Jean-Jacques Rousseau and the Cosmopolitan Spirit in Literature: A Study of the Literary Relations Between France and England During the Eighteenth Century |
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Page xvii
... seems still more problematic . You cannot obtain a conception of the soul of a portion of humanity by merely supplementing certain ethnological labels with a few vague adjectives . " 2 These are specious objections , and I confess they ...
... seems still more problematic . You cannot obtain a conception of the soul of a portion of humanity by merely supplementing certain ethnological labels with a few vague adjectives . " 2 These are specious objections , and I confess they ...
Page 5
... seems to have made no impression whatever . Saint - Amant , in some very inferior lines , said of the Englishman , " he has nevertheless the audacity to boast of his own rhymesters ; to his mind they are better than either Vergil or ...
... seems to have made no impression whatever . Saint - Amant , in some very inferior lines , said of the Englishman , " he has nevertheless the audacity to boast of his own rhymesters ; to his mind they are better than either Vergil or ...
Page 6
... seems everything in England since the days of King Artus . " Le Pays - who received the nickname of " Voiture's ape " and was so ill - treated by Boileau - remarks the ferocious nature of English dramatic representations , but does not ...
... seems everything in England since the days of King Artus . " Le Pays - who received the nickname of " Voiture's ape " and was so ill - treated by Boileau - remarks the ferocious nature of English dramatic representations , but does not ...
Page 14
... seem at times to forsake one country in order to do honour to another in its turn . At the present they have made their home in France , and if any vestiges of them are yet left in England , they are only to be found in the works of ...
... seem at times to forsake one country in order to do honour to another in its turn . At the present they have made their home in France , and if any vestiges of them are yet left in England , they are only to be found in the works of ...
Page 23
... seems to him brighter than elsewhere . " He anticipates Taine in his enthusiasm for Eng- land's gardens and beds of flowers , her parks where " wander great herds of deer , " the luxuriance of her trees , and of the hedges which ...
... seems to him brighter than elsewhere . " He anticipates Taine in his enthusiasm for Eng- land's gardens and beds of flowers , her parks where " wander great herds of deer , " the luxuriance of her trees , and of the hedges which ...
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abbé Addison admiration ancient André Chénier antiquity appeared beauty Bibliothèque Bibliothèque britannique character Chateaubriand Clarissa classical comedy contemporaries cosmopolitan criticism Desfontaines Diderot drama edition eighteenth century England English literature Englishman Essai Europe everything expression feeling fiction foreign Français France French literature Frenchmen genius German Goethe Grandison Grimm heart Histoire Homer human idea imitation influence intellectual Jean-Jacques Jean-Jacques Rousseau Journal encyclopédique Journal étranger language Lesage less Letourneur letters Lettres anglaises literary littéraire littérature London Lovelace manner Marivaux melancholy Mémoires Molière Montesquieu moral Muralt nation nature never Nouvelle Héloïse novelists opinion Ossian Pamela Paris passion philosophical poems poésie poet poetry Pope praise Prévost published readers refugees regard religion Revolution Richardson Robinson Crusoe Rousseau Saint-Hyacinthe Saint-Lambert Sainte-Beuve sentiment Shakespeare soul speak spirit Staël Suard success taste Thomson thought tion Tom Jones translated Trévoux true virtue Voltaire Voltaire's writers wrote Young
Popular passages
Page 325 - When the world is dark with tempests; when thunder rolls and lightning flies; thou lookest in thy beauty, from the clouds, and laughest at the storm. But to Ossian thou lookest in vain; for he beholds thy beams no more; whether thy yellow hair flows on the eastern clouds, or thou tremblest at the gates of the west. But thou art, perhaps, like me, for a season, thy years will have an end. Thou shall sleep in thy clouds, careless of the voice of the morning.
Page 192 - Why, Sir, if you were to read Richardson for the story, your impatience would be so much fretted that you would hang yourself. But you must read him for the sentiment, and consider the story as only giving occasion to the sentiment.
Page 293 - Is deep enrich'd with vegetable life ; Till, in the western sky, the downward sun Looks out, effulgent, from amid the flush Of broken clouds, gay-shifting to his beam. The rapid radiance instantaneous strikes Th...
Page 308 - And fated to survive the transient Sun ! By mortals and immortals seen with awe ! A starry crown thy raven brow adorns, An azure zone thy waist ; clouds, in heaven's loom Wrought through varieties of shape and shade, In ample folds of drapery divine, Thy flowing mantle form, and, heaven throughout, Voluminously pour thy pompous train...
Page 134 - What are your laws, of which you make your boast, but the fool's wisdom and the coward's valour? the instrument and screen of all your villainies, by which you punish in others what you act yourselves, or would have acted had you been in their circumstances. The judge who condemns the poor man for being a thief had been a thief himself had he been poor.
Page 296 - Be not too narrow, husbandmen ! but fling From the full sheaf, with charitable stealth, The liberal handful. Think, oh grateful think ! How good the GOD of HARVEST is to you: Who pours abundance o'er your flowing fields...
Page 114 - Subject, compound them, follow her and God. Love, hope, and joy, fair pleasure's smiling train, Hate, fear, and grief, the family of pain...
Page 323 - He lifted high his shadowy spear! He bent forward his dreadful height. Fingal, advancing, drew his sword; the blade of dark-brown Luno.* The gleaming path of the steel winds through the gloomy ghost. The form fell shapeless into air, like a column of smoke, which the staff of the boy disturbs, as it rises from the half-extinguished furnace.
Page 315 - No slaves revere them, and no wars invade : Yet frequent now, at midnight's solemn hour, The rifted mounds their yawning cells unfold, And forth the monarchs stalk with sovereign power, In pageant robes, and wreathed with sheeny gold, And on their twilight tombs aerial council hold.
Page 298 - THESE, as they change, Almighty Father, these Are but the varied God. The rolling year Is full of Thee. Forth in the pleasing Spring Thy beauty walks, Thy tenderness and love. Wide flush the fields ; the softening air is balm ; Echo the mountains round ; the forest smiles ; And every sense, and every heart is joy.