Visits to Bedlam: Madness and Literature in the Eighteenth CenturyUniversity of South Carolina Press, 1974 - 200 Seiten |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 21
Seite 38
... moral judgment against its inhabitants , just as the " worst inn's worst room " makes concrete the moral bankruptcy of Villers in the Epistle to Bathurst . Doubtless the best - known rendering of the miseries of the place is the ...
... moral judgment against its inhabitants , just as the " worst inn's worst room " makes concrete the moral bankruptcy of Villers in the Epistle to Bathurst . Doubtless the best - known rendering of the miseries of the place is the ...
Seite 156
... moral . The moral basis of Cowper's madness is , in fact , established immediately in the Memoir . Once he has described the coming on of madness , Cowper draws up short ( just at the moment , perhaps , when an Augustan might only begin ) ...
... moral . The moral basis of Cowper's madness is , in fact , established immediately in the Memoir . Once he has described the coming on of madness , Cowper draws up short ( just at the moment , perhaps , when an Augustan might only begin ) ...
Seite 169
... moral errors of his generation . For him as well as for Swift and Pope the times are out of joint . His perception of moral error reverses the Augustan one , of course : where Pope denoun- ces the prevalence of madness , Blake despises ...
... moral errors of his generation . For him as well as for Swift and Pope the times are out of joint . His perception of moral error reverses the Augustan one , of course : where Pope denoun- ces the prevalence of madness , Blake despises ...
Inhalt
CHAPTER TWO The Dunciad and Augustan Madness | 12 |
CHAPTER THREE Swift | 58 |
CHAPTER FOUR Johnson | 88 |
Urheberrecht | |
1 weitere Abschnitte werden nicht angezeigt.
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
animals appears association attack Augustan become Bedlam beginning Blake blindness Book calls cause chapter character common consider course Cowper critics darkness describe disorder divine dreams Dunces Dunciad earlier early eighteenth century England English enthusiast Essay example experience expressed eyes fact falls fear feel figure folly Fool forces genius give human ideas imagination insanity inspiration Johnson kind King Lear Lear Lear's less light lines literature Locke London look madman madness means melancholy metaphor mind moral nature never observes once passion period poem poet Poetical poetry poor Pope Pope's possible poverty present reality reason religious remarks response satire says scene seems sense society sometimes speaks spirit stands Sublime suffer suggests Swift Tale things thought truth turned Understanding vision whole writes