The British Critic: A New Review, Svazek 19F. and C. Rivington, 1812 |
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Strana i
... prove , at the termination of our half - yearly periods , To the Connoiffeurs who fhall infpect our prefent ca- binet , we can promife many pleafing specimens , and fome of much intrinsic value ; and we fhall with great pleasure ...
... prove , at the termination of our half - yearly periods , To the Connoiffeurs who fhall infpect our prefent ca- binet , we can promife many pleafing specimens , and fome of much intrinsic value ; and we fhall with great pleasure ...
Strana xiii
... proved , by a small collection of his Poems , that his criticifms , fo juftly admired , were the refult of a real feeling of the sub- ject ; one of the best fources of found criticism . Bloomfield , the pupil of Nature , has added to ...
... proved , by a small collection of his Poems , that his criticifms , fo juftly admired , were the refult of a real feeling of the sub- ject ; one of the best fources of found criticism . Bloomfield , the pupil of Nature , has added to ...
Strana xiv
... prove , that he had more fkill as a Poet than was known to any but his private friends , while he retained the power of writing . Two poetical tributes to Science have also graced our prefent volume ; the one an in- genious Introduction ...
... prove , that he had more fkill as a Poet than was known to any but his private friends , while he retained the power of writing . Two poetical tributes to Science have also graced our prefent volume ; the one an in- genious Introduction ...
Strana 5
... prove to all the world a fhameful ignorance , which he might have either cured or concealed , it is not easy to say . But fuch is the fact . Dr. G. is a writer alfo of Macaronic verfes . Can it be unreasonable to expect that a man who ...
... prove to all the world a fhameful ignorance , which he might have either cured or concealed , it is not easy to say . But fuch is the fact . Dr. G. is a writer alfo of Macaronic verfes . Can it be unreasonable to expect that a man who ...
Strana 15
... prove , that Mr. Penn is the friend of architecture , as well as of sculpture and poetry . The Poems are feparately claffed . The first volume contains fuch only as are original ; the fecond is filled with imitations and tranflations ...
... prove , that Mr. Penn is the friend of architecture , as well as of sculpture and poetry . The Poems are feparately claffed . The first volume contains fuch only as are original ; the fecond is filled with imitations and tranflations ...
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The British Critic William Beloe,Thomas Fanshaw Middleton,William Rowe Lyall,Robert Nares Úplné zobrazení - 1824 |
The British Critic William Beloe,Thomas Fanshaw Middleton,William Rowe Lyall,Robert Nares Úplné zobrazení - 1826 |
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Strana 110 - ... chicken-pox, the idea of such an occurrence, in deference to authority so truly respectable, has been generally relinquished. This I conceive has been without just reason; for after we have seen, among many others, so strong a case as that recorded by Mr. Edward Withers, Surgeon, of Newbury, Berks, in the fourth volume of the Memoirs of the Medical Society of London (from which I take the following extracts), no one, I think, will again doubt the fact. "Mr. Richard Langford, a farmer of West...
Strana 349 - And God spake unto Moses, and said unto him, I am the Lord: and I appeared unto Abraham, unto Isaac, and unto Jacob, by the name of God Almighty ; but by my name JEHOVAH was I not known to them.
Strana 17 - Smooth to the shelving brink a copious flood Rolls fair and placid; where collected all, In one impetuous torrent, down the steep It thundering shoots, and shakes the country round.
Strana 568 - ... thereunto, borrowed even from the praises which are proper to virtue itself. As of a most notorious thief, and wicked outlaw...
Strana 618 - Prison WHEN Love with unconfined wings Hovers within my gates, And my divine Althea brings To whisper at the grates — When I lie tangled in her hair And fettered to her eye, The birds that wanton in the air Know no such liberty.
Strana 569 - They eat sae much o' the venison, And drank sae much o' the blude, That Johnie and a' his bluidy hounds, Fell asleep as they had been dead. And by there came a silly auld carle, An ill death mote he die ! For he's awa' to Hislinton, Where the Seven Foresters did lie. " What news, what news, ye gray-headed carle, What news bring ye to me ?" " I bring nae news," said the gray-headed carle, " Save what these eyes did see.
Strana 616 - Because they practise and maintain The language of the beast : We'll drive the doctors out of doors, And arts, whate'er thpy be ; We'll cry both arts and learning down, And hey ! then up go we...
Strana xvi - ; and at the close of the volume he protests that " the God of Moses, Jehovah, if he really be such as he is described in the Pentateuch, is not the God whom I adore ; nor the God whom I could love.
Strana 441 - Testaments into chapters, being the same that we now have. These chapters he subdivided into smaller portions, distinguishing them by the letters of the alphabet; and, by those means...
Strana 615 - Yok'd with a slow-foot ox on fallow field, Can right areed how handsomely besets Dull spondees with the English dactylets. If Jove speak English in a thundring cloud, " Thwick thwack," and " riff raff," roars he out aloud. Fie on the forged mint that did create New coin of words never articulate.