The Letters of Sir Thomas Fitzosborne, on Several Subjects |
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Page 4
... she is a kind deceiver and an obliging flatterer . Let me conjure you then , good Clytander , not to break up her useful enchantments , which thus furround us on every fide ; but spare her harmless deceptions in mere charity to mankind ...
... she is a kind deceiver and an obliging flatterer . Let me conjure you then , good Clytander , not to break up her useful enchantments , which thus furround us on every fide ; but spare her harmless deceptions in mere charity to mankind ...
Page 5
... She cal- led me one day into the gallery to look upon a picture which was just come out of the painter's hands ; but the moment the carried me up to it , fhe burst out into B 3 a flood a flood of tears . It was drawn at the LETTER II . 3.
... She cal- led me one day into the gallery to look upon a picture which was just come out of the painter's hands ; but the moment the carried me up to it , fhe burst out into B 3 a flood a flood of tears . It was drawn at the LETTER II . 3.
Page 62
... she was Princess of Denmark , he talks of fquee- zing a parable , thrusting religion by , dri- ving a ftrict bargain with God , fharking Shifts , & c . and fpeaking of the day of judg- ment , he describes the world as cracking about our ...
... she was Princess of Denmark , he talks of fquee- zing a parable , thrusting religion by , dri- ving a ftrict bargain with God , fharking Shifts , & c . and fpeaking of the day of judg- ment , he describes the world as cracking about our ...
Page 93
... fhe does , is to affuage them ; and half the uneafiness of her absence is remov- ed , when he tells me that she regrets mine . 1 SINCE I thus affuredly find that you can work miracles SINCE LETTER XXI . 93 to CLEORA:
... fhe does , is to affuage them ; and half the uneafiness of her absence is remov- ed , when he tells me that she regrets mine . 1 SINCE I thus affuredly find that you can work miracles SINCE LETTER XXI . 93 to CLEORA:
Page 103
... she is in the number of thofe who are ever overlook- ed in a crowd . As often as I converfe with her , fhe puts me in mind of the golden age : there is an innocency and fimplicity in all her words and actions , that equals any thing the ...
... she is in the number of thofe who are ever overlook- ed in a crowd . As often as I converfe with her , fhe puts me in mind of the golden age : there is an innocency and fimplicity in all her words and actions , that equals any thing the ...
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The Letters of Sir Thomas Fitzosborne, on Several Subjects. the Eighth Edition WILLIAM. MELMOTH No preview available - 2018 |
Common terms and phrases
admirers affured againſt agreable Andromache antient beauty becauſe beſt cauſe Cicero circumftances Cleora compofitions confefs confider confiderable converfation defign defire diſcover diſtinguiſhed eloquence eſteemed EUPHRONIUS exerciſe exiſtence expref expreffion facred faid fame fatire feems fentiments ferve fhall fince fingle fingular firſt fome fomething fpecies fpirit friendſhip ftrength fubject fuch fuperior fuppofe fure genius grace greateſt happineſs herſelf higheſt himſelf Homer Iliad imagine inftance itſelf juſt kind laft leaft leaſt lefs leſs LETTER Lycon mankind meaſures mind moft moſt muft muſt myſelf nature neceffarily neceffary neral obferves occafion orator Orontes paffage paffion PALAMEDES Palemon perfons perfuaded perhaps Philotes pleaſed pleaſure poet poetry poffible Pope prefent preferve purpoſe racter raiſed reaſon reliſh repreſented reſpective rife ſcene ſeems ſeveral ſhall ſhe ſhould ſome taſte thefe themſelves theſe thofe thoſe thro Timoclea tion tranflator truth ufual underſtanding uſeful whilft whofe δε τε
Popular passages
Page 66 - It muft be acknowledged, indeed, that in the times which fucceeded the diflblution of the Roman republic, this art was fo perverted from its true end as to become the fingle ftudy of their enervated orators.
Page 345 - I dare speak confidently and positively of very few things, except matter of fact. And when I venture to deliver any thing by way of opinion, I should, if it were not for mere shame, speak yet more diffidently than I have been wont to do.
Page 309 - There must be a great agitation of mind to invent, a great calm to judge and correct ; there must be upon the same tree, and at the same time, both flower and fruit.
Page 363 - ... of its opinions, with greater force of conviction than any other method we can employ. That ' it is not good for man to be alone...
Page 358 - But even if we look up to those who move in much superior orbits, and who have opportunities to improve, as well as leisure to exercise their understandings, we shall find that thinking is one of the...
Page 4 - If we see right, we see our woes: Then what avails it to have eyes? From ignorance our comfort flows. The only wretched are the wise. We wearied should lie down in death: This cheat of life would take no more; If you thought fame but empty breath; I, Phillis, but a perjur'd whore.
Page 115 - ... of my acquaintance, a captain of a privateer, who wrote an account to his owners of an engagement, " in which he had the good fortune, " he told them, of having only one of his
Page 272 - For him through hostile camps I bent my way, For him thus prostrate at thy feet I lay; Large gifts proportion'd to thy wrath I bear; O hear the wretched, and the gods revere!
Page 219 - But in fome places he feems not to have touched it with that delicacy of pencil, which graces the original ; as he has entirely loft the beauty of one of the figures. Hector is...
Page 186 - Horace have given us the rules of criticism, that we submit to their authority ; it is because those rules are derived from works which have been distinguished by the uninterrupted admiration of all the more improved part of mankind, from their earliest appearance down to this present hour. For whatever, through a long series of ages, has been universally esteemed as beautiful, cannot but be conformable to our just and natural ideas of beauty.