Joseph Addison, Volume 10Twayne Publishers, 1982 - 182 pagine |
Dall'interno del libro
Risultati 1-3 di 21
Pagina 48
... pleasure which a reader draws from comparison of an object with its description . In the Remarks recalling appropriate classical passages takes precedence over telling of his personal adventures . When a storm drives his ship into the ...
... pleasure which a reader draws from comparison of an object with its description . In the Remarks recalling appropriate classical passages takes precedence over telling of his personal adventures . When a storm drives his ship into the ...
Pagina 76
... pleasure of seeing vice punished and virtue rewarded . . . so that inventions of this kind are like food and exercise to a good - natured disposition , which they please and gratify at the same time that they nourish and strengthen ...
... pleasure of seeing vice punished and virtue rewarded . . . so that inventions of this kind are like food and exercise to a good - natured disposition , which they please and gratify at the same time that they nourish and strengthen ...
Pagina 101
... Pleasures of the Imagination attempt to understand how literature gives pleasure . Number 409 , which introduces Addison's plan to publish eleven consec- utive papers on this topic , announces his intention to articulate the principles ...
... Pleasures of the Imagination attempt to understand how literature gives pleasure . Number 409 , which introduces Addison's plan to publish eleven consec- utive papers on this topic , announces his intention to articulate the principles ...
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