Jonathan SwiftHutchinson, 1998 - 324 páginas Jonathan Swift (1667-1745) is an inexhaustibly intriguing figure in literary and political history. He was an ordained clergyman whose enemies thought he did not believe in God. He became a legendary Dean of St. Patrick's Cathedral in Dublin, and for four intoxicating years he was the intimate of Queen Anne's chief ministers, acting as their publicist and propagandist. His private life was intense and enigmatic. Two younger women, whom he called Stella and Vanessa, moved to Ireland to be close to him. He made both of them unhappy. Poet, polemicist, pamphleteer, and wit, Swift was the master of shock. His furious satirical responses to the corruption and hypocrisy he saw around him in private and public life have every relevance for our own times. Like his Gulliver in the land of Lilliput, Swift is a problem in perspective and scale. In this entertaining biography, Glendinning takes a literary zoom lens to illuminate this proud and intractable man. |
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Página 99
... mind of Sir William Temple . ' Being so much in with ministers and public affairs put him in mind of Sir William Temple rather often . He dined as frequently with St John as with Harley . Sometimes , capriciously , he declined their ...
... mind of Sir William Temple . ' Being so much in with ministers and public affairs put him in mind of Sir William Temple rather often . He dined as frequently with St John as with Harley . Sometimes , capriciously , he declined their ...
Página 211
... mind , ' and not die here in a rage , like a poisoned rat in a hole ' . He found curious ways to assuage his rage . After Stella died , social life at the Deanery changed . Swift made new female friends Dublin women with literary ...
... mind , ' and not die here in a rage , like a poisoned rat in a hole ' . He found curious ways to assuage his rage . After Stella died , social life at the Deanery changed . Swift made new female friends Dublin women with literary ...
Página 253
... mind and lacerated heart ' . Augustine Birrell , man of letters and chief secretary for Ireland 1907-16 , wrote in 1894 : ' No fouler pen than Swift's has soiled our literature . His language is horrible from first to last . ' Birrell ...
... mind and lacerated heart ' . Augustine Birrell , man of letters and chief secretary for Ireland 1907-16 , wrote in 1894 : ' No fouler pen than Swift's has soiled our literature . His language is horrible from first to last . ' Birrell ...
Términos y frases comunes
Archbishop became become believe Bolingbroke born called Chapter Church close Court daughter Dean Deane Swift Deanery death Delany died Dingley Dublin early England English father friends friendship gave Giffard give Gulliver hand Harley head human Ireland Irish John Johnson Jonathan Swift kind King knew known Lady later leave less letters lived London look Lord marriage married mind Moor Park mother nature never Orrery Oxford person poem political Pope present published Queen reason referred remained sense Sheridan Sir William Temple sometimes St Patrick's Stella story Street talk tell thing Thomas thought told took Tory turned Uncle Vanessa verse wanted Whig wife woman women writing written wrote young