Johnson and Boswell: The Story of Their LivesHarper, 1958 - 390 Seiten |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 36
Seite 126
... Temple , or Temple himself , or even his own father , all of whom appeared to him consistent personalities ; but he failed to maintain their firmness of purpose and behaviour , for he was a creature of moods and could not make up his ...
... Temple , or Temple himself , or even his own father , all of whom appeared to him consistent personalities ; but he failed to maintain their firmness of purpose and behaviour , for he was a creature of moods and could not make up his ...
Seite 173
... Temple . But Boswell's notions of amorous dalliance were fluid , and im- mediately after an ecstatic union with Mrs. Dodds he got drunk with some friends , visited a shady house in a mean wynd , spent the night with one of its ...
... Temple . But Boswell's notions of amorous dalliance were fluid , and im- mediately after an ecstatic union with Mrs. Dodds he got drunk with some friends , visited a shady house in a mean wynd , spent the night with one of its ...
Seite 367
... Temple had four sons and two daughters . His wife Ann dis- liked Boswell , who reciprocated the feeling , thinking her drab , peevish and unsociable ; but she may have been familiar with the sort of confidences he reposed in Temple ...
... Temple had four sons and two daughters . His wife Ann dis- liked Boswell , who reciprocated the feeling , thinking her drab , peevish and unsociable ; but she may have been familiar with the sort of confidences he reposed in Temple ...
Inhalt
The Depression of Poverty I | 1 |
SelfEducation ΙΟ | 10 |
Morbidity and Marriage | 16 |
Urheberrecht | |
27 weitere Abschnitte werden nicht angezeigt.
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Anna Seward Anna Williams appeared Ashbourne asked Auchinleck Beauclerk became behaviour Bennet Langton biography Boswell's Burke called character conversation Corsican Court daughter David Garrick death dined dinner Doctor drink Edinburgh Edmund Burke English enjoyed Fanny Burney father favour feel fellow felt friendship gave give Goldsmith happy hear heard Henry Thrale Hester Hester Thrale honour hope human husband James Boswell Joshua Reynolds journey knew lady later letter Levett Lichfield lived London Lonsdale Lord Auchinleck Lucy Porter madam married mind mood morning mother nature never night occasion Oliver Goldsmith once opinion Oxford Paoli person Piozzi pleasure poet Queeney received remarked replied returned Rousseau Samuel Johnson Scotland Shakespeare soon spent stayed Streatham Street suffered talk tavern Temple things thought Thrale told took Voltaire walked wife Wilkes wish woman write wrote young