Letters and Essays in Prose and VerseE. Moxon, 1834 - 268 lappuses |
No grāmatas satura
1.–5. rezultāts no 17.
. lappuse
Richard Sharp. CONTENTS . PAGE TO THE REV . JOHN FELL 1 ON ENGLISH STYLE 5 · EXTRACT OF A LETTER FROM MR . BURKE TO MR . MURPHY 15 TO THE REV . JOHN FELL 19 TO A YOUNG FRIEND AT COLLEGE 24 TO THE SAME * TO THE SAME 27 31 TO THE SAME TO A ...
Richard Sharp. CONTENTS . PAGE TO THE REV . JOHN FELL 1 ON ENGLISH STYLE 5 · EXTRACT OF A LETTER FROM MR . BURKE TO MR . MURPHY 15 TO THE REV . JOHN FELL 19 TO A YOUNG FRIEND AT COLLEGE 24 TO THE SAME * TO THE SAME 27 31 TO THE SAME TO A ...
1. lappuse
... expression , and I must beg you to have no mercy . Our common object is to do the best we can towards preventing the style of the next race of authors from B being tainted by the pedantry of the present . Indeed TO THE REV JOHN FELL.
... expression , and I must beg you to have no mercy . Our common object is to do the best we can towards preventing the style of the next race of authors from B being tainted by the pedantry of the present . Indeed TO THE REV JOHN FELL.
3. lappuse
... style is too undisciplined for a model ) abound with phrases in which homeliness sets off elegance and ease adds grace to strength . How your neighbour , the " dilectus Iapis " will smile to hear Milton's practice appealed to ! Yet what ...
... style is too undisciplined for a model ) abound with phrases in which homeliness sets off elegance and ease adds grace to strength . How your neighbour , the " dilectus Iapis " will smile to hear Milton's practice appealed to ! Yet what ...
4. lappuse
... as pure an authority for English as for doctrine . I begin , already , to look forward to my annual week's holiday at Thaxted , where I shall hear you expound them for both purposes . ON ENGLISH STYLE . * DURING the last thirty or 4.
... as pure an authority for English as for doctrine . I begin , already , to look forward to my annual week's holiday at Thaxted , where I shall hear you expound them for both purposes . ON ENGLISH STYLE . * DURING the last thirty or 4.
5. lappuse
... words , as an early acquaintance with some other language , and the neglected study of their * Printed in 1784 as the Preface to an Grammar . " 66 Essay on English own , would naturally incline them to . Sometimes also 5 ON ENGLISH STYLE ·
... words , as an early acquaintance with some other language , and the neglected study of their * Printed in 1784 as the Preface to an Grammar . " 66 Essay on English own , would naturally incline them to . Sometimes also 5 ON ENGLISH STYLE ·
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acquainted Alps AMBLESIDE amusing ancient Aristotle asso authority beauty behold better bien blessing blest brave breathe called charms cheerful Cicero cloud common conciliating qualities confest delight Dugald Stewart elegant eloquence English EPISTLE Essay evil eyes fair fame fear feelings flower forget forms of speech grace GRASMERE habits happy hear heart heav'n Helvetius hills honour hope hour human humble idiom instance Isocrate JOHN FELL joys Keswick language laws Leibnitz living lov'd metaphysics mind moral nature never night Nihil o'er once opinion orator passion perhaps pleasure Plutarch poet poetry praise proud Quintilian rich ridiculous scarcely sentiments shun SIR JAMES MACKINTOSH sleep smile speak spirit sweet Tacitus Thaxted thee thine thou thoughts Thucydides tion toil tongue tropes true trust truth verse virtues wake walk wish word writers young youth
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4. lappuse - I was all ear, And took in strains that might create a soul Under the ribs of Death.
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8. lappuse - So far have I been from any care to grace my pages with modern decorations, that I have studiously endeavoured to collect examples and authorities from the writers before the restoration, whose works I regard as the wells of English undefiled, as> the pure sources of genuine diction.
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33. lappuse - THE VANITY OF HUMAN WISHES, IN IMITATION OF THE TENTH SATIRE OF JUVENAL. LET* Observation, with extensive view, Survey mankind from China to Peru ; Remark each anxious toil, each eager strife, And watch the busy scenes of crowded life^ Then say how hope and fear, desire and hate, O'erspread with snares the clouded maze of fate, Where...
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38. lappuse - How often,' says Father Adam, ' from the steep of echoing hill or thicket, have we heard celestial voices to the midnight air, sole, or responsive to each other's notes, singing!
14. lappuse - ... attempt may sometimes have, it is always obtained at the expense of purity and of the graces that are natural and appropriate to our language. It is true that when the exigence calls for auxiliaries of all sorts, and common language becomes unequal to the demands of extraordinary thoughts, something ought to be conceded to the necessities which make " ambition virtue;" but the allowances to necessities ought not to grow into a practice.
9. lappuse - ... to be sought in the common intercourse of life, among those who speak only to be understood, without ambition of elegance. The polite are always catching modish innovations, and the learned depart from established forms of speech in hope...
47. lappuse - If you cannot be happy in one way, be happy in another ; and this facility of disposition wants but little aid from philosophy, for health and good humour are almost the whole affair. Many run about after felicity, like an absent man hunting for his hat, while it is on his head or in his hand. Though sometimes small evils, like invisible insects, inflict great pain...