THE OBSERVER, 4. kötetBachariah Jackson, 1791 |
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1 - 5 találat összesen 10 találatból.
12. oldal
... wretch , cried he , as he feized hold of my father's body , unholy villain , circumcifed infidel ! I thank my God for having fmote thee with a fud- den den judgment : Lie there like a dog as thou 12 No 122 . THE OBSERVER .
... wretch , cried he , as he feized hold of my father's body , unholy villain , circumcifed infidel ! I thank my God for having fmote thee with a fud- den den judgment : Lie there like a dog as thou 12 No 122 . THE OBSERVER .
39. oldal
... wretch who hoards to the madman who fquanders , I fee no one to merit other praife than of a preference upon comparison ; as for the domeftic bully , who is a brute within his own doors and a fycophant without , the malevo- lent defamer ...
... wretch who hoards to the madman who fquanders , I fee no one to merit other praife than of a preference upon comparison ; as for the domeftic bully , who is a brute within his own doors and a fycophant without , the malevo- lent defamer ...
96. oldal
... wretch , I funk myfelf in my own eftem " first , then loft all fhadow of refpect with him , " and was finally ... wretch , " wretch , not to affert a freedom of will 96 N ° 132 . THE OBSERVER .
... wretch , I funk myfelf in my own eftem " first , then loft all fhadow of refpect with him , " and was finally ... wretch , " wretch , not to affert a freedom of will 96 N ° 132 . THE OBSERVER .
97. oldal
Richard Cumberland. " wretch , not to affert a freedom of will , which " is the natural right of every man , and which 66 even fervants and hirelings exercise with a spi- " rit I envy , but have not the heart to imitate : " I am afhamed ...
Richard Cumberland. " wretch , not to affert a freedom of will , which " is the natural right of every man , and which 66 even fervants and hirelings exercise with a spi- " rit I envy , but have not the heart to imitate : " I am afhamed ...
139. oldal
... wretch : " Woe to his lot ! Infatiable defires , " His nuptial bed defil'd , poifonings and plots " And maladies untold - thefe are the fruits " Of marriage , these the bleflings of a wife . " The poet , who can thus lend his wit to ...
... wretch : " Woe to his lot ! Infatiable defires , " His nuptial bed defil'd , poifonings and plots " And maladies untold - thefe are the fruits " Of marriage , these the bleflings of a wife . " The poet , who can thus lend his wit to ...
Más kiadások - Összes megtekintése
The Observer: Being a Collection of Moral, Literary and Familiar Essays. the ... Richard Cumberland Nincs elérhető előnézet - 2018 |
Gyakori szavak és kifejezések
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Népszerű szakaszok
183. oldal - ... twas suffocating silent woe. Let us drop the curtain over this melancholy pause in our narration, and attend upon the mournful widower now landing upon English ground, and conveyed by his humane and generous preserver to the house of a noble earl, the father of our amiable captain, and a man by his virtues still more conspicuous than by his rank. Here amidst the gentle solicitudes of a benevolent family, in one of the most enchanting spots on earth, in a climate...
91. oldal - His scenes exhibit not much of humour, imagery, or passion : his personages are a kind of intellectual gladiators ; every sentence is to ward or strike ; the contest of smartness is never intermitted ; his wit is a meteor playing to and fro with alternate coruscations.
136. oldal - As he lived in constant serenity of mind, so he died without pain of body ; for having called together a number of his friends to the reading of a play, which he had newly finished, and sitting, as was the custom in that serene climate, under the open canopy of Heaven, an unforeseen fall of rain broke up the company...
26. oldal - ... every body to be warmed by the contemplation of her figure or the reflection of her countenance ; at the...
174. oldal - He found every thing in confusion, a deck covered with the slain, and the whole crew in consternation at an event they were in no degree prepared for, not having received any intimation of a war. He found the officers in general, and the passengers without exception, under the most horrid impressions of the English, and expecting to be plundered, and perhaps butchered without mercy.
180. oldal - Spaniard's hand in his, and seating him on a couch beside him, ordered the centinel to keep the cabin private, and delivered himself as follows : ' Senor Don Manuel, I must now impart to you an anxiety which I labour under on your account ; I have strong reason to suspect you have enemies in your own country, who are upon the watch to arrest you on your landing: when I have told you this, I expect you will repose such trust in my honour, and the sincerity of my regard for you, as not to demand a...
245. oldal - Every hope being extinguished by the receipt of" this letter, the disconsolate Rachel became henceforth one of the most miserable of human beings : after venting a torrent of rage against her brother...
141. oldal - ... abovementioned most eloquently displays in his parallel between Christ and that Impostor ; the Deist will perhaps be much interested to support his favourite philosopher, and will care little for the prophet : the .modern Platonist, who is ingenious to erect a new system of natural religion out of the ruins of heathen idolatry, may be zealous to defend the founder of his faith, and his anger I must submit to incur ; but it is not quite so easy to bear the reproof of friends, from whom I have...
21. oldal - ... are a kind of balancing powers, which feem indeed to hold a neutrality in moral affairs, but, holding it with arms in their hands, cannot be fuppofed to remain impartial fpectators of the fray, and therefore muft be either with us, or againft us.
90. oldal - As for that diftinguifhing chara&eriftic, which the ingenious efTayift terms very properly the harmony of its cadence ; that I take to be incommunicable and immediately dependant upon the ear of him who. models it. This harmony of cadence is fo...