Motto, Context, Essay: The Classical Background of Samuel Johnson's Rambler and Adventurer EssaysA helpful reference guide to the mottoes of Samuel Johnson's Rambler and Adventurer periodical essays. The author provides the context for each motto Johnson selected and relates the context to the content of the essay to which the motto is affixed. Provides a unique insight into Johnson's way of thinking as as essayist in a specific and detailed fashion. An invaluable aid to students and scholars of Johnson and 18th-century studies in general. |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 77
Page 4
Other lines in Eclogue III , in addition to the motto quoted above , fit well with Johnson's approval of temporary otium . Birth , renovation , " new display " are surely evident in such lines as n Dulce satis umor , depulsis arbutus ...
Other lines in Eclogue III , in addition to the motto quoted above , fit well with Johnson's approval of temporary otium . Birth , renovation , " new display " are surely evident in such lines as n Dulce satis umor , depulsis arbutus ...
Page 92
Lo ! now the clarion's voice I hear , Its threat'ning murmurs pierce mine ear ; And in thy lines with brazen breath The trumpet sounds the charge of death . Francis . Ode II , 1 , addressed to Pollio , who is writing a history of the ...
Lo ! now the clarion's voice I hear , Its threat'ning murmurs pierce mine ear ; And in thy lines with brazen breath The trumpet sounds the charge of death . Francis . Ode II , 1 , addressed to Pollio , who is writing a history of the ...
Page 147
Johnson uses the lines expressing this Horatian principle to introduce the subject of letter writing , an art in which he thinks the English are deficient . He admits that the French are superior to the English as correspondents ...
Johnson uses the lines expressing this Horatian principle to introduce the subject of letter writing , an art in which he thinks the English are deficient . He admits that the French are superior to the English as correspondents ...
What people are saying - Write a review
We haven't found any reviews in the usual places.
Common terms and phrases
accept addressed admits Adventurer advice appears asks attempts beauty become begins believes calls classical comes concludes considered context criticism death desire discussion Eclogues epigram Epistles essay evident example expect expresses father faults fear finally follows fortune Francis future girl give goes hand happy hope Horace Horace's human John Johnson Johnson's essay Juvenal Juvenal's kind known learning less letter lines literary live Loeb London marriage Martial means mind moral motto nature never Odes once Ovid passions Persius pleasure poem poet Poetica praise present question quotes Rambler readers reason reference rich Roman Satire says seems sense social sometimes story suggests tells thought tion truth turn Vanity verse vice virtue warns wealth wife wish writers young youth