| William Wollaston - Ethics - 1725 - 228 pages
...fafety or profperity mould depend upon winds or rains, muft new motions be impreft upon the atmofphere, and new directions given to the floating parts of...it, by fome extraordinary and new influence from God ? Muft clouds be Ib precipitated, or kept in fufpenfee, as the cafe of a particular man or two requires... | |
| William Wollaston - Apologetics - 1731 - 242 pages
...fafety orprofperity ihould depend upon winds or rains, mult new motions be impreft upon the atmofphere, and new directions given to the floating parts of it, by fome ex. traordinary and нети influence from God ? Mult clouds be fo precipitated, or kept in fufpencec,... | |
| William Wollaston - Ethics - 1746 - 436 pages
...fafety or profperity mould depend upon winds or rains, muft new motions be impreft upon the atmofphere, and new directions given to the floating parts of it, by fome extraordinary nary and new Influence from God ? Muft clouds be fo precipitated, or kept in fufpence a , as the cafe... | |
| Richard Hurd - Imitation in literature - 1757 - 90 pages
...or profperity fhould depend upon winds or rains, muft new motions be imprejfcd upon the atmofphere, and new directions given to the floating parts of...in a kind of circumlocution. Yet this artifice does riot conceal him, efpecially if fome fragments, as it were, of the inventor's phrafe are found difperfedly... | |
| Richard Hurd, William Mason - Imitation (in literature) - 1757 - 88 pages
...or profperity fhould depend upon winds or rains, muft new motions be imprej/ed upon the atmofphere, and new directions given to the floating parts of...Sometimes the original expreffion is not taken but paraphrased ; and the writer difguifes himfelf in a kind of circumlocution. Yet this artifice does... | |
| Horace - Poetry - 1766 - 288 pages
...or profperity mould depend upon winds or rains, muft new motions be impreffed upon the atmofphere, and new directions given to the floating parts of...expreffion is not taken but paraphrafed ; and the writer difgtiifes himfelf in a kind of circumlocution. Yet this artifice does not conceal him, efpecially... | |
| Samuel Parr - Clergy - 1792 - 244 pages
...draw-back unhappily lies here; for the fame f critic tells us, " that the original expreffion is fometimes not taken, but paraphrafed, and the writer difguifes himfelf in a kind of circumlocution. Yet," fays he, " this artifice does not conceal him, efpecially if fome fragments of the inventor's phrafe... | |
| Richard Hurd - Theology, Doctrinal - 1811 - 374 pages
...HI. Sometimes the original expression is not taken but paraphrased ; and the writer disguises himself in a kind of circumlocution. Yet this artifice does not conceal him, especially if some fragments, as it were, of the inventor's phrase are found dispersedly in the imitation.... | |
| Samuel Parr, John Johnstone - 1828 - 760 pages
...Expression, " the original expression is not taken, but paraphrased; and the writer disguises himself in a kind of circumlocution. Yet this artifice does not conceal him, especially if some fragments, as it were, of the inventor's phrase are found dispersedly in the imitation."... | |
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