Enlightenment Essays, Volumer 1-3Enlightenment essays, 1970 |
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Side 121
... fact Johnson is defending nothing . He is ex pounding straightforward constitutional law , as valid today as in 1775. The Parliament of Great Britain is legally omnipotent as regards its subjects . Johnson is , in fact , in advance of ...
... fact Johnson is defending nothing . He is ex pounding straightforward constitutional law , as valid today as in 1775. The Parliament of Great Britain is legally omnipotent as regards its subjects . Johnson is , in fact , in advance of ...
Side 171
... fact , claiming a single standpoint in the composition of his various works . But in fact it is only the reader's personal identity which comes to create re trospectively that of the author . The reader himself is allowed to find his ...
... fact , claiming a single standpoint in the composition of his various works . But in fact it is only the reader's personal identity which comes to create re trospectively that of the author . The reader himself is allowed to find his ...
Side 131
... fact , to dem onstrate that much of Thomson's latinate diction , his periphrases and per- sonifications , his universalizing nouns and the epithets he took so much trouble over , those orotundities which in Milton are part of a uniquely ...
... fact , to dem onstrate that much of Thomson's latinate diction , his periphrases and per- sonifications , his universalizing nouns and the epithets he took so much trouble over , those orotundities which in Milton are part of a uniquely ...
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American argues argument artistic attempt audience Bacon beauty Becky believed Blake Blake's Burnet Cambridge Platonists character Christian Church Cicero civil Cleanthes concept concern critics death Defoe Defoe's deism dialogue Diderot divine DOMASO Dryden dunces Dunciad eclogue effect eighteenth century England English Enlightened Despotism ENLIGHTENMENT ESSAYS Euthyphro existence experience fact genre human Hume Hume's ideas imitation important impotent poor individual intellectual interest Johnson Kant knowledge learning Les Liaisons dangereuses letters literary literature Locke Locke's man's Milton mind modern Montesquieu moral natural law novel passions person Philo philosophical play poem poet poetic poetry political poor Pope position present principles problem Professor rational reader reading reason religion religious RICHARD HARDIN Rousseau Samuel Johnson satire says scripture sense social society Spinoza stanza Swift theory things thought tion tradition truth University Vanity Vanity Fair Voltaire writing Yiddish