Shelley: the Golden YearsHarvard University Press, 1974 - Всего страниц: 669 Bewigged, muscular and for his day unusually tall, adorned in soiled, rumpled clothes, beset by involuntary tics, opinionated, powered in his conversation by a prodigious memory and intellect, Samuel Johnson (1709–1784) was in his life a literary and social icon as no other age has produced. “Johnsonianissimus,” as Boswell called him, became in the hands of his first biographers the rationalist epitome and sage of Enlightenment. These clich s-though they contain elements of truth-distort the complexity of the public and private Johnson. Peter Martin portrays a Johnson wracked by recriminations, self-doubt, and depression-a man whose religious faith seems only to have deepened his fears. His essays, scholarship, biography, journalism, travel writing, sermons, fables, as well as other forms of prose and poetry in which he probed himself and the world around him, Martin shows, constituted rational triumphs against despair and depression. It is precisely the combination of enormous intelligence and frank personal weakness that makes Johnson’s writing so compelling. Benefiting from recent critical scholarship that has explored new attitudes toward Johnson, Martin’s biography gives us a human and sympathetic portrait of Dr. Johnson. Johnson’s criticism of colonial expansion, his advocacy for the abolition of slavery, his encouragement of women writers, his treatment of his female friends as equals, and his concern for the underprivileged and poor make him a very “modern” figure. The Johnson that emerges from this enthralling biography, published for the tercentenary of Johnson’s birth, is still the foremost figure of his age but a more rebellious, unpredictable, flawed, and sympathetic figure than has been previously known. |
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... laws must be similar to each other , possibly in some way connected . Of one thing he felt certain : one general law governed both , namely , that of necessity . The universe must be " connected and cemented in all its parts , nothing ...
... laws [ the laws of necessity ] are the unknown causes of the known ef- fects perceivable in the Universe . Their effects are the boundaries of our knowl- edge , their names the expressions of our ignorance . To suppose some existence ...
... laws of neces- sity , to Demogorgon - has been taken by some to signify that necessity is under the control of love . But Shelley does not say this . He says only that love is not subject to these other entities , not that it controls ...
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The Last Years in England | 1 |
Shelley in Italy | 64 |
Political Philosophy | 115 |
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