The Letters of Sir Thomas Fitzosborne, on Several SubjectsJ. Dodsley, 1769 - 452 ページ |
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... XLI . to ORONTES : The comparative merit of the two fexes , con- fidered , 192 Letter XLII . to PALEMON : Reflections upon the various revolutions in the the mind of man with respect both to his Speculative CONTENTS , vij.
... XLI . to ORONTES : The comparative merit of the two fexes , con- fidered , 192 Letter XLII . to PALEMON : Reflections upon the various revolutions in the the mind of man with respect both to his Speculative CONTENTS , vij.
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... merit . And it was an obfervation of one of the Scipio's , that he could never view the figures of his an- ceftors without finding his bofom glow with the most ardent paffion of imitating their deeds . However , as the days of exemplary ...
... merit . And it was an obfervation of one of the Scipio's , that he could never view the figures of his an- ceftors without finding his bofom glow with the most ardent paffion of imitating their deeds . However , as the days of exemplary ...
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... is fomething indeed in diftrefs that reflects a fort of merit upon every object which is fo fituated , and turns off our attention from from those blemishes that stain even the most vitious characters LETTER III . 13.
... is fomething indeed in diftrefs that reflects a fort of merit upon every object which is fo fituated , and turns off our attention from from those blemishes that stain even the most vitious characters LETTER III . 13.
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... , for our meeting with fo fmall a number of authors who can claim the merit of being originals ? Is not this a kind of fubmiffion , that damps the fire and weakens C 3 weakens the vigor of the mind ? For the antients LETTER 21 V.
... , for our meeting with fo fmall a number of authors who can claim the merit of being originals ? Is not this a kind of fubmiffion , that damps the fire and weakens C 3 weakens the vigor of the mind ? For the antients LETTER 21 V.
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... merit his reputation . But I speak only of those more nice and delicate traits which diftinguish the feveral degrees of probity and good - fenfe , and afcertain the quantum ( if I may fo express it ) of human merit . The powers of the ...
... merit his reputation . But I speak only of those more nice and delicate traits which diftinguish the feveral degrees of probity and good - fenfe , and afcertain the quantum ( if I may fo express it ) of human merit . The powers of the ...
多く使われている語句
admired affured againſt Agamemnon Andromache antient beauty becauſe Cicero circumftance Cleora compofitions confefs confider confiderable converfation defign defire diſcovers diſtinguiſhed eloquence Engliſh eſteem EUPHRONIUS exerciſe expreffion exprefs facred faid fame fatire feems fenfe fentiments fhall fhew fince fingle fingular firſt fome fomething fpecies fpeech friendſhip ftrength fubject fuch fuperior fure genius good-fenfe grace greateſt happineſs Hector higheſt himſelf Homer Iliad imagine inftance itſelf juſt kind language leaft leaſt lefs LETTER Lycon meaſures mind moft moſt muft muſt myſelf neceffarily neceffary neral obferve occafion orator paffage paffion Palemon Patroclus perfon perfuaded perhaps Phereclus philofopher PHILOTES pleaſing pleaſure poet poetry poffeffed poffeffion poffibly Pope prefent preferve purpoſe raiſed reaſon reliſh repreſented reſpect rife ſcarce ſeems ſeveral ſhe ſhould ſome ſpeak ſpirit ſtand taſte thefe themſelves theſe thofe thoſe thro Timoclea tion tranflator truth underſtanding uſeful uſually verfe whofe δε
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3 ページ - If we see right, we see our woes: Then what avails it to have eyes? From ignorance our comfort flows. The only wretched are the wise. We wearied should lie down in death: This cheat of life would take no more; If you thought fame but empty breath; I, Phillis, but a perjur'd whore.
184 ページ - ... at once upon the mind with the fame force of conviction, as that the whole is greater than any of its parts, or, that if from equals you take away equals, the remainder will be equal. And in both cafes, the propofitions \vhich reft upon thefe plain and obvious maxims, feem equally capable of the fame evidence of demonftration.
58 ページ - It might, metbinks, somewhat abate the insolence of human pride, to consider, that it is but increasing or diminishing the velocity of certain fluids in the animal machine, to elate the soul with the gayest hopes, or sink her into the deepest despair ; to depress the hero into a coward, or advance the coward into a hero.
347 ページ - I must freely confess to you, . . . that having met with many things, of which I could give myself no one probable cause, and some things, of which several causes may be assigned so differing, as not to agree in any thing, unless in their being all of them probable enough; I have often found such difficulties in searching into the...
256 ページ - And oft look'd back, slow moving o'er the strand. Not so his loss the fierce Achilles bore; But sad, retiring to the sounding shore, O'er the wild margin of the deep he hung, That kindred deep, from whence his mother sprung : There...
362 ページ - The number of those writers who can, with any justness of expression, be termed thinking authors, would not form a very copious library, though one were to take in all of that kind which both ancient...
115 ページ - ... of my acquaintance, a captain of a privateer, who wrote an account to his owners of an engagement, " in which he had the good fortune, " he told them, of having only one of his
313 ページ - I herepafs my life : with a fortune far above the neceffity of engaging in the drudgery of bufinefs; and with defires much too humble to have any relifh for the fplendid baits of ambition. You muft not, however, imagine that I...
186 ページ - Upon juft and folid reafons : it is not becaufe Ariftotle and Horace have given us the rules of criticifm, that we fubmit to their authority; it is becaufe thofe rules are derived from works which have been diftinguimed by the uninterrupted admiration of all the more improved part of mankind from their earlieft appearance down to this prefent hour. For whatever, thro...
62 ページ - One cannot indeed but regret," says he, "that Dr. Tillotson, who abounds with such noble and generous sentiments, should want the art of setting them off with all the advantage they deserve ; that the sublime in morals should not be attended with a suitable elevation of language. The truth, however, is, his words are frequently ill chosen, and almost always ill placed ; his periods are both tedious and unharmonious ; as his metaphors are generally mean, and often ridiculous.