Samuel JohnsonViking Press, 1975 - 388 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 72
Página 165
... death was both emotional and intellectual ; naturally so , since it stirred him to his depths and involved his whole being . To begin with the obvious , there was his profound grief . Even if we split this up , as it were prismatically ...
... death was both emotional and intellectual ; naturally so , since it stirred him to his depths and involved his whole being . To begin with the obvious , there was his profound grief . Even if we split this up , as it were prismatically ...
Página 367
... death , Johnson wrote to his widow , had ' eclipsed the gaiety of nations ' , and certainly it had done much to darken his own gaiety . Death crowded upon death ; there would be no more epigrams from Topham Beauclerk ; he would never ...
... death , Johnson wrote to his widow , had ' eclipsed the gaiety of nations ' , and certainly it had done much to darken his own gaiety . Death crowded upon death ; there would be no more epigrams from Topham Beauclerk ; he would never ...
Página 373
... death but of the judgement after death . In his late years , talking once with Adams at Oxford , Johnson had admitted his fear that he might be one of the damned . Adams , sweetly reasonable as became a don and a clergyman , started to ...
... death but of the judgement after death . In his late years , talking once with Adams at Oxford , Johnson had admitted his fear that he might be one of the damned . Adams , sweetly reasonable as became a don and a clergyman , started to ...
Contenido
Introduction | 13 |
At St Johns Gate | 79 |
The Friend of Goodness | 100 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 21 secciones no mostradas
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Términos y frases comunes
Anna Williams Bennet Langton Birmingham Boswell Boswell's Cave century Charlotte Lennox Chesterfield comfort conversation David Garrick death Dictionary Edial edition eighteenth eighteenth-century Elizabeth Porter emotional England English enjoyed essay fact feel Frank Barber friends Garrick give hand happened happiness Hawkins Hector Henry Thrale Hester Thrale hope human interest Johnson wrote Johnsonian journey judgement kind knew Langton later letter Levet Lichfield literary literature living London look Lord Lucy Porter matter memory Michael Johnson mind nature never once Oxford perhaps poem poet poetry political published Rambler Rasselas reason remarked Reynolds Sam Johnson Samuel Johnson Sarah Savage seems sense Shakespeare society St John's Gate story Stourbridge Streatham Street talk Taylor Tetty Tetty's things thought took turn Walmesley Warton Whig word writing young
Referencias a este libro
Hemispheric Function and Collaboration in the Child Catherine T. Best Sin vista previa disponible - 1985 |