Prose and PoetryR. Hart-Davis, 1950 - 961 من الصفحات Over sixty-five representative selections. |
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الصفحة 524
... scenes from the inroads of correction . ( I have adopted the Roman sentiment , that it is more honourable to save a ... scene is changed , or any considerable time is required to pass . This method would at once quell a thousand ...
... scenes from the inroads of correction . ( I have adopted the Roman sentiment , that it is more honourable to save a ... scene is changed , or any considerable time is required to pass . This method would at once quell a thousand ...
الصفحة 553
... scenes , and therefore , as on other such occasions , contracts his dialogue and precipitates his action . Decency required that Bertram's double crime of cruelty and dis- obedience , joined likewise with some hypocrisy , should raise ...
... scenes , and therefore , as on other such occasions , contracts his dialogue and precipitates his action . Decency required that Bertram's double crime of cruelty and dis- obedience , joined likewise with some hypocrisy , should raise ...
الصفحة 831
... scenes of smiling plenty , and looks up to the distant tower , the residence of some fair in- habitant ; thus he pursues rural gaiety through a day of labour or of play , and delights himself at night with the fanciful narratives of ...
... scenes of smiling plenty , and looks up to the distant tower , the residence of some fair in- habitant ; thus he pursues rural gaiety through a day of labour or of play , and delights himself at night with the fanciful narratives of ...
المحتوى
Chronological Table | 8 |
London a Poem | 25 |
An Account of the Life of Mr Richard Savage | 41 |
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appeared authour beauty better blank verse British Museum censure character common commonly considered conversation Cowley criticism curiosity danger delight desire dignity diligence discovered Dryden Earse easily elegance endeavoured English enquire equally evil excellence expected eyes Falstaff favour folly Fort Augustus frequently friends genius give happiness Hebrides Highlands honour hope human imagination Imlac Inch Kenneth inhabitants Islands kind knowledge labour Lady language learned less live Mankind mind misery nature necessary ness never observed once opinion Paradise Lost passions Pekuah performed perhaps play pleasing pleasure poem poet poetry Pope praise present prince PRINCE OF ABISSINIA princess produced publick Raasay Rasselas reader reason Savage scarcely scenes Scotland seems seldom sentiments Shakespeare shew Slanes Castle sometimes suffered sufficient supposed Tacksman things thou thought tion told truth Tyrconnel vanity verse virtue words write