| JAMES RUSSELL LOWELL. A.M. - 1870 - 604 páginas
...spend in England : here it remains, and here it circulates ; for if the coin be good, it will pass from one hand to another. I trade both with the living...our native language. We have enough in England to supply our necessity ; but if we will have things of magnificence and splendour, we must get them by... | |
| Richard Chenevix Trench - 1870 - 352 páginas
...I spend in England. Here it remains and here it circulates, for, if the coin be good, it will pass from one hand to/ another. I trade both with the living...dead,.. for the enrichment of our native language. We hav enough in England to supply our necessity, but if w will have things of magnificence and splendour,... | |
| 1874 - 488 páginas
...misplaced is both. The following examples will suffice to illustrate the nature of this misplacement : " I trade both with the living and the dead, for the enrichment of our native language." — Trench. "The poems both of Homer and Virgil." — Addison. In neither of these cases are the two... | |
| Adams Sherman Hill - 1878 - 314 páginas
...comes, as it will come, increasingly to interest us — an English form." 2 "I trade," says Dryden,3 " both with the living and the dead, for the enrichment...our native language. We have enough in England to supply our necessity ; but, if we will have things of magnificence and splendor, we must get them by... | |
| Adams Sherman Hill - 1878 - 336 páginas
...comes, as it will come, increasingly to interest us — an English form." 2 "I trade," says Dryden, 3 "both with the living and the dead, for the enrichment...our native language. We have enough in England to supply our necessity, but, if we will have things of magnificence and splendor, we must get them by... | |
| Albert Newton Raub - 1880 - 280 páginas
...distinguish between pedantry and poetry; every man, therefore, is not fit to innovate. — Dryden. 25. I trade both with the living and the dead for the enrichment of our native language. — Dryden. 26. He's not the man to tamely acquiesce. — Bolingbroke. 27. We could see the lake over... | |
| Richard Chenevix Trench - 1881 - 408 páginas
...I spend in England. Here it remains and here it circulates, for, if the coin be good, it will pass from one hand to another. I trade both with the living...our native language. We have enough in England to supply our necessity, but if we will have things of magnificence and splendour, we must get them by... | |
| James Russell Lowell - 1887 - 408 páginas
...spend in England : here it remains, and here it circulates ; for if the coin be good, it will pass from one hand to another. I trade both with the living...our native language. We have enough in England to supply our necessity ; but if we will have things of magnificence and splendour, we must get them by... | |
| James Russell Lowell - 1890 - 386 páginas
...spend in England : here it remains, and here it circulates ; for if the coin be good, it will pass from one hand to another. I trade both with the living...our native language. We have enough in England to supply our necessity ; but if we will have things of magnificence and splendor, we must get them by... | |
| James Russell Lowell - 1890 - 410 páginas
...I spend in England: here it remains, and here it circulates; for if the coin be good, it will pass from one hand to another. I trade both with the living...our native language. We have enough in England to supply our necessity; but if we will have things of magnificence and splendor, we must get them by... | |
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