The True Genius of Oliver GoldsmithJohns Hopkins Press, 1969 - 241 pagina's |
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Pagina 64
... never read the Rambler ? Both Boswell and Dr. Warton noted the influ- ence of Johnson upon Goldsmith's conversation , particu- larly in his attempt to employ difficult words , but they might have discovered even subtler evidences of it ...
... never read the Rambler ? Both Boswell and Dr. Warton noted the influ- ence of Johnson upon Goldsmith's conversation , particu- larly in his attempt to employ difficult words , but they might have discovered even subtler evidences of it ...
Pagina 196
... never becomes san integral part of his personality — and what D. W. Jef- ferson calls the " official and the unofficial self of the vicar " are never fully reconciled . The attitude which Goldsmith takes toward Dr. Primrose may not be ...
... never becomes san integral part of his personality — and what D. W. Jef- ferson calls the " official and the unofficial self of the vicar " are never fully reconciled . The attitude which Goldsmith takes toward Dr. Primrose may not be ...
Pagina 224
... never been more subtly satirized than in this novel . Goldsmith's original intention in writing The Vicar , an intention which was never changed , may be summed up in a quatrain by William Blake : Since all the Riches of this World May ...
... never been more subtly satirized than in this novel . Goldsmith's original intention in writing The Vicar , an intention which was never changed , may be summed up in a quatrain by William Blake : Since all the Riches of this World May ...
Inhoudsopgave
Introduction | 1 |
Augustanisms and the Moral Basis for | 21 |
The Craft of Persuasion | 40 |
Copyright | |
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Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
Altangi appears artistic attack attitude Augustan beauty become benevolence Black called century Chapter character Citizen comic considered critics culture direct edition effect eighteenth-century English Enquiry essay fail followed force fortune function give Gold Goldsmith hand happiness History human important interpretation ironic irony italics Italy John Johnson later learning Letter literary literature London look manner material mean merely mind moral narrator Nash nature never novel object observed once original paragraph passage pattern pleasure poem poetry point of view political poor Pope praise present Primrose Primrose's prose reader reason recognize refers reflect rhetoric satire seems sense sentence sentimental smith social story structure style suggest Swift taste theory thesis tion traditional Traveller turn understand verse Vicar of Wakefield virtue vols writing
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