Johnson and Boswell: The Story of Their LivesHarper, 1958 - 390 Seiten |
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Seite 225
... thought the conversation of Adams ' cold ' and was glad when they left him ; but that day they experienced something more cheerless than cold conver- sation . It rained hard , the roads were deep in mire , “ and we walked up a steep ...
... thought the conversation of Adams ' cold ' and was glad when they left him ; but that day they experienced something more cheerless than cold conver- sation . It rained hard , the roads were deep in mire , “ and we walked up a steep ...
Seite 226
... thought it " wonderfully flattering to me to have his company . " But she must suddenly have remembered that Johnson on the road was not the same person as Johnson on the hearth . While travelling he seemed indifferent to discom- fort ...
... thought it " wonderfully flattering to me to have his company . " But she must suddenly have remembered that Johnson on the road was not the same person as Johnson on the hearth . While travelling he seemed indifferent to discom- fort ...
Seite 318
... thought ' is all the worse for being often thought , because to be wit it ought to be newly thought . " " But , sir , ' tis the expression makes it new . " " How can the expression make it new ? It may make it clear , or may make it ...
... thought ' is all the worse for being often thought , because to be wit it ought to be newly thought . " " But , sir , ' tis the expression makes it new . " " How can the expression make it new ? It may make it clear , or may make it ...
Inhalt
The Depression of Poverty I | 1 |
SelfEducation ΙΟ | 10 |
Morbidity and Marriage | 16 |
Urheberrecht | |
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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