Oliver Goldsmith: The Critical HeritageG.S. Rousseau Routledge, 2013 M10 31 - 412 páginas The Critical Heritage gathers together a large body of critical sources on major figures in literature. Each volume presents contemporary responses to a writer's work, enabling student and researcher to reaad the material themselves. |
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Página 3
... things. As Goethe himself says: The influence Goldsmith . . . exercised upon me, just at the chief point of my development, cannot be estimated. This high, benevolent irony [italics mine], this just and comprehensive way of viewing things ...
... things. As Goethe himself says: The influence Goldsmith . . . exercised upon me, just at the chief point of my development, cannot be estimated. This high, benevolent irony [italics mine], this just and comprehensive way of viewing things ...
Página 4
... things were a most admirable training for me, and surely, these are the sentiments, which in the end lead us back from all the mistaken paths of life. This perception is truly keen, and exciting as well. Recently, an American critic ...
... things were a most admirable training for me, and surely, these are the sentiments, which in the end lead us back from all the mistaken paths of life. This perception is truly keen, and exciting as well. Recently, an American critic ...
Página 6
... things British, sang Goldsmith's praises as they had extolled Richardson and Fielding before him; yet in contrast, a minuscule part of the genuinely influential critics (Schlegel, Herder, Goethe), gave him their staunch support. And in ...
... things British, sang Goldsmith's praises as they had extolled Richardson and Fielding before him; yet in contrast, a minuscule part of the genuinely influential critics (Schlegel, Herder, Goethe), gave him their staunch support. And in ...
Página 9
... thing at all.' Why not? James provides no clue. He knows what he knows and understands only so much; and when We recall that his essay is merely an introduction to a new edition of The Vicar, we must be grateful for whatever pittance is ...
... thing at all.' Why not? James provides no clue. He knows what he knows and understands only so much; and when We recall that his essay is merely an introduction to a new edition of The Vicar, we must be grateful for whatever pittance is ...
Página 11
... things as they really are, wie es eigentlich gewesen, but they rarely wrote about The Vicar.29 The four authors just mentioned all aimed at a description of these five rare qualities they believed Goldsmith to possess. He was unique in ...
... things as they really are, wie es eigentlich gewesen, but they rarely wrote about The Vicar.29 The four authors just mentioned all aimed at a description of these five rare qualities they believed Goldsmith to possess. He was unique in ...
Contenido
1 | |
The Traveller or a Prospect of Society December
1764 | 29 |
The Vicar of Wakefield 27 March 1766 | 44 |
The Good Natured Man 29 January 1768 | 70 |
The Deserted Village 26 May 1770 | 76 |
She Stoops to Conquer March 1773 | 115 |
Retaliation I9 April 1774 posthumously published | 128 |
History of the Earth and Animated Nature 1 July 1774 posthumously published | 135 |
On Goldsmiths Life and Works | 157 |
Select Bibliography | 359 |
Index | 361 |
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Términos y frases comunes
admired appeared beauty biographical booksellers Burke century character charm critical heritage David Garrick delight Deserted Village Doctor Dr Johnson edition Edmund Burke elegant England English Essays excellence fame Fanny Burney faults field find fine finished fire first Garrick genius George Eliot Goethe Goldsmith’s writings happiness Hardcastle heart honour humour idea imitation influence James Prior Johnson kind labour language letter lines literary literature living London luxury manner Memoirs merit mind moral natural history never novel observed Oliver Goldsmith opinion original passage peculiar perhaps play pleasure poem poet poet’s poetical poetry poor Pope praise present produced prose published readers reflections Review Richard Cumberland Samuel Foote scene seems sentimental comedy Sir Joshua Reynolds smith’s Stoops to Conquer story style sweet taste things thought tion Traveller truth verse Vicar of Wakefield virtue volume written wrote