Londoner's Post: Letters to Gog and MagogHutchinson, 1952 - 174 pages |
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Page 53
... conversation . It may arise among friends , and may not disturb their understanding ; but really good talk involves a thousand tacts and courtesies which are destroyed as soon as one of the company becomes pugnacious or dogmatic ...
... conversation . It may arise among friends , and may not disturb their understanding ; but really good talk involves a thousand tacts and courtesies which are destroyed as soon as one of the company becomes pugnacious or dogmatic ...
Page 82
... conversation . The dialogue form has been often used , as Plato used it , for the presentation of ideas . It has been used to present contemporary manners , as was done by Erasmus , by Swift in his brilliant , dia- bolical Polite ...
... conversation . The dialogue form has been often used , as Plato used it , for the presentation of ideas . It has been used to present contemporary manners , as was done by Erasmus , by Swift in his brilliant , dia- bolical Polite ...
Page 84
... conversations with James Northcote which he proposed to call Boswell Redivivus . This was apparently in the Summer of 1826. But although , as Liber Amoris shows , Hazlitt could have remembered every word of any conversation in which his ...
... conversations with James Northcote which he proposed to call Boswell Redivivus . This was apparently in the Summer of 1826. But although , as Liber Amoris shows , Hazlitt could have remembered every word of any conversation in which his ...
Contents
WHY READ THE CLASSICS? | 9 |
FINISHING A BOOK | 45 |
THE CONVERSATION OF AUTHORS | 51 |
Copyright | |
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A. E. W. Mason admire American amusing Arnold Bennett asked became born Boswell Butler Byron called character Christmas classics Coleridge conversation critical Defoe delightful diary Dickens E. V. Lucas England English everything eyes fact familiar essay fashion father feel friends genius George Saintsbury gift go-cart H. M. TOMLINSON Hazlitt heart Hume Nisbet humour intellectual J. M. Barrie James Northcote Jane Austen Jerry Owen Johnson Journal knew known Lady Lamb language laugh learned letter-writers letters literary literature lived look Mary Mitford matter mind Mitford modern never novel novelist once perhaps person poems poetry poets political published re-read readers Robinson romance Saintsbury Scott sense slippers sometimes story style sure Sydney Smith talk tell Thackeray thing thought told Tomlinson true truth Turgenev Victorians Walpole William Hazlitt wish words Wordsworth write written wrote young author