Essays on Men and MannersBradbury, Evans, & Company, 1868 - 340 strán (strany) |
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Výsledky 1 - 5 z 18.
Strana 26
... agreeable perfumes . But the shower was past ; the sun dispersed the vapours ; and the sky was clear and lucid , when Polydore walked forth . He was of a complexion altogether plain and unaffected ; a lover of the Muses , and beloved by ...
... agreeable perfumes . But the shower was past ; the sun dispersed the vapours ; and the sky was clear and lucid , when Polydore walked forth . He was of a complexion altogether plain and unaffected ; a lover of the Muses , and beloved by ...
Strana 50
... agreeable : I mean in regard to those few he had to exercise his skill . N.B. This was written , in an extempore manner , on my friend's wall at Oxford , with a black lead pencil , 1735 , and intended for his character . ON ON RESERVE ...
... agreeable : I mean in regard to those few he had to exercise his skill . N.B. This was written , in an extempore manner , on my friend's wall at Oxford , with a black lead pencil , 1735 , and intended for his character . ON ON RESERVE ...
Strana 79
... themselves . IN short , says he , as persons of ability are capable of furnishing out a much more agreeable entertain- ment ; when a gentleman offers me cards , I shall esteem esteem it as his private opinion that I have neither CARDS . 79.
... themselves . IN short , says he , as persons of ability are capable of furnishing out a much more agreeable entertain- ment ; when a gentleman offers me cards , I shall esteem esteem it as his private opinion that I have neither CARDS . 79.
Strana 90
... agreeable make , may with great truth be said to lose his property in the portrait . In like manner , if he encourage the painter to belie his dress , he seems to transfer his claim to the man with whose station his assumed trappings ...
... agreeable make , may with great truth be said to lose his property in the portrait . In like manner , if he encourage the painter to belie his dress , he seems to transfer his claim to the man with whose station his assumed trappings ...
Strana 107
... agreeable to a person eager of glory , furnished with skill , and conscious of abilities . Such was this ingenious nobleman . He well knew the ambition of princes , and of his monarch in particular . But he was not acquainted with his ...
... agreeable to a person eager of glory , furnished with skill , and conscious of abilities . Such was this ingenious nobleman . He well knew the ambition of princes , and of his monarch in particular . But he was not acquainted with his ...
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Časté výrazy a frázy
admire advantage affection afford agreeable alliteration allowed ambition amusement answer appear beauty better betwixt character Clelia colours consider contrived degree dignity discover disposition distinction distinguish dress elegance elegy endeavour envy equal esquire esteem fame fancy favour former fortune frequently gardening genius gentleman give greater happiness highwayman honour human humour idea imagination inclined inferior instance judgment Juvenal kind ladies landscape latter Leander Leasowes least less LIVY Lord Bolingbroke Lord Shaftesbury Lycidas manner means ment merit metre mind nation nature never objects observed occasion one's opinion Ovid passions perhaps person Piercefield pleasing pleasure plebeian poet poetry Polydore Pope proper proportion reason regard remarkable render respect Sallust scene seems sense shew sidered sometimes sort species spirit style sublime superior suppose taste thought tion trees truth Urim and Thummim vanity variety Virgil virtue vulgar WILLIAM SHENSTONE word writer
Populárne pasáže
Strana 232 - AVARICE is the most opposite of all characters to that of God Almighty, whose alone it is, to give and not receive. A MISER grows rich by seeming poor ; an extravagant man grows poor by seeming rich.
Strana 336 - The melancholy of a lover is different, no doubt, from what we feel on other mixed occasions. The mind in which love and grief at once predominate is softened to an excess.
Strana 165 - HAD I a fortune of eight or ten thousand pounds a year, I would methinks make myself a neighbourhood. I would first build a village with a church, and people it with inhabitants of some branch of trade that was suitable to the country round, I would then, at...
Strana vi - When forced the fair nymph to forego, What anguish I felt at my heart ! Yet I thought — but it might not be so — 'Twas with pain that she saw me depart. She gazed, as I slowly withdrew, My path I could hardly discern ; So sweetly she bade me adieu, I thought that she bade me return.
Strana 291 - When misfortunes happen to such as dissent from us in matters of religion, we call them judgments : when to those of our own sect, we call them trials : when to persons neither way distinguished, we are content to impute them to the settled course of things.
Strana 278 - The philosophers and ancient sages, who declaimed against the vanity of all external advantages, seem in an equal degree to have countenanced and authorized the mental ones, or they would condemn their own example. Superiority in wit is more frequently the cause of vanity than superiority of judgment ; as the person that wears an ornamental sword, is ever more vain than he that wears an useful one.
Strana 240 - A lady of good-nature would forgive the blunder of a country esquire, who, through zeal to serve her with a glass of claret, should involve his spurs in her Brussels apron. On the contrary, the fop (who may in some sense use the words of Horace Quod verum atque decens euro et rogo et omnis in hoc sum) would be entitled to no pardon for such unaccountable misconduct.
Strana 131 - ... of the pleasing kind. Objects should indeed be less calculated to strike the immediate eye than the judgment or well-formed imagination; as in painting. It is no objection to the pleasure of novelty that it makes an ugly object more disagreeable. It is enough that it produces a superiority betwixt things in other respects equal. It seems, on some occasions, to go even farther. Are there not broken rocks and rugged grounds to which we can hardly attribute either beauty or grandeur; and yet when...
Strana 135 - I think the landscape painter is the gardener's best designer. The eye requires a sort of balance here ; but not so as to encroach upon probable nature.
Strana 302 - That we are contemporaries, and persons whom future history shall unite, who, great part of us, however imperceptibly, receive and confer reciprocal benefits ; this, with every other circumstance that tends to heighten our philanthropy, should be brought to mind as much as possible, during our abode upon earth. Hereafter it may be just, and requisite, to comprehend all ages of mankind. THE best notion we can conceive of God, may be, that he is to the creation what the soul is to the body- : Dens...