Samuel JohnsonOxford University Press, 1984 - 840 من الصفحات |
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الصفحة 75
... play which he had delivered to the licenser twenty years before . ' I waited , ' says he , ' often on the licenser , and with the utmost importunity entreated an answer . ' Let Mr Brooke consider whether that importunity was not a ...
... play which he had delivered to the licenser twenty years before . ' I waited , ' says he , ' often on the licenser , and with the utmost importunity entreated an answer . ' Let Mr Brooke consider whether that importunity was not a ...
الصفحة 292
... play , and allowed Addison to be the complete master of allegory and grave humour , but paid no great deference to ... play without a couplet ; for what can be more absurd , said Minim , than that part of a play should be rhymed , and ...
... play , and allowed Addison to be the complete master of allegory and grave humour , but paid no great deference to ... play without a couplet ; for what can be more absurd , said Minim , than that part of a play should be rhymed , and ...
الصفحة 814
... play Johnson appends a general note on the play , sometimes short , sometimes long , recording his own response to it . This is a brief sampling . 467 Sermon 5. This is the fifth in the collection of twenty - four Sermons on Different ...
... play Johnson appends a general note on the play , sometimes short , sometimes long , recording his own response to it . This is a brief sampling . 467 Sermon 5. This is the fifth in the collection of twenty - four Sermons on Different ...
المحتوى
Translation of Horace Odes ii 20 1726 12 | 1 |
Prologue to Garricks Lethe 1740 | 8 |
Irene Act 11 Scene vii 1749 | 24 |
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Abyssinia Addison ancient appears beauty blank verse Catiline censure character common considered Cowley criticism curiosity danger death delight desire dignity diligence discovered Dryden easily elegance endeavoured English English language equally evil expected eyes fall favour fear folly frequently friends Gabriel Piozzi genius give happiness Harleian library honour hope human Idler ignorance Iliad imagination Imlac inhabitants Johnson justly kind King Lear knowledge labour ladies language learning less likewise live mankind marriage means mind misery nation nature necessary neglected never observed once opinion Paradise Lost passed passions Pekuah perhaps pleased pleasure poem poet poetry Pope praise present prince produce Raasay Rambler Rasselas reader reason received Savage scarcely scenes Scotland seems seldom sentiments Shakespeare Soame Jenyns sometimes suffered supposed thee things thou thought translation truth vanity verse virtue wish words write