Jane Austen and Samuel Johnson |
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Page 27
... sense of the probable , your own observation of what is passing around you . . . . Dearest Miss Morland , what ideas have you been admitting ? " ( NA , 197-98 ) . Judgment , understanding , observation , a sense of the probable -- all ...
... sense of the probable , your own observation of what is passing around you . . . . Dearest Miss Morland , what ideas have you been admitting ? " ( NA , 197-98 ) . Judgment , understanding , observation , a sense of the probable -- all ...
Page 93
Peter L. De Rose. CHAPTER V EXPLORATION OF FEELING IN SENSE AND SENSIBILITY AND PERSUASION Sense and Sensibility and Persuasion stand not only at opposite ends of Jane Austen's writing career , but , according to several contemporary ...
Peter L. De Rose. CHAPTER V EXPLORATION OF FEELING IN SENSE AND SENSIBILITY AND PERSUASION Sense and Sensibility and Persuasion stand not only at opposite ends of Jane Austen's writing career , but , according to several contemporary ...
Page 112
... Sense and Sensibility and Pride and Prejudice derive from a standard thematic pattern set by late eighteenth - century moralistic fiction , in which opposed qualities of mind are dramatized through opposed personalities , usually ...
... Sense and Sensibility and Pride and Prejudice derive from a standard thematic pattern set by late eighteenth - century moralistic fiction , in which opposed qualities of mind are dramatized through opposed personalities , usually ...
Contents
Jane Austen and Samuel Johnson | 1 |
Imagination in Northanger Abbey | 15 |
Hardship Recollection | 37 |
Copyright | |
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Anne's artistic attention believe Benwick Bingley Boswell Catherine Catherine's imagination comic conduct cousins critical Darcy Darcy's Dashwood deception discipline dramatic duty Edmund eighteenth-century Eleanor Elinor Elizabeth Bennet Emma's essays example explores fancy Fanny Price Fanny's feeling Frank Churchill fully habit Harriet Henry Henry's heroine human Ian Watt ideas Idler imag imaginary irony Jane Austen Jane Austen's fiction Jane Austen's novels Johnsonian moral judgment Knightley Lady Bertram letter Mansfield Park Maria Marianne Marianne's marriage Marvin Mudrick Mary Crawford memory mind Miss Bates moral character moral principle moralist Mudrick nature never Norris Northanger Abbey observes Oxford pain Persuasion pleasure Portsmouth Pride and Prejudice R. W. Chapman Rambler Rasselas rational reason recognize recollection reminds romance Rushworth Samuel Johnson self-deception self-knowledge Sense and Sensibility sermons Sir Thomas sister Sotherton suffering Susan thing Tilney tion Tom Jones truth Univ vanity Walton Litz Wentworth Wickham