her attitude and that of Cecil , her accomplice in teasing out the absurd tangles of the situation , has been one of bluff common sense : Your ...
Página 286
... sense of decorum to suppress some characteristic passages , such as the description , which William Blake himself would have endorsed , of the miseries of school education . A school is the cavern of fear and sorrow ; the mobility of ...
... sense of decorum to suppress some characteristic passages , such as the description , which William Blake himself would have endorsed , of the miseries of school education . A school is the cavern of fear and sorrow ; the mobility of ...
Página 310
... sense of the word , had come to be regarded by 1700 as equivalent to a treatise , some of Locke's modesty continued to overtake the learned as they penned titles and wrote prefaces to their inquiries into subjects as far- reaching as ...
... sense of the word , had come to be regarded by 1700 as equivalent to a treatise , some of Locke's modesty continued to overtake the learned as they penned titles and wrote prefaces to their inquiries into subjects as far- reaching as ...
Índice
INTRODUCTION I | 1 |
SAMUEL JOHNSON | 8 |
POETRY 17401760 | 57 |
Direitos de autor | |
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admirable ancient appeared attempt attention ballad biography Boswell called Cambridge century chapter character collected concerned considered contributed criticism described detail dialogue discussed early Edinburgh edition effect Eighteenth Eighteenth-Century England English essay example experience expression feeling Fielding followed genius give hand History human imagination important interest Italy John Johnson kind Lady language later learned less letters literary Literature lives London Lord manners Memoirs mind moral narrative nature never novel Observations original Oxford particular perhaps period play pleasure poems poet poetry political Pope preface present principal publication published reader remarked satire says scene Scottish seems sense sentiment society story Thomas thought tion translated turn University verse vols volume writing written wrote York young