The Pelican Book of English Prose: Eighteenth-century prose, 1700-80; edited by D.W. JeffersonMiddlesex] Penguin Books, 1956 |
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Página 102
... Expression which varies from the familiar Use of Language , will seem harsh and ridiculous . But this doth not concern the Truth of the Proposition , which in other Words is no more than to say , we are fed and clothed with those Things ...
... Expression which varies from the familiar Use of Language , will seem harsh and ridiculous . But this doth not concern the Truth of the Proposition , which in other Words is no more than to say , we are fed and clothed with those Things ...
Página 128
... expressing those feelings which are natural to a man , or that indignation which became an historian . Knox , whose mind ... expression of regret , or one symptom of compunction , for a crime no less dishonourable than barbarous . Morton ...
... expressing those feelings which are natural to a man , or that indignation which became an historian . Knox , whose mind ... expression of regret , or one symptom of compunction , for a crime no less dishonourable than barbarous . Morton ...
Página 266
... expression requires a variation , and that so far the melody may justly be sacrificed . Examples accordingly are not un- frequent , in Milton especially , of the capital pause being after the first , the second , or the third syllable ...
... expression requires a variation , and that so far the melody may justly be sacrificed . Examples accordingly are not un- frequent , in Milton especially , of the capital pause being after the first , the second , or the third syllable ...
Índice
SCENE PERSONALITY | 1 |
An Encounter with a Highwayman John Byrom | 22 |
Sir Robert Walpole John Baron Hervey | 29 |
18 outras secções não apresentadas
Palavras e frases frequentes
admirable Alexander Pope appear Barnabas beautiful better body Brother called Carm character Child classic unity cried Daniel Defoe dear Death edition Edward Gibbon effect English eyes Faery Queen father favour feel Fool genius give Gothic hand happy hath heart Heaven Henry Fielding honour Horace Walpole hour human Humour Husband imagine John Vanbrugh Johnson Jonathan Swift Joseph King knew Lady Laurence Sterne living look Lord Ogle Madam Manfred mankind manner mean mind moral nature never occasion Oliver Goldsmith Passion Peach perhaps person philosopher Piece pleasure poet Poetry political Polly poor pray principles prose reason Samuel Johnson sense shew Sister Sophia Soul Spectator Spirit Sterl taste Text from second thee thing Thomas Warton thou thought thro tion Tobias Smollett turn virtue walk whole William Shenstone woman word World wretched writing