The Spectator, Svazek 3George Atherton Aitken G. Routledge, 1898 |
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Strana 179
... proper characters , the other by drawing them quite unlike themselves . Burlesque is therefore of two kinds , the first repre- sents mean persons in the accoutrements of heroes ; the other describes great persons acting and speaking ...
... proper characters , the other by drawing them quite unlike themselves . Burlesque is therefore of two kinds , the first repre- sents mean persons in the accoutrements of heroes ; the other describes great persons acting and speaking ...
Strana 217
... proper to trouble you with particulars of the just complaints we all of us have to make ; but so it is , that without regard to our obliging pains , we are all equally set aside in the present opera . Our application therefore to you is ...
... proper to trouble you with particulars of the just complaints we all of us have to make ; but so it is , that without regard to our obliging pains , we are all equally set aside in the present opera . Our application therefore to you is ...
Strana 350
... proper subject is dull and stupid , but one who shows it in an im- proper place is as impertinent and absurd . Besides , a man who has the gift of ridicule is apt to find fault with anything that gives him an opportunity of exerting his ...
... proper subject is dull and stupid , but one who shows it in an im- proper place is as impertinent and absurd . Besides , a man who has the gift of ridicule is apt to find fault with anything that gives him an opportunity of exerting his ...
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