The National Quarterly Review, Volume 4Edward Isidore Sears, David Allyn Gorton, Charles H. Woodman Pudney & Russell, 1862 |
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Pagina 4
... Language like this would be much less absurd , if applied to Shakespeare , who has certainly " carried nature to lengths unknown " to Milton . But the Italians , Germans , French , Spanish , and Portuguese , institute similar ...
... Language like this would be much less absurd , if applied to Shakespeare , who has certainly " carried nature to lengths unknown " to Milton . But the Italians , Germans , French , Spanish , and Portuguese , institute similar ...
Pagina 8
... language of a corrupt woman , though it does little justice to Homer ? In the first couplet of the translation the words that show most sorrow are not rendered . There is no rendering of nλaivovбa ( weep- ing ) ; Homer uses yoov in one ...
... language of a corrupt woman , though it does little justice to Homer ? In the first couplet of the translation the words that show most sorrow are not rendered . There is no rendering of nλaivovбa ( weep- ing ) ; Homer uses yoov in one ...
Pagina 28
... language , would contribute more towards perfecting taste than all the metaphysical treatises upon the arts that ever were , or ever can be , written , because such treatises can only tell what true taste is , but Homer everywhere shows ...
... language , would contribute more towards perfecting taste than all the metaphysical treatises upon the arts that ever were , or ever can be , written , because such treatises can only tell what true taste is , but Homer everywhere shows ...
Pagina 41
... language through- out the discussion is quite amusing . In the first place , he makes a verbally unintelligible distinction between " intel- * Dunglison's Human Physiology , vol . I. , p . 729 . † Vol . I. , p . 159 . lectual truths ...
... language through- out the discussion is quite amusing . In the first place , he makes a verbally unintelligible distinction between " intel- * Dunglison's Human Physiology , vol . I. , p . 729 . † Vol . I. , p . 159 . lectual truths ...
Pagina 63
... language , as then they would live forever , our mother tongue is ever preferable for that purpose . Let grandeur , in this instance , at least , be made subservient to usefulness . Better far a valuble pre- cept , though couched in the ...
... language , as then they would live forever , our mother tongue is ever preferable for that purpose . Let grandeur , in this instance , at least , be made subservient to usefulness . Better far a valuble pre- cept , though couched in the ...
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