The Augustan Defence of Satire |
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Dr. Johnson considered the distinction important enough to include it in his definition of ' satire ' in the Dictionary : ' Proper satire is distinguished , by the generality of the reflections , from a lampoon which is aimed against a ...
Dr. Johnson considered the distinction important enough to include it in his definition of ' satire ' in the Dictionary : ' Proper satire is distinguished , by the generality of the reflections , from a lampoon which is aimed against a ...
Sida 79
It was considered much more effective than teaching , for example — as Francis Hutcheson put it , ' Men have been laughed out of faults which a sermon could not reform ... ' 33 — and more effective also than philosophical discourse or ...
It was considered much more effective than teaching , for example — as Francis Hutcheson put it , ' Men have been laughed out of faults which a sermon could not reform ... ' 33 — and more effective also than philosophical discourse or ...
Sida 148
Like many other critics he considered that bad temper turns readers against the satirist : ' When he loses temper , his weapons will be inverted , and the ridicule he threw at others will retort with contempt on himself ; for the ...
Like many other critics he considered that bad temper turns readers against the satirist : ' When he loses temper , his weapons will be inverted , and the ridicule he threw at others will retort with contempt on himself ; for the ...
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Innehåll
THE MEANING OF SATIRE II | 11 |
SATIRES ORIGIN AND HISTORY | 26 |
MAIN LINES OF THE ATTACK | 44 |
Upphovsrätt | |
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able Addison appear argument attack Augustan believed Boileau Brown called censure character claim comedy common concerned considered contemporary Correspondence critics defenders doubt Dryden effect eighteenth century English Epistle especially Essays example expressed feel follies give hand Horace human humour instance John Juvenal kind lampoon late seventeenth laugh laughter least less letter libel lines literary lived mankind manner matter means mind moral Moreover nature never noted object observed opinion Oxford particular Persius personal satire Poems poet Poetry political Pope Pope's practice Preface present question raillery readers reason reference Reflections reform regarded remarks ridicule Roman satire satirist Satyr sense severe society sometimes sort Steele Swift term thing thought tion true truth turn verse vice virtue writing written wrote
Hänvisningar till den här boken
Intricate Laughter in the Satire of Swift and Pope Allan Ingram Fragmentarisk förhandsgranskning - 1986 |