Critical and Historical Essays: Contributed to the Edinburgh Review, 2. kötetB. Tauchnitz, 1850 - 1742 oldal |
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1 - 5 találat összesen 53 találatból.
2. oldal
... subjects . He should never have attempted to illustrate the Paradise Lost . There can be no two manners more directly opposed to each other than the manner of his painting and the manner of Milton's poetry . Those things which are mere ...
... subjects . He should never have attempted to illustrate the Paradise Lost . There can be no two manners more directly opposed to each other than the manner of his painting and the manner of Milton's poetry . Those things which are mere ...
9. oldal
... subjects , which will not be hidden , which force themselves through the veil , and appear before us in their native aspect . The effect is not unlike that which is said to have been produced on the ancient stage , when the eyes of the ...
... subjects , which will not be hidden , which force themselves through the veil , and appear before us in their native aspect . The effect is not unlike that which is said to have been produced on the ancient stage , when the eyes of the ...
13. oldal
... subject of predestination gave offence to some zealous persons . We have seen an absurd allegory , the heroine of which is named Hephzibah , written by some raving supralapsarian preacher who was dissatisfied with the mild theology of ...
... subject of predestination gave offence to some zealous persons . We have seen an absurd allegory , the heroine of which is named Hephzibah , written by some raving supralapsarian preacher who was dissatisfied with the mild theology of ...
27. oldal
... subjects without the slightest necessity . His foolish talk exasperated them infinitely more than forced loans or benevolences would have done . Yet , in practice , no king ever held his prerogatives less tenaciously . He neither gave ...
... subjects without the slightest necessity . His foolish talk exasperated them infinitely more than forced loans or benevolences would have done . Yet , in practice , no king ever held his prerogatives less tenaciously . He neither gave ...
28. oldal
... subjects . What opinion grave and moral persons residing at a distance from the Court entertained respecting him , we learn from Mrs. Hutchinson's Memoirs . England was no place , the seventeenth century no time , for Sporus and Locusta ...
... subjects . What opinion grave and moral persons residing at a distance from the Court entertained respecting him , we learn from Mrs. Hutchinson's Memoirs . England was no place , the seventeenth century no time , for Sporus and Locusta ...
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absurd admiration army authority Buckinghamshire Bunyan Carteret Catalonia Catholic century character Charles Church Clarendon command conduct Court crown danger death debate disposed doctrines Duke Elizabeth enemies England English Europe excitement favour favourite feelings France French Hampden honour Horace Walpole House of Bourbon House of Commons King liberty lived London Long Parliament Lord Mahon Louis Louis the Fourteenth Macaulay Madrid manner ment mind minister nation never Newcastle noble opinion Opposition orator Parliament parliamentary party peace Pelham persecuted person Peterborough Petition of Right Philip Pilgrim's Progress Pitt political prerogative Prince Prince of Wales produced Protestant Queen reform reign Revolution Rome royal says scarcely seems Sir James Mackintosh soldiers sovereign Spain Spanish spirit statesman strong talents temper thing throne tion took Tories treaty truth tyranny violent voted Walpole Walpole's Whigs whole writer