Joseph Addison, Volume 10Twayne Publishers, 1982 - 182 pagine |
Dall'interno del libro
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Pagina 54
... dialogue , perhaps un- finished , compares the merits of ancient and modern medals . Like the Remarks Upon Several Parts of Italy , the Dialogues dis- plays the wealth of Addison's classical knowledge . He uses anec- dotes from Roman ...
... dialogue , perhaps un- finished , compares the merits of ancient and modern medals . Like the Remarks Upon Several Parts of Italy , the Dialogues dis- plays the wealth of Addison's classical knowledge . He uses anec- dotes from Roman ...
Pagina 55
... Dialogue II with a passage which de- lights as much for the brevity of setting as for the writer's hu- morous self - awareness : Some of the finest treatises of the most polite Latin and Greek writers are in Dialogue , as many very ...
... Dialogue II with a passage which de- lights as much for the brevity of setting as for the writer's hu- morous self - awareness : Some of the finest treatises of the most polite Latin and Greek writers are in Dialogue , as many very ...
Pagina 56
... dialogue about an issue . The first dialogue pits silly antiquarianism against in- telligent historical appreciation . Old coins are not valuable as antiques but as sources of knowledge about ancient people's ap- pearance , dress ...
... dialogue about an issue . The first dialogue pits silly antiquarianism against in- telligent historical appreciation . Old coins are not valuable as antiques but as sources of knowledge about ancient people's ap- pearance , dress ...
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