The Monthly Review, Or, Literary Journal, Том 27R. Griffiths, 1763 |
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Страница 5
... heads over many countries . His feed is to increafe ; his people to exceed the drops of the dew of the morning : yet it ... head . That we may obtain the full meaning of the expreffions ufed in this Pfalm . our Author thinks it neceflary ...
... heads over many countries . His feed is to increafe ; his people to exceed the drops of the dew of the morning : yet it ... head . That we may obtain the full meaning of the expreffions ufed in this Pfalm . our Author thinks it neceflary ...
Страница 9
... head shall be lifted up . Compare Ifaiah liii . with Philip . ii . 8 , 9. If thefe critical and conjectural obfervations are right , the entire pfalm will appear as follows : PSALM CX . A Pfalm of DAVID . The tranflation of the English ...
... head shall be lifted up . Compare Ifaiah liii . with Philip . ii . 8 , 9. If thefe critical and conjectural obfervations are right , the entire pfalm will appear as follows : PSALM CX . A Pfalm of DAVID . The tranflation of the English ...
Страница 10
... heads over many countries . 7. He fhall drink of the brook in the way : therefore fhall he lift up the head . He ( the Lord ) shall exe- cute judgment in the nations with a great army : He ( the Lord ) hath fhaken , ( shall fhake fo as ...
... heads over many countries . 7. He fhall drink of the brook in the way : therefore fhall he lift up the head . He ( the Lord ) shall exe- cute judgment in the nations with a great army : He ( the Lord ) hath fhaken , ( shall fhake fo as ...
Страница 13
... heads might have afforded matter for a larger fcope than our Author has thought proper to affign them . A certain fuitableness or correfpondence among things connected by any relation , is what he calls congruity or propriety ; which ...
... heads might have afforded matter for a larger fcope than our Author has thought proper to affign them . A certain fuitableness or correfpondence among things connected by any relation , is what he calls congruity or propriety ; which ...
Страница 14
... head give intire fatisfaction , and speak the genuine principles of unaffected virtue and manly devotion . Dignity ... heads ; on which his reflections are too copious for abridg- ment . The next chapter treats of Ridicule , a fubject ...
... head give intire fatisfaction , and speak the genuine principles of unaffected virtue and manly devotion . Dignity ... heads ; on which his reflections are too copious for abridg- ment . The next chapter treats of Ridicule , a fubject ...
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Страница 17 - Of every hearer; for it so falls out That what we have we prize not to the worth Whiles we enjoy it, but being lack'd and lost, Why, then we rack the value, then we find The virtue that possession would not show us Whiles it was ours.
Страница 91 - If you ask then, what is this Unity of Spenser's Poem ? I say, It consists in the relation of it's several adventures to one common original, the appointment of the Faery Queen ; and to one common end, the completion of the Faery Queen's injunctions.
Страница 139 - Under an oak whose antique root peeps out Upon the brook that brawls along this wood: To the which place a poor sequester'd stag, That from the hunter's aim had ta'en a hurt, Did come to languish...
Страница 333 - There at the foot of yonder nodding beech That wreathes its old fantastic roots so high, His listless length at noontide would he stretch, And pore upon the brook that babbles by.
Страница 93 - Queen is more apparent. His twelve knights are to exemplify as many virtues, out of which one illustrious character is to be composed.
Страница 98 - ... earth : and as they never did fubfift but once, and are never likely to fubfift again, people would be led of courfe to think and fpeak of them, as romantic, and unnatural.
Страница 174 - ... him? Other animals, indeed, they have provided with feet, by which they may remove from one place to another ; but to man, they have also given hands, with which he can form many things for his use, and make himself happier than creatures of any other kind. A tongue hath been bestowed on every other animal ; but what animal, except man, hath the power of forming words with it, whereby to explain his thoughts, and make them intelligible to others...
Страница 39 - ... reflection; we meet with no rubs or difficulties in our way, or we do not perceive them ; we find ourselves able to go on without rules, and we do not so much as suspect, that we stand in need of them.
Страница 87 - FOR, though much, no doubt, might be owing to the different humour and genius of the eaft and weft, antecedent to any cuftoms and forms of government, and independent of them; yet the confideration had of the females in the feudal conftitution will, of itfelf, account for this difference. It made them capable of fucceeding to fiefs as well as the men. And does not one fee, on the inftant, what...
Страница 82 - Or may there not be something in the Gothic romance peculiarly suited to the views of a genius and to the ends of poetry? And may not the philosophic moderns have gone too far, in their perpetual ridicule and contempt of it?