Anglica, Volumes 5-61962 - English philology |
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Page 59
... moral attitude in the papers on literary criticism as well as on manners . In that respect Addison is different from ... Morally Vicious , and only Poetically Good , if I may use the Phrase of our Modern Criticks ( No. 548 ) . The same ...
... moral attitude in the papers on literary criticism as well as on manners . In that respect Addison is different from ... Morally Vicious , and only Poetically Good , if I may use the Phrase of our Modern Criticks ( No. 548 ) . The same ...
Page 2
... moral idea , that the way of approach to the study of moral speeches from the viewpoint of the use of classical names will be of use , so far as Mediaeval and Elizabethan literature is concerned , and I take up here the use of Jupiter ...
... moral idea , that the way of approach to the study of moral speeches from the viewpoint of the use of classical names will be of use , so far as Mediaeval and Elizabethan literature is concerned , and I take up here the use of Jupiter ...
Page 31
... moral sentiment appear in his linguistic judgments . Anyway the above passge is another indication that Johnson read the Prefaces in a critical way . ( ix ) Johnson's moral and prescriptive character can best be observed in " branding ...
... moral sentiment appear in his linguistic judgments . Anyway the above passge is another indication that Johnson read the Prefaces in a critical way . ( ix ) Johnson's moral and prescriptive character can best be observed in " branding ...
Contents
The Auxiliary Do In John Drydens Plays Keitaro Irie | 1 |
The Language of The Spectator | 20 |
藤木白鳳 | 63 |
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adjectives appear authors blood Caesar called cause century character combinations comes common course death dialects Dictionary effect Elizabethan English examples expressed eyes fact fair Falstaff Fielding function give given Hamlet hand honour human instance Johnson kind King language Lear less letter lines linguistic live look Macbeth main clause marker meaning MICHIGAN mind moral nature never noun object once original Othello passage period person phrase play poetry present prose question reason reference relation relative relative clause scene seems seen sense sentence Shakespeare shows simple sometimes speak Spectator speech stand structure sub-clause thing thou thought Troilus turn University verb verse whole words writing