Jonathan Swift: Essays on His Satire and Other StudiesOxford University Press, 1964 - 292 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 30
Página 209
... virtue of simplicity . For him the virtue of simplicity had not been a natural gift ; he had acquired it with much effort . His own early poetry , much of which he had destroyed , was written in a grandilo- quent manner ; he had found ...
... virtue of simplicity . For him the virtue of simplicity had not been a natural gift ; he had acquired it with much effort . His own early poetry , much of which he had destroyed , was written in a grandilo- quent manner ; he had found ...
Página 245
... Virtues of all Kinds are so highly necessary and where the Want of any is so quickly or uni- versally felt . A great ... virtue because , as a moralist , he firmly believed that there was the possibility of an ordered society . " The ...
... Virtues of all Kinds are so highly necessary and where the Want of any is so quickly or uni- versally felt . A great ... virtue because , as a moralist , he firmly believed that there was the possibility of an ordered society . " The ...
Página 282
... Virtue is crown'd and Vice punished ; that the Historian ( hardly otherwise more than a Tale - teller ) becomes a Statesman and a Soldier ; makes himself Judge of Princes and their Ministers ; and Ar- bitrator of their good and evil ...
... Virtue is crown'd and Vice punished ; that the Historian ( hardly otherwise more than a Tale - teller ) becomes a Statesman and a Soldier ; makes himself Judge of Princes and their Ministers ; and Ar- bitrator of their good and evil ...
Contenido
Comedy | 57 |
CONTENTS | 63 |
Swift and Stella | 70 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 10 secciones no mostradas
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Términos y frases comunes
able allowed appeared attack believe called century common concerned continued conversation course court critics dangerous Dean death describes Dublin edition effect England English evidence examine experience final force friends further give given Gulliver Gulliver's hand human Ibid Ireland irony Journal kind King Lady language later learned least leave less letters lines living London look Lord manner meaning method mind Nature never observe parody particular perhaps person play poem poetry poets political possible present printed Prose published readers reason remark satire seems sense society sort Stella style Swift Tale things thought tion Travels true turned verse whole wish writing written wrote young