Doctor Johnson: A Study in Eighteenth Century HumanismRussell & Russell, 1963 - 280 páginas |
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Página 48
... classical poet , explain to Rasselas that the business of the poet is not to number the streaks of the tulip , or to describe the different shades in the verdure of the forest , but to find expression for universal truth and to ...
... classical poet , explain to Rasselas that the business of the poet is not to number the streaks of the tulip , or to describe the different shades in the verdure of the forest , but to find expression for universal truth and to ...
Página 53
... classical learning , he showed a fondness for Burton's The Anatomy of Melancholy , declaring that it was the only book that ever took him out of bed two hours sooner than he wished to rise.2 Intellectual curiosity , which led him to ...
... classical learning , he showed a fondness for Burton's The Anatomy of Melancholy , declaring that it was the only book that ever took him out of bed two hours sooner than he wished to rise.2 Intellectual curiosity , which led him to ...
Página 145
... classical critic and a neo - classical poet who had been brought up on the tradition of correctness , with the fur- ther handicap of nearly a complete insensibility to music . No doubt he could feel the grand but more simple majesty of ...
... classical critic and a neo - classical poet who had been brought up on the tradition of correctness , with the fur- ther handicap of nearly a complete insensibility to music . No doubt he could feel the grand but more simple majesty of ...
Contenido
A WORD OF INTRODUCTION | 3 |
AN ACCOUNT OF JOHNSONS READING 8 | 33 |
JOHNSONS RELATION TO CLASSICAL | 54 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Términos y frases comunes
Addison ancient appear applied Aristotle assertion beauties biography blank verse Boileau Boswell century character classical criticism common sense Cowley declares delight diction Dictionary Doctor Johnson doctrine dogmatic drama Dryden edition eighteenth-century elegance English Euripides example expression faults French genius Greek heroic couplet Horace human humanist Ibid images imagination imitation intellectual Johnson judgment Julius Caesar Scaliger kind King Lear language Latin learning lexicon lines literary literature Lives Lycidas manner merit metaphysical poets Milton mind Misc modern Molière moral nature neo-classical neo-classicism never observation odes opera opinion Paradise Lost passions pastoral perhaps Petrarch play poem poet's poetical poetry Pope Pope's praise Preface to Shakespeare principles Quintilian Rambler reader reason reference Réflexion remarks reveals revival romantic rules Rymer says scenes sentiments Shakespeare Spenser spirit sublime taste Theocritus thought tion true truth versification Virgil words writing