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. |
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Page 16
There ( among the Getae ] the blameless woman cares for stepchildren lacking a mother , nor does the dowered wife dominate her husband , nor trust a flashy adulterer . The child's great benefit is the virtue of his parents and chastity ...
There ( among the Getae ] the blameless woman cares for stepchildren lacking a mother , nor does the dowered wife dominate her husband , nor trust a flashy adulterer . The child's great benefit is the virtue of his parents and chastity ...
Page 104
Toward the end of Juvenal X the poet concludes that man , led by impulse , and by blind and strong desire , seeks wife and offspring , but cannot know what the future knows , of what sort the wife and sons will be ( x , 350-53 ) .
Toward the end of Juvenal X the poet concludes that man , led by impulse , and by blind and strong desire , seeks wife and offspring , but cannot know what the future knows , of what sort the wife and sons will be ( x , 350-53 ) .
Page 112
Are you taking a wife , Postumus ? Tell me by what Fury , by what snakes are you harassed ? A sober man like thee to change his life ! What fury wou'd possess thee with a wife ? Dryden . Ramblers 113 , 114 , and 115 all have mottoes ...
Are you taking a wife , Postumus ? Tell me by what Fury , by what snakes are you harassed ? A sober man like thee to change his life ! What fury wou'd possess thee with a wife ? Dryden . Ramblers 113 , 114 , and 115 all have mottoes ...
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