Johnson as CriticRoutledge & K. Paul, 1973 - 472 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 79
Página 156
... scenes , he seems to produce without labour , what no labour can improve . In tragedy he is always struggling after some occasion to be comic ; but in comedy he seems to repose , or to luxuriate , as in a mode of thinking congenial to ...
... scenes , he seems to produce without labour , what no labour can improve . In tragedy he is always struggling after some occasion to be comic ; but in comedy he seems to repose , or to luxuriate , as in a mode of thinking congenial to ...
Página 188
... scene was in Illyria , and added in England ; but his sense of the same impropriety could not restrain him from the bells of Saint Bennet . This play is , in the graver part , elegant and easy , and , in some of the lighter scenes ...
... scene was in Illyria , and added in England ; but his sense of the same impropriety could not restrain him from the bells of Saint Bennet . This play is , in the graver part , elegant and easy , and , in some of the lighter scenes ...
Página 371
... scene , as is done by Rowe , in the middle of an act , is to add more acts to the play , since an act is so much of the ... scenes , from the elegance of his diction , and the suavity of his verse . He seldom moves either pity or terror ...
... scene , as is done by Rowe , in the middle of an act , is to add more acts to the play , since an act is so much of the ... scenes , from the elegance of his diction , and the suavity of his verse . He seldom moves either pity or terror ...
Contenido
JOHNSON ON SHAKESPEARE | 43 |
Note on the Text and Acknowledgment | 58 |
EARLY PERIODICAL CRITICISM | 59 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 51 secciones no mostradas
Términos y frases comunes
action admiration Aeneid ancient appears attention beauties blank verse censure character comedy common composition considered Cowley criticism death delight dialogue diction dignity diligence drama Dryden easily easy edition effect elegance endeavoured English English poetry Essay excellence exhibit expression eyes F. R. Leavis Falstaff fancy faults genius give harmony heaven hexameter Hudibras human Iliad images imagination imitation Johnson judgment kind King knowledge labour language learning lines literary literature lived Lycidas Macbeth Metaphysical poets Milton mind moral nature never numbers observed opinion original Othello Paradise Lost passages passions pastoral perhaps play pleasing pleasure poem poet poetical poetry Pope praise produced reader reason remarks rhyme Samson Samson Agonistes Samuel Johnson says scarcely scenes seems sense sentiments Shakespeare sometimes sound supposed syllables thee things thou thought tion tragedy translation truth versification Virgil virtue Warburton words writer written