Dr. Samuel Johnson and James BoswellHarold Bloom Chelsea House Publishers, 1986 - 280 Seiten A collection of critical essays on the works of Dr. Samuel Johnson and James Boswell, arranged in order of original publication. |
Im Buch
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Seite 50
... imagination , and the tunneling of desire into new and unexpected veins . The imagination of even the old man in Rasselas , for whom everything has " lost its novelty , " and who believes that " Nothing is now of much importance beyond ...
... imagination , and the tunneling of desire into new and unexpected veins . The imagination of even the old man in Rasselas , for whom everything has " lost its novelty , " and who believes that " Nothing is now of much importance beyond ...
Seite 251
... imagination . " Animation is what Johnson means when he discusses Milton's knowledge . in relation to his imagination : " To put these materials to poetical use is required an imagination capable of painting nature and realizing fiction ...
... imagination . " Animation is what Johnson means when he discusses Milton's knowledge . in relation to his imagination : " To put these materials to poetical use is required an imagination capable of painting nature and realizing fiction ...
Seite 252
... imagination and reason . If imagination is supposed to provide the pleasure , while reason assures instruction , the danger is always present that the desire to please will overcome the duty to instruct . Since poetry is not reducible ...
... imagination and reason . If imagination is supposed to provide the pleasure , while reason assures instruction , the danger is always present that the desire to please will overcome the duty to instruct . Since poetry is not reducible ...
Inhalt
Johnsons Theory | 11 |
The Life of Boswell | 31 |
The Treachery of the Human Heart and the Stratagems of Defense | 45 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
actual appears become begins biographer Boswell Boswell's called chapter character close conclusion considered continued conversation Corsica course criticism death described desire Dryden effect English essay example experience expression fact feel fiction final give hero hope human ideal ideas imagination important interest island John Johnson journal kind knowledge language later learning least less letters literary literature Lives London look matter meaning mind moral nature never observation once original Paoli passage perhaps play poem poet poetry political Pope possible practice present principles question Rambler Rasselas reader reason reflection relation remarks Samuel satire Savage says seems sense Shakespeare simply society story style suggests things thought Tour truth turn University vanity virtue whole wish writing written