Samuel JohnsonH. Holt, 1944 - 599 من الصفحات Samuel Johnson was a pessimist with an enormous zest for living. It has been said that no one was ever more typically English and it has also been said that he is one of the world's greatest eccentrics. But no other single trait of his character is quite so striking as the strange combination of deeply pessimistic convictions with an enormous - almost Gargantuan - appetite for learning, for literature, for good company, and for food. The literature surrounding Samuel Johnson is enormous and there is probably no other English man of letters except Shakespeare whom so many people acknowledge as the chief interest in their lives. They not only write books and read papers, they also form clubs, give dinners, stage celebrations, and collect curios. |
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الصفحة 466
... criticism of classical authors would , no less surely than classical theory , incline the critic of the moderns to con- sider the biography of the writer and his literary works as two separate things . It is true that the rough criticism ...
... criticism of classical authors would , no less surely than classical theory , incline the critic of the moderns to con- sider the biography of the writer and his literary works as two separate things . It is true that the rough criticism ...
الصفحة 492
... criticism conspicuous for literary charm , and despite Warburton , Mason , Young and Morgann , criticism usually suggested either pedan- try , personal abuse , or that curious combination of the two which one found in Rymer , Jeremy ...
... criticism conspicuous for literary charm , and despite Warburton , Mason , Young and Morgann , criticism usually suggested either pedan- try , personal abuse , or that curious combination of the two which one found in Rymer , Jeremy ...
الصفحة 499
... criticism as something which ought to be essentially different from that general criticism of life which he had made it his business to offer since he first began to write . No praise would have seemed to him higher than that implied in ...
... criticism as something which ought to be essentially different from that general criticism of life which he had made it his business to offer since he first began to write . No praise would have seemed to him higher than that implied in ...
المحتوى
The Lichfield Prodigy | 1 |
London or The Full Tide of Human | 27 |
Running About the World | 59 |
حقوق النشر | |
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عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
admiration Anna Seward appear Arthur Murphy assume Beauclerk believe Bennet Langton Boswell Hill Boswell Hill-Powell Boswell Hill-Powell ed Boswell's called century certainly character concerning contemporaries conversation course criticism David Garrick death delight Dictionary doubt Dryden edition essays evidence fact Fanny Burney Garrick gentleman Gentleman's Magazine Hebrides Henry Thrale human imagination important James Boswell John journal kind knew lady later learned least less letter Lichfield literary lived London Lord Lucy Porter manner means ment merely mind Miscellanies moral Moreover nature never occasion once opinion passage perhaps person Piozzi pleasure poem poet poetry Pope possible Preface probably published Queeney Rambler Rasselas reason remarked remembered replied Samuel Johnson Savage seems sense Shakespeare sometimes sort Streatham suggested talk Tetty things thought Thrale Thraliana tion told Topham Beauclerk Voltaire wife words write written wrote