The Great Tradition in English Literature from Shakespeare to Shaw, Volume 1 |
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Pagina 298
dialogue but also of the subtlety of his dialectic saying : " Pounce begins with a typical , apparently common - sense , materialist definition of charity . But by the end of the dialogue his materialism is revealed as an empty idealism ...
dialogue but also of the subtlety of his dialectic saying : " Pounce begins with a typical , apparently common - sense , materialist definition of charity . But by the end of the dialogue his materialism is revealed as an empty idealism ...
Pagina 390
The constant struggle to make ends meet for his five children ( his wife had , in 1792 , magnanimously adopted her husband's newly born infant , whose mother was a barmaid at the Globe Tavern ) and his sharp sense of being in a false ...
The constant struggle to make ends meet for his five children ( his wife had , in 1792 , magnanimously adopted her husband's newly born infant , whose mother was a barmaid at the Globe Tavern ) and his sharp sense of being in a false ...
Pagina 753
A note to a woman friend , written when she was preparing a new edition nine years after the book's first publication , gives an interesting glimpse of the advice she too often followed in spite of her own better sense : So , to return ...
A note to a woman friend , written when she was preparing a new edition nine years after the book's first publication , gives an interesting glimpse of the advice she too often followed in spite of her own better sense : So , to return ...
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Inhoudsopgave
THE ELIZABETHAN AGE AND THE BOURGEOIS REVOLUTION | 3 |
THE AGE OF REASON | 206 |
THE GREAT ROMANTICS AND THE DEMOCRATIC REVOLUTION | 375 |
Copyright | |
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able accepted already appeared attack attempt become beginning brother called cause century Charles Church common complete continued course criticism death Dickens early effect England English evidently example expressed fact father feel felt finally followed forced give hand happy heart hope human immediate important interest Italy Jane king land later least less letter living London look Lord matter means mind nature never novel perhaps play poem poet poetry political poor possible practical present published question reason respect says seems sense Shaw Shelley social society soon speak successful tell things thought tion true turn understanding whole wife woman writing written wrote young