| John Aikin - 1852 - Počet stránok 792
...utter incapability of defining a single term in the language,andjusl stood too little of ihe Inngunge th Thr the fine things were really deserved, which they mutually said and sung of each olher. Thus persuaded,... | |
| 1861 - Počet stránok 490
...panegyrics on themselves, and complimentary ' canzonettas ' on two or three Italians, who understood too little of the language in which they were written to be disgusted with them." — (Gifford.) About the same time, a newspaper called the " World " was started in England by a gentleman... | |
| 1861 - Počet stránok 522
...panegyrics upon themselves, and complimentary ' canzonettas' on two or three Italians, who understood too little of the language in which they were written...things which were mutually said and sung of each other. Thus persuaded, they were unwilling their inimitable productions should be confined to the little circle... | |
| George Lillie Craik - 1861 - Počet stránok 580
...high-flown panegyrios on themselves ; and complimentary cauzonettas on two or three Italians, who understood too little of the language in which they were written to be disgusted with them." Among them were Mrs. Piozzi, the widow of Johnson's friend Thrale, now the wife of her daughter's music-master;... | |
| W.N. Hargreaves-Mawdsley - 1967 - Počet stránok 342
...high-flown panegyricks on themselves and complimentary 'canzonettas' on two or three Italians who understood too little of the language in which they were written to be disgusted with them."1 Few in England knew or cared to learn anything about the rights and wrongs of Tuscan politics,... | |
| John Aikin, John Frost - 1866 - Počet stránok 786
...proverbial for its vulgarity, an utter incarabillty of defining a single term in the language,andjusl stood too little of the language in which they were written...they soon wrought themselves into an opinion that the fine things were really deserved, which they mutually said and sung of each other. Thus persuaded,... | |
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