Monthly Review; Or Literary Journal EnlargedR. Griffiths., 1826 Editors: May 1749-Sept. 1803, Ralph Griffiths; Oct. 1803-Apr. 1825, G. E. Griffiths. |
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... become familiar . But I can have no assurance that this will be the belief or opinion of the legislature , or the majority of the country ; and it is impossible to deny , that a little longer continuance , and a little greater excess of ...
... become familiar . But I can have no assurance that this will be the belief or opinion of the legislature , or the majority of the country ; and it is impossible to deny , that a little longer continuance , and a little greater excess of ...
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... become an inmate of the cave , where , besides Mr. Trelawney , he found a young Englishman of very respectable connexions . Upon this youth Fenton prevailed to second him in his designs , and one day , when the three were amusing ...
... become an inmate of the cave , where , besides Mr. Trelawney , he found a young Englishman of very respectable connexions . Upon this youth Fenton prevailed to second him in his designs , and one day , when the three were amusing ...
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... become inactive when the purposes of Infinite Wis- dom , for which it was created , have been duly accomplished . So far we can go along with the author , whose reasoning applies very well to the unfolding of the present state of the ...
... become inactive when the purposes of Infinite Wis- dom , for which it was created , have been duly accomplished . So far we can go along with the author , whose reasoning applies very well to the unfolding of the present state of the ...
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... become what they are representing , it may be fairly presumed that the wildest invention in the incongruous can go no further . And we own we cannot but think , that if one or two writers of the true stamp were just now to arise among ...
... become what they are representing , it may be fairly presumed that the wildest invention in the incongruous can go no further . And we own we cannot but think , that if one or two writers of the true stamp were just now to arise among ...
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... such things are not quite impossible . She contrives to become her lover's partner in a masquerade , and tries all her powers of conversation to no purpose . Don Cesar is charm - proof ; and her next scheme 36 Love's Victory ; a Comedy .
... such things are not quite impossible . She contrives to become her lover's partner in a masquerade , and tries all her powers of conversation to no purpose . Don Cesar is charm - proof ; and her next scheme 36 Love's Victory ; a Comedy .
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多く使われている語句
admiration amusing ancient appears beauty Canova Captain character Cicero Cochin China court currency Don Cesar du Hausset editio princeps edition effect England English existence eyes father favour feeling France French give Greece Greek hand honour human imagination important India interest island King labour lady living London look Lord Louis XIV Lusiad Madame Madame de Genlis Madame de Pompadour manner matter means Memoirs ment mind Molière moral Morea mysteries nature never Nureddin object observed occasion once opinion original Paris passed perhaps persons poet Poland political possess present Princess Diana principles produced reader received religion remarkable respect scarcely scene Scotland seems sentiments Siegendorf sovereigns spirit story supposed tale Tartuffe taste thing thought tion translation truth volume whole writer young
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199 ページ - T do confess thou'rt smooth and fair, And I might have gone near to love thee. Had I not found the slightest prayer That lips could speak, had power to move thee; But I can let thee now alone, As worthy to be loved by none.
300 ページ - In such a cause, your success would be hazardous. America, if she fell, would fall like the strong man ; she would embrace the pillars of the state, and pull down the constitution along with her.
425 ページ - Though I should gaze for ever On that green light that lingers in the west: I may not hope from outward forms to win The passion and the life, whose fountains are within.
230 ページ - How, as in brazen pumps the pistons move, The membrane valve sustains the weight above; Stroke follows stroke, the gelid vapour falls, And misty dew-drops dim the crystal walls ; Rare and more rare expands the fluid thin, And silence dwells with vacancy within.
71 ページ - ... who, in noticing the power of the parent so to disinherit his children, thought it had not been amiss, if he had been bound to leave them at least a necessary subsistence...
183 ページ - ... enacted that, for the future, those who did not plead should be held guilty of the crimes laid to their charge. 5. The continent of Europe was the scene of an atrocious act of injustice committed by three crowned heads ; the first dismemberment of Poland was effected by an iniquitous confederacy between the emperor of Germany, the empress of Russia, and the king of Prussia ; they left the unfortunate monarch of the country little more than a nominal sovereignty, and even of this he was subsequently...
235 ページ - His views were most comprehensive, his arguments most acute; his diction was correct without stiffness, and his imagery splendid without glare. It was the vulgar notion of those who did not know Dr. Parr, that his information was confined to the structure of sentences, the etymology of words, the import of particles, and the quantity of syllables.
118 ページ - Place us on the banks of a river, or in an orchard, and we shall infallibly perish, either of thirst or hunger, if we do not, by an effort of industry, raise the water to our lips, or pluck the fruit from its parent tree.
218 ページ - The book he has now sent, shall be taken care of ; but of a former book mentioned in the note, Mr. Johnson has no remembrance, and can hardly think he ever received it, though bad health may possibly have made him negligent.''
217 ページ - Before dinner was finished, Mr. Garrick came in, full dressed, made many apologies for being so much later than he intended, but he had been unexpectedly detained at the House of Lords, and Lord Camden had absolutely insisted upon setting him down at the door of the hotel in his own carriage. Johnson said nothing, but he looked a volume. During the afternoon some literary dispute arose ; but Johnson sat silent, till the Dean of Derry very respectfully said, ' We all wish, Sir, for your opinion on...