Samuel Johnson, Band 10Twayne Publishers, 1989 - 206 Seiten Provides in-depth analysis of the life, works, career, and critical importance of Samuel Johnson. |
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Seite 75
... seems not very easy to admit new positions , for he never mentions the motion of the earth but with contempt and ridi- cule . " And of the Urn Burial , he writes : " Of the uselessness of these inquiries , Browne seems not to have been ...
... seems not very easy to admit new positions , for he never mentions the motion of the earth but with contempt and ridi- cule . " And of the Urn Burial , he writes : " Of the uselessness of these inquiries , Browne seems not to have been ...
Seite 154
... seem very strange to find him at other times playing the role of the great " abstractionist , " as he has sometimes been termed . In fact , Johnson never seems to have used the word abstract as a critical term . What he does use ...
... seem very strange to find him at other times playing the role of the great " abstractionist , " as he has sometimes been termed . In fact , Johnson never seems to have used the word abstract as a critical term . What he does use ...
Seite 155
... seems to mean " vague , indefinite , unable to be grasped by the senses " - " abstract , " in the sense that vivid and concrete sensory impressions are absent . It seems clear from such remarks that Johnson ( like Blake and many others ) ...
... seems to mean " vague , indefinite , unable to be grasped by the senses " - " abstract , " in the sense that vivid and concrete sensory impressions are absent . It seems clear from such remarks that Johnson ( like Blake and many others ) ...
Inhalt
Chapter | 26 |
Chapter Three | 47 |
Chapter Four | 62 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Abyssinia amusing biography Boswell Boswell's Britain century chapter Christian death Dictionary Donald Greene Donne early edition eighteenth eighteenth-century English essays Fanny Burney feel Gentleman's Magazine George George Strahan happiness Henry Thrale Human Wishes Idler imagery imagination important intellectual interest James James Boswell Jenyns John Johnson Society Johnson wrote Johnson's critical Johnsonian journalism journalistic language later letters Lichfield Literary Magazine literature Lives London Lord Lycidas means metaphysical poets Milton mind modern moral nature Oxford pamphlets passage Patriot perhaps pleasure poem poetic poetry Poets political Pope Pope's praise Preface prose published Rambler Rasselas reader remark Samuel Johnson Savage seems sense sermons Shakespeare Sir Dagonet Soame Jenyns sometimes style T. S. Eliot things thought Thrale tion Tory translation University Press Vanity of Human verse Walpole Whig Whiggism words writing Yale young