The miscellaneous works of OLiver Goldsmith [ed. by S. Rose].1812 |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-5 von 24
Seite 23
... original ; but it is extraordinary that it was published as an original and not as a translation . Pope should have acknow- ledged it , as he knew . The Fairy Tale is incontestably one of the finest pieces in any language . The old ...
... original ; but it is extraordinary that it was published as an original and not as a translation . Pope should have acknow- ledged it , as he knew . The Fairy Tale is incontestably one of the finest pieces in any language . The old ...
Seite 24
... original , and which it was impossible to remedy : I mean the names of the combatants , which in the Greek bear a ridiculous allusion to their natures , have no force to the English reader . A bacon - eater was a good name for a mouse ...
... original , and which it was impossible to remedy : I mean the names of the combatants , which in the Greek bear a ridiculous allusion to their natures , have no force to the English reader . A bacon - eater was a good name for a mouse ...
Seite 32
... original as high as Adam de Port , Baron of Basing in Hampshire , be- fore the conquest ; and in a succession of ages to have produced warriors , patriots , and statesmen , some of whom were conspicuous for their loyalty , and others ...
... original as high as Adam de Port , Baron of Basing in Hampshire , be- fore the conquest ; and in a succession of ages to have produced warriors , patriots , and statesmen , some of whom were conspicuous for their loyalty , and others ...
Seite 72
... original of the sacred books , which he supposes to have no such foundation . This new system of thinking , which he had always pro- pagated in conversation , and which he now began to adopt in his more laboured compositions , seemed no ...
... original of the sacred books , which he supposes to have no such foundation . This new system of thinking , which he had always pro- pagated in conversation , and which he now began to adopt in his more laboured compositions , seemed no ...
Seite 123
... original that has appeared in our language , being possessed of all the force and satyrical resent- ment of Juvenal . Imitation gives us a much truer idea of the ancients than even translation could do . THE THE SCHOOL MISTRESS , IN ...
... original that has appeared in our language , being possessed of all the force and satyrical resent- ment of Juvenal . Imitation gives us a much truer idea of the ancients than even translation could do . THE THE SCHOOL MISTRESS , IN ...
Inhalt
5 | |
29 | |
79 | |
89 | |
97 | |
105 | |
109 | |
112 | |
119 | |
133 | |
141 | |
160 | |
180 | |
195 | |
213 | |
236 | |
255 | |
299 | |
311 | |
381 | |
392 | |
415 | |
434 | |
438 | |
443 | |
449 | |
452 | |
457 | |
461 | |
465 | |
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
acquainted admiration Æneid Alcander amusement antient appearance Asem attempts beauty Bolingbroke Broom of Cowdenknows character dæmon David Rizzio distress dress Earl of Mar eloquence endeavour England English entertainment ESSAY eyes fame favour fond fortune friends friendship frugality gave genius gentleman give hand happiness honour humour imagination imitation insect Italy justice king king of Prussia labour lady language laugh learning lived Lord Lord Bolingbroke Lysippus MAC FLECKNOE mankind manner means ment merit mind Nature neral never object obliged observed occasion Olinda once Parnell party passion perceive perhaps philosopher pleased pleasure poem poet poetry polite Pope possessed praise present Pretender Quintilian racter reader reputation ridiculous scarcely Scotland Scribblerus Club seemed seldom serve shew society soon taste thing thought tion tory trifling truth ture virtue vulgar whigs whole writer