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
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 85
Seite 217
... mind by brisker motions and stronger impulses : and to unite myself once more to the living gener- ation . " In keeping with the metaphor of disease , this passage describes the experience of the mind in highly palpable terms drawn from ...
... mind by brisker motions and stronger impulses : and to unite myself once more to the living gener- ation . " In keeping with the metaphor of disease , this passage describes the experience of the mind in highly palpable terms drawn from ...
Seite 244
... mind that produced it : The general character of his poetry is elegance and gaiety . He is never pathetick , and very rarely sublime . He seems neither to have had a mind much elevated by nature , nor amplified by learning . His ...
... mind that produced it : The general character of his poetry is elegance and gaiety . He is never pathetick , and very rarely sublime . He seems neither to have had a mind much elevated by nature , nor amplified by learning . His ...
Seite 250
... mind of man , " and that is known by turning the mind upon itself , and using what is found there for grounds of inference about the mind generally , exactly Imlac's advice to Rasselas . As opposed to Cowley , Dryden's critical precepts ...
... mind of man , " and that is known by turning the mind upon itself , and using what is found there for grounds of inference about the mind generally , exactly Imlac's advice to Rasselas . As opposed to Cowley , Dryden's critical precepts ...
Inhalt
Johnsons Theory | 11 |
The Life of Boswell | 31 |
The Treachery of the Human Heart and the Stratagems of Defense | 45 |
Urheberrecht | |
10 weitere Abschnitte werden nicht angezeigt.
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Account of Corsica appears Auchinleck biographer Boswell's called chapter character comic conclusion context conversation Cowley criticism Dictionary dignity Dryden effect English envy essay example experience fact feel fiction Frank Brady genius happiness Hebrides hero hope Human Wishes ideal ideas imagination Imlac island James Boswell John Johnsonian judgment Juvenal's kind knowledge language Laura Quinney Leopold Damrosch less literary literature Lives London Journal meaning Milton mind moral narrative nation nature never Paoli Paradise Lost passage pastoral pathos Paul Fussell Pekuah perhaps philosophic Plutarch poem poet poetical poetry political Pope Pope's portrait Preface present Rambler Rasselas reader reason reflection remarks Samuel Johnson satire Savage says Scotland Scots seems sense Shakespeare simply story style Swift things thought Thrale Tour to Corsica tragic truth Vanity of Human virtue W. K. Wimsatt Walter Jackson Bate words writing