A Catalogue of the Royal and Noble Authors of England: With Lists of Their WorksW. H. Lunn, Cambridge; J. Mundell & Company Edinburgh; and for J. Mundell, Glasgow, 1796 - 339 páginas |
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Página 2
... paffion for fame let him , in a reign of ten years , refide but eight months in his own kingdom , than Mr. Rymer's , who would metamorphofe him into the foft lute- loving Hero of poefy , and at the fame time a- fcribes to him ...
... paffion for fame let him , in a reign of ten years , refide but eight months in his own kingdom , than Mr. Rymer's , who would metamorphofe him into the foft lute- loving Hero of poefy , and at the fame time a- fcribes to him ...
Página 12
... paffions made him overturn a church , was likely to have carried its interefts high , if his own had coincid- ed with them . If the pieces above mentioned ever existed , it would be curious to fee what rules for the educa- tion of youth ...
... paffions made him overturn a church , was likely to have carried its interefts high , if his own had coincid- ed with them . If the pieces above mentioned ever existed , it would be curious to fee what rules for the educa- tion of youth ...
Página 90
... paffions : He trusted to being always able to mafter her by absenting himself : His enemies embraced those moments to ruin him . I am aware that it is become a mode to treat the Queen's paffion for him as a romance . Voltaire laughs at ...
... paffions : He trusted to being always able to mafter her by absenting himself : His enemies embraced those moments to ruin him . I am aware that it is become a mode to treat the Queen's paffion for him as a romance . Voltaire laughs at ...
Página 91
With Lists of Their Works Horace Walpole. I do not date this paffion from her first fight of him , nor impute his immediate rife to it , as fome have done , who did not obferve how nearly he was related to the Queen , as appears by the ...
With Lists of Their Works Horace Walpole. I do not date this paffion from her first fight of him , nor impute his immediate rife to it , as fome have done , who did not obferve how nearly he was related to the Queen , as appears by the ...
Página 92
... paffions never extend- ed to matrimony . Yet before this he had infult- ed Sir Charles Blount , on a t jealoufy of the Queen's partiality . Inftead of fentimental foft- nefs , the spirit of her father broke out on that occafion ; fhe ...
... paffions never extend- ed to matrimony . Yet before this he had infult- ed Sir Charles Blount , on a t jealoufy of the Queen's partiality . Inftead of fentimental foft- nefs , the spirit of her father broke out on that occafion ; fhe ...
Índice
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64 | |
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339 | |
Otras ediciones - Ver todo
Términos y frases comunes
afcribed againſt Anne Boleyn anſwer Antony Wood Bacon Papers becauſe Befides Biogr Biſhop Burnet called cauſe character Charles Charles II compofition Cotton library court death difcourfe Duchefs Duke Earl Earl's Edward Effay Effex England Engliſh epiftle faid fame fatire favour fays fecond feems fent feven feveral fhort firft firſt folio fome foon fubject fuch greateſt Henry Henry VIII hiftory himſelf honour Houfe Houſe intituled Ireland King James King's Lady laft laſt letter Lond Lord Clarendon Lord Privy Seal Lord Somers Lordſhip Lordship's Majefty Majefty's manuſcript Marquis Memoirs mentioned minifter moft moſt muſt obfervations occafion paffion Papifts Parliament perfon pieces poems preferved preſent Prince printed profe publiſhed Queen raiſed reaſon reign Reſtoration Roger North ſays ſeems ſeveral ſhe ſhould ſome Somers's Tracts Speech ſpirit ſtate theſe thofe thoſe thouſand tion tranflated treatiſe uſe verfe verſes Vide whofe whoſe writing written wrote
Pasajes populares
Página 242 - ONE of those divine men, who, like a chapel in a palace, remain unprofaned, while all the rest is tyranny, corruption, and folly...
Página 22 - Christ was the word that spake it, He took the bread and brake it, And what that word did make it, That I believe and take it.
Página 235 - William. He had as much wit as his first master, or his contemporaries, Buckingham and Rochester ; without the royal want of feeling, the Duke's want of principles, or the Earl's want of thought. The latter said with astonishment, ' That he did not know how it was, but Lord Dorset might do any thing, and yet was never to blame...
Página 258 - With attachment to no party, though with talents to govern any party, this lively man changed the free air of Westminster for the gloom of the Escurial, the prospect of King George's garter for the Pretender's ; and, with indifference to all religion, the frolic lord, who had writ the ballad on the Archbishop of Canterbury, died in the habit of a capuchin.
Página 254 - Nottingham for his most noble defence of the catholic faith.. contained in his answer to Mr. Whiston's letter concerning the eternity of the Son of GOD and of the Holy Ghost.
Página 129 - When we, at this distance of time, inquire what prodigious merits excited such admiration, what do we find? Great valour. — But it was an age of heroes. — In full of all other talents, we have a tedious, lamentable, pedantic, pastoral romance, which the patience of a young virgin in love cannot now wade through; and some absurd attempts to fetter English verse in Roman chains; a proof that this applauded author understood little of the genius of his own language.
Página 302 - Duchess, who, like the proud Duke of Espernon, lived to brave the successors in a court where she had domineered, wound up her capricious life, where it seems she had begun it, with an apology for her conduct. The piece, though weakened by the prudence of those who were to correct it, though maimed by her Grace's own corrections, and though great part of it is rather the annals of a wardrobe than of a reign, yet has still curious anecdotes, and a few of those sallies of wit which fourscore years...
Página 30 - Quotations, puns, witticisms, superstition, oaths, vanity, prerogative, and pedantry, the ingredients of all his sacred majesty's performances, were the pure produce of his own capacity, and deserving all the incense offered to such immense erudition by the divines of his age, and the flatterers of his court.
Página 303 - ... places in her imagination and in her narrative. The Revolution left no impression on her mind, but of Queen Mary turning up bed-clothes ; and the Protestant Hero, but of a selfish glutton who devoured a dish of peas from his sister-in-law. Little circumstances indeed convey the most...
Página 323 - An Account of the Affairs of Scotland, RELATING TO THE REVOLUTION IN 1688. As sent to the late King James II., when in France.