The Miscellaneous Works of Oliver Goldsmith, M. B.: Including a Variety of Pieces, Volumen 1John Murray, 1837 |
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Página 103
... imagination ; instead of this , they are too frequently obliged to toil through the four empires , as they are called , where their memories are burdened by a number of disgusting names , that destroy all their future relish for our ...
... imagination ; instead of this , they are too frequently obliged to toil through the four empires , as they are called , where their memories are burdened by a number of disgusting names , that destroy all their future relish for our ...
Página 114
... imagination , and gives the orator irresistible force . Thus , a captain of the first caliphs seeing his sol- diers fly , cried out , " Whither do you run ? the enemy are not there ! You have been told that the caliph is dead ; but God ...
... imagination , and gives the orator irresistible force . Thus , a captain of the first caliphs seeing his sol- diers fly , cried out , " Whither do you run ? the enemy are not there ! You have been told that the caliph is dead ; but God ...
Página 134
... imaginations , which are amused and enter- tained with the perpetual novelty and variety that fiction affords , but find no manner of delight in the uniform sim- plicity of homely truth , which still sues them under the same appearance ...
... imaginations , which are amused and enter- tained with the perpetual novelty and variety that fiction affords , but find no manner of delight in the uniform sim- plicity of homely truth , which still sues them under the same appearance ...
Página 136
... imaginations and little understandings , were by positive and repeated charges against them , of com- mitting mischievous and supernatural facts and villainies , deluded to judge of themselves by the judgment of their ene- mies , whose ...
... imaginations and little understandings , were by positive and repeated charges against them , of com- mitting mischievous and supernatural facts and villainies , deluded to judge of themselves by the judgment of their ene- mies , whose ...
Página 149
... imagination without any desires or endeavours to effect ; the public , therefore , with justice discard such empty sound , which has nothing but a jingle , or , what is worse , the unmusical flow of blank verse to recommend it . The ...
... imagination without any desires or endeavours to effect ; the public , therefore , with justice discard such empty sound , which has nothing but a jingle , or , what is worse , the unmusical flow of blank verse to recommend it . The ...
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Términos y frases comunes
absurdity acquainted admiration Æneid amusement ancient appearance applause Asem Austria beauty blank verse character Cicero contempt continued criticism dæmon David Rizzio Demetrius Phalereus eloquence empire endeavour enemies England English entertainment ESSAY Europe excellence expect eyes fame fancy favour folly fortune France French friends friendship genius give happiness honour humour imagination imitation improvement Italy king king of Prussia labours lady language laws liberty lived Lysippus Manetho mankind manner means ment merit Metastasio mind Montesquieu nation nature never obliged observed occasion Olinda once orator passion perceived perhaps philosopher Planxty pleasing pleasure poet poetry possessed praise present prince proper racter reader reason regard reputation ridiculous says scarcely seems seldom sense shew society Spain spondee style taste Thespis thing thought tion truth Virgil virtue vulgar whole word writer