Samuel Johnson and the Didactic AestheticUniversity of Colorado., 1973 - 402 Seiten |
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Seite 93
... learning , and regarded with a veneration somewhat approaching to that which man would pay to the Angelick Nature . " 7 He says that he thereupon determined to become a poet and at once began to see everything with a new purpose . He ...
... learning , and regarded with a veneration somewhat approaching to that which man would pay to the Angelick Nature . " 7 He says that he thereupon determined to become a poet and at once began to see everything with a new purpose . He ...
Seite 141
... learning to live as one should and of mending the world for the better . The purpose of biography is moral ; or , as William K. Wimsatt sums it up , " Biography is what happened to a person , like oneself . " 98 Prose Fiction The ...
... learning to live as one should and of mending the world for the better . The purpose of biography is moral ; or , as William K. Wimsatt sums it up , " Biography is what happened to a person , like oneself . " 98 Prose Fiction The ...
Seite 162
... learning and critical acumen but who obviously had mastered only the " husk , " if that . 136 " The Idler , " No. 60 , Yale Edition , II , 184 . Johnson's satirical lash is directed against the inane judgments and 162.
... learning and critical acumen but who obviously had mastered only the " husk , " if that . 136 " The Idler , " No. 60 , Yale Edition , II , 184 . Johnson's satirical lash is directed against the inane judgments and 162.
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Achievement of Samuel Atkins biography Boswell chapter character Christian Christian humanism Classic to Romantic communication Daiches David Daiches didactic aesthetic Doctor Johnson drama Dryden English essay ethical expression Fanny Burney genres George Birkbeck Hagstrum Hereafter cited Houston human conduct human experience human nature humanistic Idler inculcation of moral John Johnson believed Johnson on Shakespeare Johnson says Johnson's concept Johnson's critical Johnson's humanism Johnson's ideas Johnson's literary theory Johnson's theory Johnson's view Johnsonian Joseph Epes Brown Joseph Wood Krutch judgments Keast knowledge Krutch litera literary art literary fiction literary pleasure Lives man's mankind Milton mind moral instruction moral truth numbers observed ornament passage passions poem poet poetic poetry Pope Preface to Shakespeare Prince of Abissinia principles prose fiction purpose Rambler Rasselas reader realism recognition remarks representations Samuel Johnson significance son's source of literary stresses theory of literature tion ture Walter Jackson Bate Wellek writings Yale Edition