The Works of the Right Honourable Joseph Addison, Bind 2Vernor and Hood; John Walker; Cuthell and Martin; W.J. and J. Richardson; Longman and Rees; R. Lea; and J. and A. Arch. ; T. Maiden, printer, Sherbourn-Lane, 1804 |
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Side 49
紧 The second kind of female orators are those who deal in invectives , and who are commonly known by the name of the censorious . The imagination . and elocution of this set of rhetoricians is wonderful ...
紧 The second kind of female orators are those who deal in invectives , and who are commonly known by the name of the censorious . The imagination . and elocution of this set of rhetoricians is wonderful ...
Side 63
For this reason I think there is nothing in the world so tiresome as the works of those critics , who write in a positive dogmatic way , without either language , genius , or imagination . If the reader would see how the best of the ...
For this reason I think there is nothing in the world so tiresome as the works of those critics , who write in a positive dogmatic way , without either language , genius , or imagination . If the reader would see how the best of the ...
Side 67
Others , who are free from this natural perverseness of temper , grow wary in their praises of one who sets too great a value on them , lest they should raise him too high in his own imagination , and by consequence remove him to a ...
Others , who are free from this natural perverseness of temper , grow wary in their praises of one who sets too great a value on them , lest they should raise him too high in his own imagination , and by consequence remove him to a ...
Side 102
It shows a greater genius in Shakespear to have drawn his Caliban , than his Hotspur or Julius Cæsar : the one was to be supplied out of his own imagination , whereas the other might have been formed upon tradition , history , and ...
It shows a greater genius in Shakespear to have drawn his Caliban , than his Hotspur or Julius Cæsar : the one was to be supplied out of his own imagination , whereas the other might have been formed upon tradition , history , and ...
Side 103
It is impossible for the imagination of man to distend itself with greater ideas , than those which he has laid together in his first , second , and sixth books . The seventh , which describes the creation of the world , is likewise ...
It is impossible for the imagination of man to distend itself with greater ideas , than those which he has laid together in his first , second , and sixth books . The seventh , which describes the creation of the world , is likewise ...
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