The Round Table, 1817Woodstock Books, 1991 - Počet stran: 261 |
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Výsledky 1-3 z 43
Strana
... truth and sense of justice are not confined to seeking out things to praise ; they contribute too to a magnificent anger . Burke who was a half poet and a half philosopher , has done more mischief than perhaps any other person in the ...
... truth and sense of justice are not confined to seeking out things to praise ; they contribute too to a magnificent anger . Burke who was a half poet and a half philosopher , has done more mischief than perhaps any other person in the ...
Strana 59
... truth and nature itself . There is , there- fore , something disinterested in this passion , inas- much as it is abstracted and ideal , and only ap- peals to opinion as a standard of truth : it is this which " makes ambition virtue ...
... truth and nature itself . There is , there- fore , something disinterested in this passion , inas- much as it is abstracted and ideal , and only ap- peals to opinion as a standard of truth : it is this which " makes ambition virtue ...
Strana 235
... Truth alone does not satisfy their pampered appetites , without the sauce of praise . To prefer truth to all other things , it requires that the mind should have been at some pains in finding it out , and that we should feel a severe ...
... Truth alone does not satisfy their pampered appetites , without the sauce of praise . To prefer truth to all other things , it requires that the mind should have been at some pains in finding it out , and that we should feel a severe ...
Obsah
INTRODUCTION H T | 1 |
On Chaucer L H To the President and Companions of the Round Table | 7 |
The Subject Continued H T | 9 |
Autorská práva | |
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admiration appear artist attachment beauty Beggar's Opera Boccacio character charms Chaucer colour common common-place criticism dæmons delight Dr Johnson effect enjoyment equal excellence excite expression eyes face fame fancy feeling fire fireside flowers genius give good-natured grace gusto habit hand head Hogarth human Iago idea imagination imitation indifference instance interest jects Julius Cæsar kind knowledge lady living look Lycidas manner Marriage a-la-Mode ment Milton mind mistress modern moral nature neral never night objects opinion ourselves pain painted painter Paradise Lost passion perfect perhaps persons philosopher pleasure poem poet poetry prejudices pretend principle racter Raphael reader reason refined Rembrandt Round Table seems sense sentiment Shakspeare shew sophism sort spirit St Peter Martyr Stadtholder style sympathy taste Tatler thing thought tion Titian truth ture whole Wordsworth writer