The British essayists, with prefaces by A. Chalmers, المجلدات 31-32 |
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الصفحة 14
... honour . The play - house is a degree more tolerable , though the horror of thinking who will hand one out , pre- vents one from being diverted . In company , I see every body more attended to than myself . At home I am miserable . What ...
... honour . The play - house is a degree more tolerable , though the horror of thinking who will hand one out , pre- vents one from being diverted . In company , I see every body more attended to than myself . At home I am miserable . What ...
الصفحة 53
... honour to present to a great man a list , consisting of three hundred and nineteen new taxes , the greater part of which I perceive have been adopted . I have in manuscript a number of treatises , which might be a load to an ordinary ...
... honour to present to a great man a list , consisting of three hundred and nineteen new taxes , the greater part of which I perceive have been adopted . I have in manuscript a number of treatises , which might be a load to an ordinary ...
الصفحة 55
... honour of opening them in a lady's library . " My next department will consist of sketches and interesting anecdotes of private characters , with the tea - table conversations , and the fashions of the principal towns in Great Britain ...
... honour of opening them in a lady's library . " My next department will consist of sketches and interesting anecdotes of private characters , with the tea - table conversations , and the fashions of the principal towns in Great Britain ...
الصفحة 57
... honour and esteem . Books of hu- mour or of philosophy , belles lettres , and history , if they be not the production of one who is , or may become my subscriber , will not criticise . God forbid that I should presume to think myself ...
... honour and esteem . Books of hu- mour or of philosophy , belles lettres , and history , if they be not the production of one who is , or may become my subscriber , will not criticise . God forbid that I should presume to think myself ...
الصفحة 58
... fair sex will think rashly of my endeavours , since I wish to convert them to a new religion , merely that they may do honour to it . Lest I should be suspected of vanity , 58 No. 60 . LOUNGER . Mary Plain's Account of a Hunter after Truth.
... fair sex will think rashly of my endeavours , since I wish to convert them to a new religion , merely that they may do honour to it . Lest I should be suspected of vanity , 58 No. 60 . LOUNGER . Mary Plain's Account of a Hunter after Truth.
المحتوى
105 | |
127 | |
146 | |
161 | |
179 | |
206 | |
221 | |
223 | |
236 | |
249 | |
259 | |
10 | |
13 | |
18 | |
47 | |
48 | |
49 | |
50 | |
51 | |
53 | |
59 | |
80 | |
93 | |
273 | |
289 | |
305 | |
350 | |
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
acquaintance acquired affection allowed amusement ancient Greece attention beauty Ben Jonson bestow bustle Calliope character circumstances companion daughters degree Delaserre dinner disposition distress dress Emilia enjoyment Epimenides Eudocius Eupolis excellent Falstaff fancy fashion father favour favourite feelings flattered fortune frequently gave genius gentleman give happy heard Hermippus honour humour husband indulgence knowledge Ladyship late learned less letter look LOUNGER Macbeth Magnetic Lady manner marriage melancholy ment Metapontum mind misanthropy mother nature never NUMBER observed passion perceived perfect perhaps person phaëton philosopher Pisistratus pleasure Plutarch poet Porphyry possessed present Pythagoras racter ridicule SATURDAY Scotland seems sensibility sentiment Shakspeare silence situation society sometimes sort spirits superior Symposius talk taste tell tenderness thing thought tion told town turally uncon vanity virtue walk wife Wilfull Wilfull's wish XXXI
مقاطع مشهورة
الصفحة 262 - Thou's met me in an evil hour; For I maun crush amang the stoure Thy slender stem: To spare thee now is past my pow'r, Thou bonnie gem. Alas ! it's no thy neebor sweet, The bonnie Lark, companion meet! Bending thee 'mang the dewy weet! Wi' spreckl'd breast, When upward-springing, blythe, to greet The purpling east.
الصفحة 143 - But there was a certain man, called Simon, which beforetime in the same city used sorcery, and bewitched the people of Samaria, giving out that himself was some great one : 10 To whom they all gave heed, from the least to the greatest, saying, This man is the great power of God.
الصفحة 146 - That which the palmerworm hath left hath the locust eaten; and that which the locust hath left hath the cankerworm eaten; and that which the cankerworm hath left hath the caterpillar eaten.
الصفحة 263 - Ev'n thou who mourn'st the Daisy's fate, That fate is thine — no distant date ; Stern Ruin's ploughshare drives, elate, Full on thy bloom, Till crush'd beneath the furrow's weight, Shall be thy doom ! TO RUIN.
الصفحة 100 - Tis not a set of features, or complexion, The tincture of a skin that I admire. Beauty soon grows familiar to the lover, Fades in his eye, and palls upon the sense. The virtuous Marcia tow'rs above her sex : True, she is fair, (oh how divinely fair !) But still the lovely maid improves her charms With inward greatness, unaffected wisdom, And sanctity of manners.
الصفحة 103 - Though I will not go so far as a paradoxical critic has done, and ascribe valour to Falstaff ; yet, if his cowardice is fairly examined, it will be' found to be not so much a weakness as a principle. In his very cowardice there is much of the sagacity I have remarked in him; he has the sense of danger, but not the discomposure of fear.
الصفحة 240 - But see the fading many-coloured woods, Shade deepening over shade, the country round Imbrown, a crowded umbrage, dusk, and dun, Of every hue, from wan declining green To sooty dark.
الصفحة 282 - From this tyranny, as youth conceives it, of attention and of labor, relief is commonly sought from some favorite avocation or amusement, for which a young man either finds or steals a portion of his time, either patiently plods through his task, in expectation of its approach, or anticipates its arrival by deserting his work before the legal period for amusement is arrived. It may fairly be questioned, whether the most innocent of those amusements, is either so honorable or so safe as the avocation...
الصفحة 281 - The abstraction of learning, the speculations of science, and the visionary excursions of fancy are fatal, it is said, to the steady pursuit of common objects, to the habits of plodding in dustry, which ordinary business demands. The fineness of mind which is created or increased by the study of letters, or the admiration of the arts, is supposed to incapacitate a man for the drudgery by which professional eminence is gained ; as a nicely tempered edge, applied to a coarse and rugged material, is...
الصفحة 281 - Genius are proscribed, as leading their votaries to barren indigence and merited neglect. In doubting the truth of these assertions, I think I shall not entertain any hurtful degree of...