The Spirit of the Age: Or, Contemporary Portraits. [By W. Hazlitt.], Том 1Colburn, 1825 |
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Сторінка 133
... racter . It was poetry " of no mark or likeli- hood . " It slid out of the mind as soon as read , like a river ; and would have been forgotten , but that the public curiosity was fed with ever- new supplies from the same teeming liquid ...
... racter . It was poetry " of no mark or likeli- hood . " It slid out of the mind as soon as read , like a river ; and would have been forgotten , but that the public curiosity was fed with ever- new supplies from the same teeming liquid ...
Сторінка 338
... racter . All that he pretends to is common sense and common honesty ; and a greater compliment cannot be paid to these than the attention with which he is listened to in the House of Commons . We cannot conceive a higher proof of ...
... racter . All that he pretends to is common sense and common honesty ; and a greater compliment cannot be paid to these than the attention with which he is listened to in the House of Commons . We cannot conceive a higher proof of ...
Сторінка 403
... racter , the spontaneous impulses , do not appear to excuse the author , unless you are acquaint- ed with his situation and habits - like some proud beauty who gives herself what we think strange airs and graces under a mask , but who ...
... racter , the spontaneous impulses , do not appear to excuse the author , unless you are acquaint- ed with his situation and habits - like some proud beauty who gives herself what we think strange airs and graces under a mask , but who ...
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admiration affections argument beauty Ben Jonson Bentham breath Caleb Williams candour character Coleridge common-place critic delight Edinburgh Review eloquence equally fancy feelings flowers friends genius Gifford give Godwin grace ground habit hand heart Heaven honour House human idle imagination Irving JEREMY BENTHAM less light living look Lord Byron LORD ELDON Lyrical Ballads Malthus mankind manner means mind modern moral Muse nature ness never object opinion passion perhaps person philosophical poem poet poetical poetry political popular prejudices pretensions preter pride principle prose quaint question racter reason sense sentiment shew Sir Francis Burdett Sir James Sir James Mackintosh Sir Walter Sir Walter Scott sort Southey speak spirit spleen striking style sweet talent taste thing thought tion tone Tooke truth turn vanity verse vice and misery virtue Whig wild word Wordsworth writer