The British essayists; with prefaces by A. Chalmers, 第 4 巻 |
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... means , my petitioners say , they find them- selves grow insensibly less offended , and in time . enamoured of these their enemies . What is re- quired of me on this occasion is , that as I love and study to preserve the better part of ...
... means , my petitioners say , they find them- selves grow insensibly less offended , and in time . enamoured of these their enemies . What is re- quired of me on this occasion is , that as I love and study to preserve the better part of ...
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... means of health , so reading is apt to grow uneasy and burdensome , when we apply ourselves to it only for our improvement in virtue . For this reason , the virtue which we gather from a fable , or an allegory , is like the health we ...
... means of health , so reading is apt to grow uneasy and burdensome , when we apply ourselves to it only for our improvement in virtue . For this reason , the virtue which we gather from a fable , or an allegory , is like the health we ...
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... means have no indifferent moments , but their whole life is one continued scene of delight . Their passion for each other communicates a certain satisfaction , like that which they themselves are in , to all that approach them . When ...
... means have no indifferent moments , but their whole life is one continued scene of delight . Their passion for each other communicates a certain satisfaction , like that which they themselves are in , to all that approach them . When ...
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... means the jewels ap- pear in their true and genuine lustre , while there is no colour that can infect their brightness , or give a false cast to the water . When I was at the opera the other night , the assembly of ladies in mourning ...
... means the jewels ap- pear in their true and genuine lustre , while there is no colour that can infect their brightness , or give a false cast to the water . When I was at the opera the other night , the assembly of ladies in mourning ...
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... means to turn off her thoughts from marriage . The method they took was , in any time of danger , to throw a new gown or petticoat in her way . When she was about twenty - five years of age , she fell in love with a man of an agreeable ...
... means to turn off her thoughts from marriage . The method they took was , in any time of danger , to throw a new gown or petticoat in her way . When she was about twenty - five years of age , she fell in love with a man of an agreeable ...
多く使われている語句
acquaintance actions admired agreeable Apartment appear Bass-viol beauty behaviour behold Bickerstaff Bouchain cerned character chearful Coffee-house consider conversation countenance death delight desire discourse Douay endeavour enemy entertain Erasistratus esteem eyes fancy father favour fortune gentleman give Great-Britain happy hath heart honour humour husband imagination impertinent ISAAC BICKERSTAFF July 21 Jupiter kind lady learned letter live look lovers malè mankind manner marriage matter merit mind Mohocks nature neral never observe occasion OVID Palamede pass passion persons Philander play pleased pleasure poet present prince proper Pyrrha racter ragoûts reader reason received Roman Censor says sense Sheer-lane soul speak spirit Stratonice Tatler Telemachus tell temper Terentia thing thou thought THURSDAY Timoleon Tiresias told town TUESDAY turn Ulysses upholsterer Virgil virtue whole wife woman word write young
人気のある引用
188 ページ - Papa could not hear me, and would play with me no more, for they were going to put him under ground, whence he could never come to us again.
190 ページ - ... why this cruelty to the humble, to the meek, to the undiscerning, to the thoughtless? Nor age, nor business, nor distress can erase the dear image from my imagination. In the same week, I saw her dressed for a ball, and in a shroud. How ill did the habit of death become the pretty trifler!
12 ページ - N- 147. SATURDAY, MARCH IS, 1709-1O. — — Ut emtris, anat.lii este. OVID. — — Be lovely, that you may be lovM. From my own Apartment, March 17. HEADING is to the mind, what exercise is to the body. As by the one, health is preserved, strengthened, and invigorated ; by the other, virtue, which is the health of the mind, is kept alive, cherished, and confirmed.
240 ページ - A cheerful temper joined with innocence will make beauty attractive, knowledge delightful, and wit good-natured. It will lighten sickness, poverty, and affliction ; convert ignorance into an amiable simplicity ; and render deformity itself agreeable.
313 ページ - The appellation of gentleman is never to be affixed to a man's circumstances, but to his behaviour in them.
116 ページ - ... executions ; so men of letters and education feel their humanity most forcibly exercised, when they attend the obsequies of men who had arrived at any perfection in liberal accomplishments. Theatrical action is to be esteemed as such, except it be objected, that we cannot call that an art which cannot be attained by art.
118 ページ - ... had been unnatural, nay, impossible, in Othello's circumstances. The charming passage in the same tragedy, where he tells the manner of winning the affection of his mistress, was urged with so moving and graceful an energy, that, while I walked in the cloisters...
72 ページ - He thinks he gives you an account of an author when he tells you the subject he treats of, the name of the editor, and the year in which it was printed. Or, if you draw him into further particulars, he cries up the goodness of the paper, extols the diligence of the corrector, and is transported with the beauty of the letter. This he looks upon to be sound learning, and substantial criticism.
71 ページ - Tom Folio is seen at the door. There is not an auction where his name is not heard, and that too in the very nick of time, in the critical moment, before the last decisive stroke of the hammer. There is not a subscription goes forward in which Tom is not privy to the first rough draught of the proposals ; nor a catalogue printed, that doth not come to him wet from the press. He is an universal scholar, so far as the title-page of all authors...
56 ページ - tell me sincerely, what are your thoughts of the king of Sweden ?' (for though his wife and children were starving, I found his chief concern at present was for this great monarch.) I told him, ' that I looked upon him as one of the first heroes of the age.' But pray,' says he, ' do you think there is any thing in the story of his wound?