Oliver GoldsmithPageant Press, 1955 - 86 pagina's |
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Pagina 37
... wrote from his heart . This was evident in all his most successful pieces . He wrote of secret discon- tent , which strong men cannot always resist , and which Goldsmith did not try to repress . When he found himself starving in those ...
... wrote from his heart . This was evident in all his most successful pieces . He wrote of secret discon- tent , which strong men cannot always resist , and which Goldsmith did not try to repress . When he found himself starving in those ...
Pagina 45
... wrote : A long habit of writing for bread thus turns the am- bition of every author at last into avarice . He finds that money procures all these advantages ; that respect , and that ease which he vainly expected from fame . Later on he ...
... wrote : A long habit of writing for bread thus turns the am- bition of every author at last into avarice . He finds that money procures all these advantages ; that respect , and that ease which he vainly expected from fame . Later on he ...
Pagina 52
... wrote ] : Poetry is a much easier and more agreeable species of composition than prose ; and , could a man live by it , it were not unpleasant employment to be a poet . Through the years of experience , Goldsmith had learned to turn ...
... wrote ] : Poetry is a much easier and more agreeable species of composition than prose ; and , could a man live by it , it were not unpleasant employment to be a poet . Through the years of experience , Goldsmith had learned to turn ...
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
Animated Nature Auburn Ballymahon Beau Nash became began biography booksellers Boswell brother Henry Bryanton Burke CALIFORNIA LIBRARY charm coffeehouses comedy compiling continued cousin Critical Review debts Deserted Village drudgery Elphin English Enquiry essays Europe fame Fleet Street friends garret Garrick gave genius Goldsmith family Goldsmith wrote grew Griffith Grub Street hack writing happy heart History homesick Horneck humor hundred pounds Ireland Irish Johnson labor later laugh letters Leyden lines Lissoy literary world literature living lodging London Magazine Monthly Review never Newbery night Oliver Goldsmith Oliver's patron paying students person play poem poet poetry Posterity present Public Ledger published reader received reputation Reynolds Richard Nash Samuel Johnson sizar Smollett spent starve Stoops to Conquer story Sweet Thomas Parnell tion Traveller Trinity Trinity College turned Uncle Contarine UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA vagabond verse Vicar of Wakefield writing for bread written