Goldsmith, the Critical HeritageGeorge Sebastian Rousseau Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1974 - 385 pagina's |
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Pagina 81
... true sublime , are the consequences of polished life ; because genius is now furnished with the greatest variety of ideas , and stimulated by the most powerful incitements to excel . Do the ancients excel us in poetry ? Certainly not ...
... true sublime , are the consequences of polished life ; because genius is now furnished with the greatest variety of ideas , and stimulated by the most powerful incitements to excel . Do the ancients excel us in poetry ? Certainly not ...
Pagina 229
... true colouring of the simple figure . They are frequently contrived to express a necessary circumstance in the description , and thus avoid the usual imputation of being expletive . Of this kind are , ' the rattling terrors of the ...
... true colouring of the simple figure . They are frequently contrived to express a necessary circumstance in the description , and thus avoid the usual imputation of being expletive . Of this kind are , ' the rattling terrors of the ...
Pagina 332
... true success . Goldsmith was unhappy , it is true ; but he was not unhappy through literature ; it was not his genius which caused his sufferings . In any sphere of life he would have been as unsuccessful , as unhappy , if not ...
... true success . Goldsmith was unhappy , it is true ; but he was not unhappy through literature ; it was not his genius which caused his sufferings . In any sphere of life he would have been as unsuccessful , as unhappy , if not ...
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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