The Monthly Review, Or, Literary Journal, Том 77R. Griffiths, 1787 |
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Страница xvii
... objects for reprehenfion : and the context proves , that Ariftotle meant to reprehend a needlefs introduction of improbability , or of improbity for no purpofe ; for he condemns Euripides , because he admitted the To axoyo in bis geus ...
... objects for reprehenfion : and the context proves , that Ariftotle meant to reprehend a needlefs introduction of improbability , or of improbity for no purpofe ; for he condemns Euripides , because he admitted the To axoyo in bis geus ...
Страница 12
... object of defire , and a ground of contention . The daughters of Jethro , fen- fible of their inferiority in point of ftrength , endeavour to fupply it by diligence and addrefs . They arrive at the well before their rival thepherds ...
... object of defire , and a ground of contention . The daughters of Jethro , fen- fible of their inferiority in point of ftrength , endeavour to fupply it by diligence and addrefs . They arrive at the well before their rival thepherds ...
Страница 20
... object is in a manner perfonified in the application of thefe pro- nouns . Diftin & tly varied founds having been once employed by primitive Man to denote the genders of living objects , he naturally applies them to inanimate things ...
... object is in a manner perfonified in the application of thefe pro- nouns . Diftin & tly varied founds having been once employed by primitive Man to denote the genders of living objects , he naturally applies them to inanimate things ...
Страница 22
... object to another which is in any manner nearly related to it , Mr. Grant fupports by examples from the Galic language . BE , in the Galic language , fignifies life : but it is used to de- note the means of fubfiftence ; which bearing ...
... object to another which is in any manner nearly related to it , Mr. Grant fupports by examples from the Galic language . BE , in the Galic language , fignifies life : but it is used to de- note the means of fubfiftence ; which bearing ...
Страница 24
... objects of greatest value confifted of the means of fubfiftence , an article of fresh or new food must have been in a high degree accept- able . When marriage came to be introduced , the prefents made by a new married man to his bride ...
... objects of greatest value confifted of the means of fubfiftence , an article of fresh or new food must have been in a high degree accept- able . When marriage came to be introduced , the prefents made by a new married man to his bride ...
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Страница 177 - Speak not of fate: ah! change the theme, And talk of odours, talk of wine, Talk of the flowers that round us bloom: Tis all a cloud, 'tis all a dream; To love and joy thy thoughts confine, Nor hope to pierce the sacred gloom.
Страница 213 - Ask where's the North? at York, 'tis on the Tweed; In Scotland, at the Orcades ; and there, At Greenland, Zembla, or the Lord knows where.
Страница 399 - Oh ! while along the stream of Time thy name Expanded flies, and gathers all its fame, Say, shall my little bark attendant sail, Pursue the triumph, and partake the gale...
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Страница 298 - High and mighty king, your grace, and these your nobles here present, may be pleased benignly to bow your ears to hear the tragedy of a young man, that by right ought to hold in his hand the ball of a kingdom ; but by fortune is made himself a ball, tossed from misery to misery, and from place to place.
Страница 423 - ... thereunto, borrowed even from the praises which are proper to virtue itself. As of a most notorious thief, and wicked outlaw...
Страница 424 - ... of their houses to lead him in the darkness; that the day was his night, and the night his day; that he loved not to be long wooing of wenches to yield to him; but, where he came, he took by force the spoil of other men's love, and left but...
Страница 152 - I put my hat upon my head And walk'd into the strand ; And there I met another man, Whose hat was in his hand.
Страница 53 - This list is given by Sir John, as it should seem, with no other view than to draw a spiteful and malevolent character of almost every one of them. Mr. Dyer, whom Sir John says he loved with the affection of a brother, meets with the harshest treatment, because it was his maxim, that to live in peace with mankind, and in a temper to do good offices, was the most essential part of our duty.
Страница xiii - The poet's eye, in a fine phrenzy rolling, Doth glance from heaven to earth, from earth to heaven ; And, as imagination bodies forth The forms of things unknown, the poet's pen Turns them to shape, and gives to airy nothing A local habitation, and a name.