Jonathan Swift: Essays on His Satire and Other StudiesOxford University Press, 1964 - 292 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 36
Página 122
... dangers , though it not only lends itself to the necessary dramatization , but also may be neatly reversed and elaborated into a satire on the real religion of the fashionable world , its god the tailor , and its system of belief ...
... dangers , though it not only lends itself to the necessary dramatization , but also may be neatly reversed and elaborated into a satire on the real religion of the fashionable world , its god the tailor , and its system of belief ...
Página 208
... danger ; the pedantry of poets and wits , the pedantry of Grub - street , the pedantry of the court and polite society seemed to him equally dangerous . Swift had very simple views on language , for he always maintained that there was ...
... danger ; the pedantry of poets and wits , the pedantry of Grub - street , the pedantry of the court and polite society seemed to him equally dangerous . Swift had very simple views on language , for he always maintained that there was ...
Página 237
... dangerous political writings in which , five years before , he had challenged the English government in the matter of its political and economic treatment of Ireland , and had endeavored to teach the peo- ple of Ireland to use the ...
... dangerous political writings in which , five years before , he had challenged the English government in the matter of its political and economic treatment of Ireland , and had endeavored to teach the peo- ple of Ireland to use the ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Términos y frases comunes
A. E. Housman amusement appeared attack Augustan Brobdingnag Cadenus comedy common concerned conciseness Congreve conversation court critics Dean Dean Swift death Denis Johnston Dryden Dublin edition England English Essay Esther Johnson fashion folly friends friendship give Gulliver Gulliver's Travels hath honour Houyhnhnms human humour Ibid Ireland Irish irony Isaac Bickerstaff Jonathan Swift Journal to Stella King Lady language later learned Lemuel Gulliver letters literary London Lord Mankind manner ment method mind ministers Muse Nature never parody passion pedantry perhaps person poem poetry poets political Pope printed Prose quote raillery readers reason reason sleeps romantic satirist seems sense sentiment sermon seventeenth century Sheridan Sir William Temple society style Swift's satire Tale Tatler things thought tion tone Tory turned Vanessa verse Virtue Whig whole words writing written