No man who knew me will think I conceived any personal resentment at this behaviour; but it was a lively picture of that cruelty and inhumanity, in the nature of men, which I have often contemplated with concern, and which leads the mind into a 7 strain... The Journal of a Voyage to Lisbon - Página 40por Henry Fielding - 1755 - 276 páginasVisualização integral - Acerca deste livro
| 1755 - 716 páginas
...of whom failed of paying their complan -tits to me, by all manner of infulti and jerts on my mifery. No man who , knew me will think I conceived any perfonal...at this behaviour ; but it was a lively picture of tliat cruelty and inhumanity, in the nature of nien, which ' 1 have often contemplated with concern... | |
| William Fordyce Mavor - 1809 - 400 páginas
...of insults and jests on my misery. No man who knew me will think I conceived any personal resentment at this behaviour : but it was a lively picture of...nature of men, which I have often contemplated with co»cern ; and which leads the mind into a train of very uncomfortable and melancholy thoughts. It... | |
| 1846 - 502 páginas
...if insults and jests on my misery. No man who knew me will think I conceived any personal resentment at this behaviour ; but it was a lively picture of that cruelty and inhumanity in the nature of men whieh I have often contemplated with concern, and which leads the mind into a train of very uncomfortable... | |
| Frederick Lawrence - 1855 - 398 páginas
...of insults and jests on my misery. No man who knew me will think I conceived any personal resentment at this behaviour ; but it was a lively picture of...train of very uncomfortable and melancholy thoughts." The sea-captain, into whose custody the novelist was committed, was a curious specimen of that well-known... | |
| Arthur Patchett Martin - 1885 - 262 páginas
...of insults and jests on my misery. No men who knew me will think I conceived any personal resentment at this behaviour ; but it was a lively picture of...train of very uncomfortable and melancholy thoughts." Even in his diseased bodily condition how thoroughly sane and generous are his remarks. He had a long... | |
| Paul-Gabriel Boucé - 1993 - 212 páginas
...when he told in the Voyage to Lisbon of the sailors and watermen who jeered at his crippled state : "it was a lively picture of that cruelty and inhumanity, in the nature of men" which an English mob reveals in its unadulterated form, and which "never shews itself in men who are polish'd... | |
| Philip Edwards - 1994 - 272 páginas
...paying their compliments to me, by all manner of insults and jests on my misery'. This, wrote Fielding, 'was a lively picture of that cruelty and inhumanity,...men, which I have often contemplated with concern'. Such licentiousness 'never shews itself in men who are polished and refined', who have learned to 'purge... | |
| Claude Julien Rawson - 2000 - 332 páginas
...when he told in the Voyage to Lishon of the sailors and watermen who jeered at his crippled state: 'it was a lively picture of that cruelty and inhumanity, in the nature of men' which an English mob reveals in its unadulterated form, and which 'never shews itself in men who are polish'd... | |
| Ronald Paulson - 2007 - 423 páginas
...to Lisbon (1754), in which cruelty (largely to Fielding himself) is a chief subject. The work offers "a lively picture of that cruelty and inhumanity,...train of very uncomfortable and melancholy thoughts" (Journal, ed. Harold Pagliaro [New York, 1963], 45; Paulson, Hogarth: Art and Politics, 26ff.). 6.... | |
| Eneas Sweetland Dallas - 1868 - 676 páginas
...following calm and admirable remarks : " No man who knew me will think I conceived any personal resentment at this behaviour ; but it was a lively picture of...cruelty and inhumanity in the nature of men which I have contemplated with concern, and which leads the mind to a train of very uncomfortable and melancholy... | |
| |