Philological Inquiries: In Three Parts, Volume 3C. Nourse, 1781 - English essays |
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Page 239
... language of Virgil fome fair , but faded flower , Cui neque fulgor adhuc , necdum fua forma receffit . VIRG . AT length , after various plunges and various escapes , it was totally annihilated in the fifteenth Century by the victorious ...
... language of Virgil fome fair , but faded flower , Cui neque fulgor adhuc , necdum fua forma receffit . VIRG . AT length , after various plunges and various escapes , it was totally annihilated in the fifteenth Century by the victorious ...
Page 244
... Language the Opinion he had of his own Station and Authority . I am placed ( fays he ) IN THE MIDDLE , between GOD and MAN , ON THIS SIDE God , but BEYOND Man ; nay I am greater than MAN , as I can judge of all Men , but can be judged ...
... Language the Opinion he had of his own Station and Authority . I am placed ( fays he ) IN THE MIDDLE , between GOD and MAN , ON THIS SIDE God , but BEYOND Man ; nay I am greater than MAN , as I can judge of all Men , but can be judged ...
Page 263
... Language , as it was then spoken among the learned and polite . They would have been ashamed to have delivered Philofophy , as it has been too often delivered fince , in Compofitions as clumfy , as the common Dialect of the mere Vulgar ...
... Language , as it was then spoken among the learned and polite . They would have been ashamed to have delivered Philofophy , as it has been too often delivered fince , in Compofitions as clumfy , as the common Dialect of the mere Vulgar ...
Page 289
... , but , in the language of Horace , quod magis ad nos Pertinet , et nefcire malum eft.- BUT to return from STOBUS to SUI- DAS . If we confider the late age when U Suidas • P. III . Suidas lived ; if we confider INQUIRIES . 289.
... , but , in the language of Horace , quod magis ad nos Pertinet , et nefcire malum eft.- BUT to return from STOBUS to SUI- DAS . If we confider the late age when U Suidas • P. III . Suidas lived ; if we confider INQUIRIES . 289.
Page 297
... Language of the Place , till in a course of years it was fupplanted by GREEK , the common Language of the neighbourhood , and the fashionable ac- quired Language of every polite Roman . WE are told , that foon after the End of the fixth ...
... Language of the Place , till in a course of years it was fupplanted by GREEK , the common Language of the neighbourhood , and the fashionable ac- quired Language of every polite Roman . WE are told , that foon after the End of the fixth ...
Common terms and phrases
Abulfeda ABULPHARAGIUS admired againſt alfo alſo anſwer antient Arabian Arabic Ariftotle ATHENS Author AVERROES becauſe Bohadin Book Caliph called Caufe celebrated Century Ch.IX Chap Character CIMABUE City Claffical Conftantinople Crufades curious defcribed Edition elegant Emperor Empire English EPICURUS Fable faid fame fays fecond feem fent fhall fhort fhould fince fingular firft firſt flouriſhed fome fometimes foon ftill fubject fubjoined fuch fuperior fuppofed Greek Guy's Cliff Hiftorian Hiftory himſelf Honain ibid illuftrated inftances JOHN OF SALISBURY King Knowlege laft Latin learned lefs Library Literature LIVY Manners Manufcripts Meaſure mentioned moft Monk moſt Mufic muſt Nicetas obferving perfon period Petersburgh PETRARCH Philofophers Plato Poetry Poets Polygnotus prefent preferved Prince Prince POTEMKIN publiſhed quoted racter reaſon RHIME Roman Saladin ſay ſeems Sentiment Suidas Tafte Taſte thefe theſe things thofe thoſe thou thouſand thro tion tranflated twas uſed Verfe Verſes whofe William of Malmesbury Writers καὶ
Popular passages
Page 532 - The thing that hath been, it is that which shall be; and that which is done is that which shall be done: and there is no new thing under the sun. Is there any thing whereof it may be said, See, this is new ? it hath been already of old time, which was before us.
Page 464 - How can they say that nature Has nothing made in vain ; Why then, beneath the water, Should hideous rocks remain ? No eyes the rocks discover That lurk beneath the deep, To wreck the wandering lover, And leave the maid to weep.
Page 487 - With mazy error under pendent shades Ran nectar, visiting each plant, and fed Flowers worthy of Paradise, which not nice Art In beds and curious knots, but Nature boon Pour'd forth profuse on hill, and dale, and plain...
Page 267 - Athens only celebrated for the refidence of philofophers, and the inftitution of youth: men of rank and fortune found pleafure in a retreat, which contributed fo much to their liberal enjoyment. The friend and correfpondent of Cicero, T.
Page 530 - One absurdity in this author (a wretched philosopher, though a great wit) is well worth remarking: in order to render the nature of man odious...
Page 249 - ... the admiration of every beholder. It was then that Polygnotus and Myro painted ; that Sophocles and Euripides wrote ; and not long after, that they faw the divine Socrates.
Page 528 - In our time it may be spoken more truly than of old, that virtue is gone ; the church is under foot ; the clergy is in error ; the devil reigneth,
Page 256 - Zeno taught in a portico or colonnade, distinguished fromoiherbuildingsofth.it sort (of which the Athenians had many) by the name of the Variegated Portico, the walls being decorated with various paintings of Polygnotus and Myro, two capital masters of that transcendent period.
Page 246 - upon this ordered them to be dispersed through the "baths of Alexandria, and to be there burnt in making "the baths warm. After this manner, in the space of "six months, they were all consumed.
Page 274 - Its fortune after this was various ; and it •was sometimes under the Venetians, sometimes under the Catalonians, till Mahomet the Great made himself master of Constantinople. This -fatal catastrophe (which happened near two thousand years after the time of...