| Daniel Defoe - 1895 - 362 páginas
...reflection is carried home, and our dear self is, in one respect, the end of living. Hence man may be properly said to be alone in the midst of the crowds and hurry of men and business. All the reflections which he makes are to himself; all that is pleasant he embraces for himself; all... | |
| Daniel Defoe - 1895 - 364 páginas
...reflection is carried home, and our dear self is, in one respect, the end of living. Hence man may be properly said to be alone in the midst of the crowds and hurry of men and business. All the reflections which he makes are to himself; all that is pleasant he embraces for himself; all... | |
| Daniel Defoe, Howard Maynadier - 1903 - 408 páginas
...reflection is carried home, and our dear self is, in one respect, the end of living. Hence man may be properly said to be alone in the midst of the crowds and hurry of men and business. All the reflections which he makes are to himself; all that is pleasant he embraces for himself; all... | |
| Daniel Defoe - 1903 - 382 páginas
...reflection is carried home, and our dear self is, in one respect, the end of living. Hence man may be properly said to be alone in the midst of the crowds ana hurry of men and business. All the reflections which he makes are to himself; all that is pleasant... | |
| Daniel Defoe - 1905 - 370 páginas
...reflection is carried home, and our dear self is, in one respect, the end of living. Hence man may be properly said to be alone in the midst of the crowds and hurry of men and business. All the reflections which he makes are to himself; all that is pleasant he embraces for himself ; all... | |
| Arthur Wellesley Secord - 1924 - 256 páginas
...page Knox dismisses the matter. Not so with Defoe whose hero goes into the matter of solitude more1 extensively and discourses of the true solitude of...the evils of conversation and the remedy therefor. 84 For these contemplations and meditations Knox offers a whimsical apology. "These notions and contemplations,"... | |
| Daniel Defoe - 1925 - 366 páginas
...reflection is carry'd home, and our dear-self is, in one respect, the end of living. Hence man may be properly said to be alone in the midst of the crowds and hurry of men and business: all the reflections which he makes, are to himself; all that is pleasant, he embraces for himself;... | |
| Frances Wyers - 1976 - 166 páginas
...reflection is carried home, and our dear self is, in one respect, the end of living. Hence man may be properly said to be alone in the midst of the crowds and hurry of men of business." Like Unamuno, Crusoe looks for "true solitude" in the middle of the crowded city. Missing... | |
| Paula R. Backscheider - 1989 - 702 páginas
...could not sustain the role of martyr that he had created for himself. Later he observed that "man may be properly said to be alone in the midst of the crowds and hurry of men of business. All the reflections which he makes are to himself."12 In A System ofMagick he wrote, "We... | |
| Simon Varey - 1990 - 240 páginas
...everyone is isolated. If Crusoe's words could represent Defoe's, we would have a reason for this: 'Man may be properly said to be alone in the Midst of the Crowds and Hurry of Men and Business'.12 Trying in 1751 to account for London's rapidly rising crime rate, an exasperated Henry... | |
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