The Cambridge History of English Literature: From Steele and Addison to Pope and Swift. 1920Sir Adolphus William Ward, Alfred Rayney Waller The University Press, 1952 |
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Página 29
... readers who were interested in manners , and deserved the fate ' that from being thought no undelightful companion , he was soon reckoned a disagreeable fellow1 ? ' This missionary spirit , when roused , impelled him to other forms of ...
... readers who were interested in manners , and deserved the fate ' that from being thought no undelightful companion , he was soon reckoned a disagreeable fellow1 ? ' This missionary spirit , when roused , impelled him to other forms of ...
Página 39
... readers to recognise their own principles in some poignant situation . As civilization became complex and peaceful , the affairs of daily life assumed greater importance ; men concerned themselves with little things , and Steele found ...
... readers to recognise their own principles in some poignant situation . As civilization became complex and peaceful , the affairs of daily life assumed greater importance ; men concerned themselves with little things , and Steele found ...
Página 48
... readers like an intimate counsellor or a constant friend . Above all , the periodical was to have the persuasiveness of personality . As the editors could not write in their own names , they profited by the example of Isaac Bickerstaff ...
... readers like an intimate counsellor or a constant friend . Above all , the periodical was to have the persuasiveness of personality . As the editors could not write in their own names , they profited by the example of Isaac Bickerstaff ...
Índice
DefocThe Newspaper and the Novel page | 1 |
Steele and Addison | 26 |
Pope | 66 |
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Términos y frases comunes
Addison admirable afterwards Ambrose Philips ancient Anthony à Wood appeared Arbuthnot attack ballad became Bentley bishop Bolingbroke Burnet called Cambridge chap character Christian church coffeehouses contemporaries controversy criticism death Defoe Defoe's deists Dryden Dunciad edition eighteenth century England English Epistle Essay followed French friends Harley heroic couplet History Hudibras humour Iliad interest Ireland Jacobite John John Bull king Lady later Latin Law's learning letters literary literature living London Lord Memoirs ment mind modern moral mystical nature Ned Ward never original Oxford pamphlets philosophy pieces pindarics poem poet poetry political Pope Pope's printed Prior prose published queen readers reign religion satire says Scotland Scottish seems songs spirit St John's college Steele style Swift taste Tatler things thought Tom Brown tory translation verse volume Walpole whig William writings written wrote