Henry, المجلد 2C. Dilly, 1795 |
من داخل الكتاب
النتائج 1-5 من 35
الصفحة 6
... objects as they pass their proper form and feature . In the time I am now writing , the national character fhews itself in fo bright a point of view , that the author must be harsh in the ex- treme , who holds up fictions of depravity ...
... objects as they pass their proper form and feature . In the time I am now writing , the national character fhews itself in fo bright a point of view , that the author must be harsh in the ex- treme , who holds up fictions of depravity ...
الصفحة 14
... object , and then thinks to throw duft in our eyes by pretending to befriend him out of pure pity and good will ! Ah Bridget , Bridget ! what a world is this we live in ! How often have I preached to you upon the vanity of works ! Let ...
... object , and then thinks to throw duft in our eyes by pretending to befriend him out of pure pity and good will ! Ah Bridget , Bridget ! what a world is this we live in ! How often have I preached to you upon the vanity of works ! Let ...
الصفحة 16
... object of them here present , that I am almost afraid of indulging myself with an interview . Yet again , when I confider how long I have been in the practice of fuppreffing what I feel , I think I may rifque the meeting . He is not ...
... object of them here present , that I am almost afraid of indulging myself with an interview . Yet again , when I confider how long I have been in the practice of fuppreffing what I feel , I think I may rifque the meeting . He is not ...
الصفحة 19
... object that now ftood before her : It was a trying moment ; fhe glanced a look upon him that would have told him where to find a mother , had he met her eyes . All the advantages of perfon were now re- ftored to him by change of drefs ...
... object that now ftood before her : It was a trying moment ; fhe glanced a look upon him that would have told him where to find a mother , had he met her eyes . All the advantages of perfon were now re- ftored to him by change of drefs ...
الصفحة 20
... object of his care henceforth belongs to me , and therefore wonder not to fee me thus af- fected by furprize and pity , having discovered you to be the relict of my much - lamented friend . Ah , my dear child , ( fo let me call you now ) ...
... object of his care henceforth belongs to me , and therefore wonder not to fee me thus af- fected by furprize and pity , having discovered you to be the relict of my much - lamented friend . Ah , my dear child , ( fo let me call you now ) ...
طبعات أخرى - عرض جميع المقتطفات
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
addrefs affured againſt amongſt anſwer becauſe beſt Blachford cafe Cary cauſe Cawdle chaife character Claypole cloſe confcience cottage cou'd cried Henry Crowbery's defire diſcover eſcape eyes Ezekiel fafe faid faid Henry fame Fanny favour fecret feemed feen fenfe fervice fhall fhort figh filence firſt fituation fome fomething foon fortune foul fpirit ftate fubject fuch fuffer fufpect fuppofed fure gentleman hand heart Heaven Henry's hero herſelf himſelf honour houfe houſe Ifabella interefting juſt juſtice Lady Crowbery laſt leaſt lefs Lord Crowbery meaſures Mifs moft moſt muft muſt myſelf nature never obferved occafion paffed paffion perfon pity pleaſe pleaſure poffeffed prefent promiſe purpoſe queſtion quoth racter reafon refolution refpect ſaid ſay ſeems ſhall ſhe ſhould Sir Roger Manſtock ſpeak ſtate Sufan thee thefe theſe thofe thoſe thou thought tion trepan underſtand whilft whofe words wou'd young yourſelf Zachary
مقاطع مشهورة
الصفحة 113 - If they fay, come with us, let us lay wait for blood, let us lurk privily for ths innocent without caiife, behold they lay wait for their own l)hod, they lurk privily for their own lives.
الصفحة 4 - ... be it happy or unhappy, he may earn a plaudit as the curtain drops. I do not aim to draw a perfect character; for, after a pretty long acquaintance with mankind, I have never met with any one example of the sort. How then shall I describe what I have not seen? On the contrary, if I wish to form a character, like this of Henry, in which virtue predominates, or like that of Blachford, where the...
الصفحة 215 - ... tricks are nothing more than mere slight of hand, the effect of nimble art and practised adroitness, by which they cheat the sight, but aim not to impose upon the understanding; like them, the novelist professes to deal in ingenious deceptions, but deceptions so like truth and nature, that, whilst his performances have all the vivacity of a romance to excite admiration, they have the harmony of a history to engage approbation.
الصفحة 4 - I do not aim to draw a perfect character, for after a pretty long acquaintance with mankind I have never met with any one example of the sort: How then shall I describe what I have not seen? On the contrary, if I wish to form a character, like this of Henry, in which virtue predominates, or like that of Blackford, where the opposite 1 His vices are not allayed with a single virtue.
الصفحة 211 - ... affords; the poor African is therefore fair game for every minstrel that has tuned his lyre to the sweet chords of pity and condolence; whether he builds immortal verse upon his loss of liberty, or weaves his melancholy fate into the pathos of a novel, in either case he finds a mine of sentiment, digs up enthusiasm from its richest vein, and gratifies at once his spleen and his ambition. The happy virtuous negro, torn from his own fine temperate climate, and transported into the torrid heats...
الصفحة 211 - ... has tuned his lyre to the sweet chords of pity and condolence; whether he builds immortal verse upon his loss of liberty, or weaves his melancholy fate into the pathos of a novel, in either case he finds a mine of sentiment, digs up enthusiasm from its richest vein, and gratifies at once his spleen and his ambition. The happy virtuous negro, torn from his own fine temperate climate, and transported into the torrid heats of our inhospitable islands, there to sweat and bleed beneath the lash of...
الصفحة 217 - Swift; the fpirit of the author will be feen in the general moral and tendency of the piece, though he will allot to every particular character its proper fentiment and language; the outline will be that of nature, and fancy will difpofe the group into various attitudes and actions, but the general colouring and complexion of the whole will reflect the peculiar and diftinguifhing tints of the mafter. CHAPTER II.
الصفحة 210 - ... I am bound to do as a story-maker, is, to make a story; I am not bound to reform the constitution of my country in the same breath, nor even (Heaven be thanked!) to overturn it, though that might be the easier task of the two, or, more properly speaking, one and the same thing in its consequences. Nature is my guide; man's nature, not his natural rights: the one ushers me by the straightest avenue to the human heart, the other bewilders me in a maze of metaphysics.