Lord Byron and Some of His Contemporaries: With Recollections of the Author's Life, and of His Visit to Italy, Том 2H. Colburn, 1828 - 450 страници |
Между кориците на книгата
Резултати 1 - 5 от 53.
Страница 5
... less in- teresting for occasionally betraying an intimacy with pain , and for a high and somewhat strain- ed tone of voice , like a man speaking with suspended breath , and in the habit of subduing his feelings . No man , I should guess ...
... less in- teresting for occasionally betraying an intimacy with pain , and for a high and somewhat strain- ed tone of voice , like a man speaking with suspended breath , and in the habit of subduing his feelings . No man , I should guess ...
Страница 6
... less the French translator of Virgil . I found him as handsome , as the Abbé Delille is said to have been ugly . But he seemed to me to embody a Frenchman's ideal notion of the Latin poet ; something a little more cut and dry than I had ...
... less the French translator of Virgil . I found him as handsome , as the Abbé Delille is said to have been ugly . But he seemed to me to embody a Frenchman's ideal notion of the Latin poet ; something a little more cut and dry than I had ...
Страница 9
... less of the subject of conversation when he came in , and he talked his full share till called upon ; yet he ran his jokes and his verses upon us all in the easiest manner , saying something characteristic of every body , or avoiding it ...
... less of the subject of conversation when he came in , and he talked his full share till called upon ; yet he ran his jokes and his verses upon us all in the easiest manner , saying something characteristic of every body , or avoiding it ...
Страница 10
... less careful and fastidious in what he did for the public ; for , after all , an author may reasonably be supposed to do best that which he is most inclined to do . It is our business to be grateful for what a poet sets before us ...
... less careful and fastidious in what he did for the public ; for , after all , an author may reasonably be supposed to do best that which he is most inclined to do . It is our business to be grateful for what a poet sets before us ...
Страница 16
... less expected to find a child in his house . More obvious and obstreperous proofs , how- ever , of the existence of a boy with a dirty face , could not have been met with . You heard the child crying and object- ing ; then the woman ...
... less expected to find a child in his house . More obvious and obstreperous proofs , how- ever , of the existence of a boy with a dirty face , could not have been met with . You heard the child crying and object- ing ; then the woman ...
Други издания - Преглед на всички
Често срещани думи и фрази
acquaintance admired afterwards agreeable appeared Barbadoes beautiful believe better Boccaccio Bonnycastle botargoes boys brother called captain character Charles Lamb Coleridge colour Della Cruscans England English eyes face fancy father feel Fleet Street fond Genoa give good-natured Grice habit hand head heard heart honour Horace Smith imagination Italian Italy jokes knew lady laugh live look Lord Byron manner master melancholy mother nature never night occasion opinion Orlando Innamorato Ovid perhaps person piece play pleasure poet poetry prison Ramsgate reader recollect remember seemed ship side sight sort speak spect spirit streets suppose taste Theodore Hook thing thought tion tipstaves tivating told took trysails turned Tuscany verses vessel Virgil Voltaire weather West wife wind wine wish word write young
Популярни откъси
Страница 337 - I have bedimm'd The noontide sun, call'd forth the mutinous winds, And 'twixt the green sea and the azur'd vault Set roaring war: to the dread rattling thunder Have I given fire, and rifted Jove's stout oak With his own bolt; the strong-bas'd promontory Have I made shake, and by the spurs pluck'd up The pine and cedar; graves at my command Have wak'd their sleepers, op'd, and let them forth By my so potent art.
Страница 257 - ... a grassplot. The earth I filled with flowers and young trees. There was an apple-tree, from which we managed to get a pudding the second year. As to my flowers, they were allowed to be perfect. Thomas Moore, who came to see me with Lord Byron, told me he had seen no such heart's-ease. I bought the Parnaso Italiano...
Страница 147 - ... with an air of ineffable endurance. Often he did not hear at all. It was a joke with us, when any of our friends came to the door, and we asked his permission to go to them, to address him with some preposterous question wide of the mark ; to which he used to assent. We would say, for instance, " Are you not a great fool, sir?" or, " Isn't your daughter a pretty girl?" to which he would reply,
Страница 153 - There was a book used by the learners in reading, called Dialogues between a Missionary and an Indian. It was a poor performance, full of inconclusive arguments and other commonplaces. The boy in question used to appear with this book in his hand in the middle of the school, the master standing behind him. The lesson was to begin. Poor , whose great fault lay in a deep-toned drawl of his syllables and the omission of his stops, stood half-looking at the book, and half-casting his eye towards the...
Страница 16 - I knew, have added the paternity; but I had never heard of it, and still less expected to find a child in his house. More obvious and obstreperous proofs, however, of the existence of a boy with a dirty face, could not have been met with.
Страница 124 - Perhaps there is not a foundation in the country so truly English, taking that word to mean what Englishmen wish it to mean — something solid, unpretending, of good character, and free to all. More boys are to be found in it, who issue from a greater variety of ranks, than in any school in the kingdom; and as it is the most various, so it is the largest, of all the free schools.
Страница 52 - Highgate, repeat one of his melodious lamentations, as he walked up and down, his voice undulating in a stream of music, and his regrets of youth sparkling with visions ever young. At the same time, he did me the honour to show me that he did not think so ill of all modern liberalism as some might suppose, denouncing the pretensions of the money-getting in a style which I should hardly venture upon, and never could equal; and asking with a triumphant eloquence what chastity itself were worth, if...
Страница 339 - The dreadfull fish, that hath deserv'd the name Of Death, and like him lookes in dreadfull hew, The griesly wasserman, that makes his game The flying ships with...
Страница 147 - As in prcesentis with an air of ineffable endurance. Often he did not hear at all. It was a joke with us, when any of our friends came to the door, and we asked his permission to go to them, to address him with some preposterous question wide of the mark ; to which he used to assent. We would say, for instance, "Are you not a great fool, sir? " or "Isn't your daughter a pretty girl? " to which he would reply, "Yes, child".