Selected Prose and PoetryRinehart, 1952 - 488 من الصفحات |
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الصفحة 123
... sometimes stamped as in rage , sometimes threw down his poker , then clattered his chairs , then sat down in deep thought , and again burst out into loud vociferations ; sometimes he would sigh as oppressed with misery , and some- times ...
... sometimes stamped as in rage , sometimes threw down his poker , then clattered his chairs , then sat down in deep thought , and again burst out into loud vociferations ; sometimes he would sigh as oppressed with misery , and some- times ...
الصفحة 200
... sometimes supported by hope , but the more severe often sink down in motionless despondence . Life must be seen before it can be known . This author and Pope perhaps never saw the miseries which they imagine thus easy to be born . The ...
... sometimes supported by hope , but the more severe often sink down in motionless despondence . Life must be seen before it can be known . This author and Pope perhaps never saw the miseries which they imagine thus easy to be born . The ...
الصفحة 229
... sometimes too much contracted , and sometimes too much diffused , the significations are distinguished rather with subtilty than skill , and the attention is harrassed with unneces- sary minuteness . The examples are too often ...
... sometimes too much contracted , and sometimes too much diffused , the significations are distinguished rather with subtilty than skill , and the attention is harrassed with unneces- sary minuteness . The examples are too often ...
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
Addison appears Aristotle attention beauties blank verse censure character Chrysippus common considered criticism curiosity danger death delight desire dignity diligence discovered Drugget Dryden Dunciad Earse easily elegance endeavour English enquire envy equally Essay Essay on Criticism evil excellence expected eyes faults favour frequently garret genius happiness honour hope Hudibras human idleness Iliad images imagination kind knowledge labour language learning lence letters live Lord mankind Matthew Prior ment mind misery nature neglect never numbers observed opinion ourselves Ovid pain Paradise Lost passed passions perhaps pleased pleasure poem poet poetry Pope Pope's praise present produced publick reader reason Satire of Juvenal says scarcely scenes seems Seged seldom sentiments Shakespeare shew Skie sometimes sorrow suffered sufficient supposed things thou thought tion truth unkle vanity verse virtue wish words writer