AddisonMacmillan, 1909 - 197 pagina's |
Vanuit het boek
Resultaten 1-5 van 24
Pagina 4
... course necessary that from such a system all belief in the super- natural shall be jealously excluded , it has not seemed impossible to write the history of Thought itself in the eighteenth century . And in tracing the course of this ...
... course necessary that from such a system all belief in the super- natural shall be jealously excluded , it has not seemed impossible to write the history of Thought itself in the eighteenth century . And in tracing the course of this ...
Pagina 9
... course enlisted on the Tory side , and supplied it with arguments which the body of the party might perhaps have found it diffi- cult to discover , or at least to express , for themselves . For Tory tastes undoubtedly lay generally ...
... course enlisted on the Tory side , and supplied it with arguments which the body of the party might perhaps have found it diffi- cult to discover , or at least to express , for themselves . For Tory tastes undoubtedly lay generally ...
Pagina 12
... course . Then , again , your Tully and your discourses of another life are the very bane of mirth and good humour . Pry'thee don't value thyself on thy reason at that exorbitant rate and the dignity of human nature ; take my word for it ...
... course . Then , again , your Tully and your discourses of another life are the very bane of mirth and good humour . Pry'thee don't value thyself on thy reason at that exorbitant rate and the dignity of human nature ; take my word for it ...
Pagina 33
... as a legitimate successor of the classics , is of course appreciated , but not at all after the elaborate 1 Spence's Anecdotes , p . 50 . D fashion of the Spectator ; to Dryden , the most II . ] 33 FAMILY AND EDUCATION .
... as a legitimate successor of the classics , is of course appreciated , but not at all after the elaborate 1 Spence's Anecdotes , p . 50 . D fashion of the Spectator ; to Dryden , the most II . ] 33 FAMILY AND EDUCATION .
Pagina 35
... course of his life . Tonson , who had a wide acquaintance , no doubt introduced him to Congreve and the leading men of letters in London , and through them he was presented to Somers and Montague . Those ministers perhaps persuaded him ...
... course of his life . Tonson , who had a wide acquaintance , no doubt introduced him to Congreve and the leading men of letters in London , and through them he was presented to Somers and Montague . Those ministers perhaps persuaded him ...
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
A. C. BENSON acquaintance Addison admirable Æneid afterwards Ambrose Philips appears audience Cato character Charles II Club Coffee-House Court criticism Dennis doubt drama Dryden Dunciad eighteenth century endeavour England English essays fashion favour feeling fortunes French genius gentleman Halifax honour humour Ibid Iliad imagination Italian Italy Jacob Tonson Jeremy Collier Johnson King Kit-Kat Club letter lion literary literature live look Lord Lord Halifax manners Marlborough ment Milston mind moral nature never Ovid Oxford paper party period play pleasure poem poet poetry political Pope Pope's praise principles published Puritan Queen reader reason Restoration ridiculous Roger de Coverley satire says scarcely scenes seems sense sentiment Shakespeare Sir Roger society Spectator Spence spirit stage Steele Steele's style Swift taste Tatler Tatler and Spectator thought Tickell Tickell's tion Tory tragedy translation verses virtue Whig words writes written wrote