Goldsmith, the Critical HeritageGeorge Sebastian Rousseau Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1974 - 385 pagina's |
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Pagina 116
... considered as copying from history or from old comedies . Such characters do not now exist ; at least not in the general walks of men . Some of our late writers have therefore very judiciously had recourse to what is called Sentimental ...
... considered as copying from history or from old comedies . Such characters do not now exist ; at least not in the general walks of men . Some of our late writers have therefore very judiciously had recourse to what is called Sentimental ...
Pagina 172
... considered how small a part of his works were wrote for fame ; yet epigrams , epitaphs and monodies to his memory were without end . And what is still a greater proof of his popularity , the booksellers still continue to live upon his ...
... considered how small a part of his works were wrote for fame ; yet epigrams , epitaphs and monodies to his memory were without end . And what is still a greater proof of his popularity , the booksellers still continue to live upon his ...
Pagina 175
... considered him as a friend indeed who would ask him to tell a story or sing a song , either of which requests he was always very ready to comply with , and very often without being asked , and without any preparation , to the great ...
... considered him as a friend indeed who would ask him to tell a story or sing a song , either of which requests he was always very ready to comply with , and very often without being asked , and without any preparation , to the great ...
Inhoudsopgave
INTRODUCTION | 1 |
The Traveller or a Prospect of Society December 1764 | 29 |
JOHN LANGHORNE Monthly Review January 1765 | 35 |
Copyright | |
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admired appeared Auburn beautiful bookseller Burke called character charm circumstances Comédie Larmoyant critical heritage David Garrick delight Deserted Village Doctor Dr Johnson earth edition Edmund Burke elegance England English entertaining Essay excellence fame fancy Fanny Burney Garrick genius Goethe Good-natured happy Hardcastle heart honour humour idea imitation Johnson kind labour language letter lines literary living London luxury mankind manner Marlow merit mind moral natural history never novel observed Oliver Goldsmith opinion original passage peculiar perhaps philosophers play pleasing pleasure poem poet poetical poetry poor Pope praise present produced prose published readers Retaliation Review Richard Cumberland Samuel Foote Samuel Johnson says scene seems Sir Joshua Reynolds Stoops to Conquer story style supposed sweet taste things thought tion Traveller truth variety verse Vicar of Wakefield virtue volume whole writing written wrote