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 26
... imagination of a poet capable of fine frenzy . All Johnson's most characteristic utterances , oral or written , display this fundamentally imaginative quality , this need for poiesis , seeking always the vivid metaphor or simile , the ...
... imagination of a poet capable of fine frenzy . All Johnson's most characteristic utterances , oral or written , display this fundamentally imaginative quality , this need for poiesis , seeking always the vivid metaphor or simile , the ...
Seite 110
... imagination , to raise phantoms of horror , or beset life with supernumerary distresses . " Or " No disease of the imagination is so diffi- cult of cure as that which is complicated with the dread of guilt . " Erich Fromm , quoting the ...
... imagination , to raise phantoms of horror , or beset life with supernumerary distresses . " Or " No disease of the imagination is so diffi- cult of cure as that which is complicated with the dread of guilt . " Erich Fromm , quoting the ...
Seite 169
... imagination " ( the image - creating faculty ) occur many dozens of times in The Lives of the Poets , and Johnson has no greater praise for a poem than to say that its imagery is novel and effective , and no greater censure than that ...
... imagination " ( the image - creating faculty ) occur many dozens of times in The Lives of the Poets , and Johnson has no greater praise for a poem than to say that its imagery is novel and effective , and no greater censure than that ...
Inhalt
Chapter | 26 |
Chapter Three | 47 |
Chapter Four | 62 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Abyssinia amusing begins biography Boswell Boswell's Britain century chapter Christian death debates Dictionary 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 Irene James James Boswell Jenyns John Johnson Society Johnson wrote Johnson's critical Johnsonian journalism journalistic language later letters Lichfield literary literature Lives London Lord Lycidas means metaphysical poets Milton mind modern moral nature never 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 virtue Walpole Whig Whiggism words writing young