The Works of Samuel Johnson, Volumen 10F.C. and J. Rivington, 1823 |
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Página 66
... criticism to ob- serve , that if our language is not here fully dis- played , I have only failed in an attempt which no human powers have hitherto completed . If the lexicons of ancient tongues , now immutably fixed , and comprized in a ...
... criticism to ob- serve , that if our language is not here fully dis- played , I have only failed in an attempt which no human powers have hitherto completed . If the lexicons of ancient tongues , now immutably fixed , and comprized in a ...
Página 69
Samuel Johnson. or additions bear a very small proportion to the whole . The critic will now have less to object , but the student who has bought any of the former copies needs not repent ; he will not , without nice collation , perceive ...
Samuel Johnson. or additions bear a very small proportion to the whole . The critic will now have less to object , but the student who has bought any of the former copies needs not repent ; he will not , without nice collation , perceive ...
Página 70
... criticism , or elegance of style . But it has been since considered that works of that kind are by no means necessary to the greater number of readers , who , seldom intending to write or presuming to judge , turn over books only to ...
... criticism , or elegance of style . But it has been since considered that works of that kind are by no means necessary to the greater number of readers , who , seldom intending to write or presuming to judge , turn over books only to ...
Página 120
... critics . Instead of the common reading , -Doing every thing Safe towards your love and honour , he has published ... criticism ought not to be blunted against an editor , who can imagine that he is restoring poetry , while he is ...
... critics . Instead of the common reading , -Doing every thing Safe towards your love and honour , he has published ... criticism ought not to be blunted against an editor , who can imagine that he is restoring poetry , while he is ...
Página 121
... critics are adopted without any acknow- ledgement , and few of the difficulties are removed which have hitherto embarrassed the readers of Shakespeare . I would not however be thought to insult the edi- tor , nor to censure him with too ...
... critics are adopted without any acknow- ledgement , and few of the difficulties are removed which have hitherto embarrassed the readers of Shakespeare . I would not however be thought to insult the edi- tor , nor to censure him with too ...
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