The Works of Samuel Johnson ...: The Adventurer and IdlerTalboys and Wheeler, 1825 |
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Strana 15
... rather mortified than hardened : with these only I converse ; and of these you may , perhaps , hereafter receive some account from Your humble servant , MISARGYRUS . No. 45. TUESDAY , APRIL 10 , 1753 Nulla fides No. 41 . 15 THE ADVENTURER .
... rather mortified than hardened : with these only I converse ; and of these you may , perhaps , hereafter receive some account from Your humble servant , MISARGYRUS . No. 45. TUESDAY , APRIL 10 , 1753 Nulla fides No. 41 . 15 THE ADVENTURER .
Strana 22
... received ; suspicion is always watchful over the prac- tices of interest ; and whatever the hope of gain , or de- sire of mischief , can prompt one man to assert , another is by reasons equally cogent incited to refute . But vanity ...
... received ; suspicion is always watchful over the prac- tices of interest ; and whatever the hope of gain , or de- sire of mischief , can prompt one man to assert , another is by reasons equally cogent incited to refute . But vanity ...
Strana 31
... received , let us not im- mediately determine , that they owed their reputation to dulness or bigotry ; but suspect at least that our ancestors had some reasons for their opinions , and that our ignorance of those reasons makes us ...
... received , let us not im- mediately determine , that they owed their reputation to dulness or bigotry ; but suspect at least that our ancestors had some reasons for their opinions , and that our ignorance of those reasons makes us ...
Strana 37
... received ; and having main- tained the youth for a few years at his own house , after- wards placed him with a merchant of eminence , and gave bonds to a great value as a security for his conduct . The young man , removed too early from ...
... received ; and having main- tained the youth for a few years at his own house , after- wards placed him with a merchant of eminence , and gave bonds to a great value as a security for his conduct . The young man , removed too early from ...
Strana 39
... received so many distinctions in publick , and was known to resort so familiarly to the houses of the great , that every man looked on his preferment as certain , and believed that its value would compensate for its slow- ness : he ...
... received so many distinctions in publick , and was known to resort so familiarly to the houses of the great , that every man looked on his preferment as certain , and believed that its value would compensate for its slow- ness : he ...
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Iné vydania - Zobraziť všetky
Časté výrazy a frázy
admiration amusement appear Bassora beauty censure common commonly considered critick curiosity danger delight desire dili diligence discovered domestick easily easy elegance endeavour enjoy equally evil expected eyes favour felicity folly fortune friends genius give gout gratified hand happiness honour hope hour Hudibras human idleness Idler imagination inquire Joseph Warton kind knowledge labour lady Lapland learned less live look Louisbourg mankind Mantua marriage ment mind miscarriage misery morning nation nature ness never Newmarket night observed once opinion OVID Owen Feltham pain passed passions perhaps pleasing pleasure Posidippus praise present produce publick racter readers reason resolved rich rience SATURDAY scarcely seldom sentiments sleep Socrates sometimes suffered surely talk tell terrour Theocritus thing Thomas Warton thought Tibullus tion told truth ulmo virtue weary wish wonder write
Populárne pasáže
Strana 378 - Here will I hold. If there's a power above us (And that there is, all Nature cries aloud Through all her works), he must delight in virtue ; And that which he delights in must be happy.
Strana 391 - The Italian, attends only to the invariable, the great and general ; ideas which are fixed and inherent in universal nature; the Dutch, on the contrary, to literal truth and a minute exactness in the detail, as I may say, of nature modified by accident. The attention to these petty peculiarities is the very cause of this naturalness so much admired in the Dutch pictures, which, if we suppose it to be a beauty, is certainly...
Strana 108 - To strive with difficulties, and to conquer them, is the highest human felicity; the next, is to strive, and deserve to conquer: but he whose life has passed without a contest, and who can boast neither success nor merit, can survey himself only as a useless filler of existence; and if he is content with his own character, must owe his satisfaction to insensibility.
Strana 444 - thou to whose voice nations have listened, and whose wisdom is known to the extremities of Asia, tell me how I may resemble Omar the prudent. The arts by which...
Strana 97 - Count o'er the joys thine hours have seen, Count o'er thy days from anguish free, And know, whatever thou hast been, 'Tis something better not to be.
Strana 385 - What I have had under consideration is the sublimest style, particularly that of Michael Angelo, the Homer of painting. Other kinds may admit of this naturalness, which of the lowest kind is the chief merit ; but in painting, as in poetry, the highest style has the least of common nature.
Strana 374 - The remembrance of a few names of painters, with their general characters, with a few rules of the academy, which they may pick up among the painters, will go a great way towards making a very notable connoisseur. With a gentleman of this cast, I visited last week the Cartoons at Hampton-court; he was just returned from Italy, a connoisseur of course, and of course his mouth full of nothing but the grace of Raffaelle, the purity of Domenichino, the learning of Poussin, the air of Guido...
Strana 238 - To write news in its perfection requires such a combination of qualities, that a man completely fitted for the task is not always to be found. In Sir Henry Wotton's jocular definition, "An ambassador is said to be a man of virtue sent abroad to tell lies for the advantage of his country ; a newswriter is a man without virtue, who writes lies at home for his own profit.
Strana 373 - Critick still worse, who judges by narrow rules, and those too often false, and which though they should be true, and founded on nature, will lead him but a very little way towards the just estimation of the sublime beauties in works of Genius ; for whatever part of an art can be executed or criticised...
Strana 356 - That some of them have been adopted by him unnecessarily, may perhaps be allowed ; but in general they are evidently an advantage, for without them his stately ideas would be confined and cramped. "He that thinks with more extent than another, will want words of larger meaning.