Jonathan Swift: Essays on His Satire and Other StudiesOxford University Press, 1964 - 292 páginas |
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Página 127
... least as it appeared to me from the views we received of it in Ireland , had ruined the liberties of Athens and Rome ; and that it might be easy to prove it from history . Soon after I went to London ; and , in a few weeks , drew up a ...
... least as it appeared to me from the views we received of it in Ireland , had ruined the liberties of Athens and Rome ; and that it might be easy to prove it from history . Soon after I went to London ; and , in a few weeks , drew up a ...
Página 169
... least have approved of Hobbes's point of view . It might even be said that with all its limitations it is nevertheless sufficient to account for that kind of poetry which Swift himself produced . Swift amused himself in similar fashion ...
... least have approved of Hobbes's point of view . It might even be said that with all its limitations it is nevertheless sufficient to account for that kind of poetry which Swift himself produced . Swift amused himself in similar fashion ...
Página 213
... least " a thousand shining questions , anwers , repartee , replies and rejoinders fitted to adorn every kind of discourse " ; and all these bright passages of wit have been in use for at least a hundred years , and may therefore be ...
... least " a thousand shining questions , anwers , repartee , replies and rejoinders fitted to adorn every kind of discourse " ; and all these bright passages of wit have been in use for at least a hundred years , and may therefore be ...
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