Samuel Johnson's Literary CriticismUniversity of Nebraska Press, 1974 - 286 من الصفحات |
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الصفحة 66
... once before him , and passed willingly over those which were most barren of ideas , and required labour , rather than genius.67 Yet versification , or the art of modulating his numbers , is indispensably necessary to a poet . Every ...
... once before him , and passed willingly over those which were most barren of ideas , and required labour , rather than genius.67 Yet versification , or the art of modulating his numbers , is indispensably necessary to a poet . Every ...
الصفحة 126
... once become unfamiliar by disuse , and unpleasing by unfamiliarity ? There is another cause of alteration more prevalent than any other , which yet in the present state of the world cannot be obviated . A mixture of two languages will ...
... once become unfamiliar by disuse , and unpleasing by unfamiliarity ? There is another cause of alteration more prevalent than any other , which yet in the present state of the world cannot be obviated . A mixture of two languages will ...
الصفحة 242
... once so interesting by the fable , and so delightful by the language . The story is domestick , and therefore easily received by the imagination , and assimilated to common life ; the diction is exquisitely harmonious , and soft or ...
... once so interesting by the fable , and so delightful by the language . The story is domestick , and therefore easily received by the imagination , and assimilated to common life ; the diction is exquisitely harmonious , and soft or ...
المحتوى
FROM THE PERIODICAL CRITICISM 175059 | 1 |
Rambler nos 86 88 and 90 Paradise Lost | 65 |
Preface To A Dictionary of the English Language 1755 | 101 |
حقوق النشر | |
14 من الأقسام الأخرى غير ظاهرة
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
action allowed ancient appears attention beauties beginning censure character common considered copies criticism delight desire diction diligence discovered Dryden easily easy edition effect elegance endeavoured English equally Essay excellence exhibit expression faults force frequently genius give happy hope human ideas ignorance images imagination imitation interest Johnson kind knowledge known labour language learning less living lost manners meaning Milton mind moral nature necessary never notes observed once opinion original pass passages passions pastoral performance perhaps play pleasing pleasure poem poet poetical poetry Pope praise Preface present principles produced reader reason remarks requires rest rules says scenes seems seldom sense sentiments Shakespeare shew sometimes sound suffered sufficient supply suppose surely things thought tion tragedy true truth verse virtue wish writer written