Selected Essays of William Hazlitt1930 |
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Pagina 293
... better , and laugh in their sleeves at so improbable a suggestion . Not a corner , not a cranny , not a pocket , not a drawer has been left unrummaged , or has not been subjected over and over again to more than the strictness of a ...
... better , and laugh in their sleeves at so improbable a suggestion . Not a corner , not a cranny , not a pocket , not a drawer has been left unrummaged , or has not been subjected over and over again to more than the strictness of a ...
Pagina 363
... better than a daub : but if the expression in one of Raphael's faces is better than the most mean and vulgar , how resist the consequence that the feeling so expressed is better also ? It does not appear to me that all faces or all ...
... better than a daub : but if the expression in one of Raphael's faces is better than the most mean and vulgar , how resist the consequence that the feeling so expressed is better also ? It does not appear to me that all faces or all ...
Pagina 456
... better than that of most professions . It is better than that of lawyers , who talk nothing but double entendre - than that of physicians , who talk of the approaching deaths of the College , or the marriage of some new practitioner ...
... better than that of most professions . It is better than that of lawyers , who talk nothing but double entendre - than that of physicians , who talk of the approaching deaths of the College , or the marriage of some new practitioner ...
Inhoudsopgave
On the Love of Life | 8 |
On Living to Onesself | 24 |
On Reading Old Books | 40 |
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Selected Essays of William Hazlitt, 1778-1830 William Hazlitt,Geoffrey Keynes Geen voorbeeld beschikbaar - 2013 |
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
abstract absurdity admiration appearance battle of Marengo beauty better character circumstances Coleridge common contempt conversation Correggio death delight effect equally expression face fancy favour favourite feeling French French Revolution friends genius Gil Blas give habit hand Hazlitt hear heart House of Commons Hudibras human humour idea imagination impression indifference instance interest Jeremy Taylor laugh learned less live look Lord Lord Byron manner means mind Molière nature never object observation once opinion ourselves pain painting Paradise Lost pass passion perhaps person play pleasure poet poetry prejudice pretensions pride principle prose reason Rembrandt seems sense sentiment Shakespear shew sort sound speak spirit spleen style supposed talk taste things thought tion Titian Tom Jones true truth turn understanding vanity virtue vulgar William Hazlitt Winterslow wish words write