AddisonBookRix, 11 mrt 2014 - 228 pagina's Addison written by William John Courthope. Published by HARPER & BROTHERS PUBLISHERS in 1902. and now republished in ePub file. William John Courthope was an English writer and historian of poetry, whose father was rector of South Malling, Sussex. Of the four English men of letters whose writings most fully embody the spirit of the eighteenth century, the one who provides the biographer with the scantiest materials is Addison. In his Journal to Stella, his social verses, and his letters to his friends, we have a vivid picture of those relations with women and that protracted suffering which invest with such tragic interest the history of Swift. Pope, by the publication of his own correspondence, has enabled us, in a way that he never intended, to understand the strange moral twist which distorted a nature by no means devoid of noble instincts. Johnson was fortunate in the companionship of perhaps the best biographer who ever lived. But of the real life and character of Addison scarcely any contemporary record remains. The formal narrative prefixed to his works by Tickell is, by that writer's own admission, little more than a bibliography. Steele, who might have told us more than any man about his boyhood and his manner of life in London, had become estranged from his old friend before his death. No writer has taken the trouble to preserve any account of the wit and wisdom that enlivened the "little senate" at Button's. His own letters are, as a rule, compositions as finished as his papers in the Spectator. Those features in his character which excite the greatest interest have been delineated by the hand of an enemy—an enemy who possessed an unrivalled power of satirical portrait-painting, and was restrained by no regard for truth from creating in the public mind such impressions about others as might serve to heighten the favourable opinion of himself. |
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... afterwards gave the main support to the Tatler and the Spectator. Ignorant of the writings of the great classical authors, as well as of the usages of polite society, these men were nevertheless robust and manly in their ideas, and were ...
... afterwards gave the main support to the Tatler and the Spectator. Ignorant of the writings of the great classical authors, as well as of the usages of polite society, these men were nevertheless robust and manly in their ideas, and were ...
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... afterwards carried to perfection in the Spectator. By this brief sketch the reader may be enabled to judge of the distracted state of society, both in politics and taste, in the reign of Charles II. On the one side, the Monarchical ...
... afterwards carried to perfection in the Spectator. By this brief sketch the reader may be enabled to judge of the distracted state of society, both in politics and taste, in the reign of Charles II. On the one side, the Monarchical ...
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... afterwards Dean of Lichfield. His father was a man of character and accomplishments. Educated at Oxford, while that University was under the control of the famous Puritan Visitation, he made no secret of his contempt for principles to ...
... afterwards Dean of Lichfield. His father was a man of character and accomplishments. Educated at Oxford, while that University was under the control of the famous Puritan Visitation, he made no secret of his contempt for principles to ...
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... respect for his memory, and that death alone prevented him from completing the monument afterwards erected in Lancelot's honour in Lichfield Cathedral. Of Addison's mother nothing of importance is recorded. His second.
... respect for his memory, and that death alone prevented him from completing the monument afterwards erected in Lancelot's honour in Lichfield Cathedral. Of Addison's mother nothing of importance is recorded. His second.
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... partiality at last improved to a steady justice towards them, and that which at first was but an expedient to correct his weakness was afterwards the measure of his virtue.”[5] This, no doubt, is the set description of a moralist,
... partiality at last improved to a steady justice towards them, and that which at first was but an expedient to correct his weakness was afterwards the measure of his virtue.”[5] This, no doubt, is the set description of a moralist,
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acquaintance Addison admirable Æneid afterwards Anne’s appears audience Cato character Charles II Club coffee-houses Countess of Warwick Court criticism Dennis described doubt drama Dryden Dunciad eighteenth century endeavour England English essays fashion favour feeling fortunes French genius gentleman Halifax honour humour Iliad imagination Italian Jacob Tonson Jeremy Collier Johnson King Kit-Kat Club letter lion literary literature live Lord Lord Halifax manners Marlborough Milston mind moral nature never Ovid Oxford paper Parliament party period person play pleasure poem poet poet’s political Pope Pope’s praise principles published Puritan Queen reader reason Restoration ridiculous Roger de Coverley satire says scarcely scenes seems sentiment Shakespeare Sir Roger society Spence Spence’s Anecdotes spirit stage Steele Steele’s style Swift taste Tatler Tatler and Spectator thought Tickell Tickell’s Tory tragedy translation verses virtue Whig Will’s William John Courthope words writes written wrote