Selected Essays of William Hazlitt, 1778-1830 |
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Página 310
But they set no value upon money , and throw it away on any object or in any manner that first presents itself , merely to have it off their hands , so that you wonder what has become of ...
But they set no value upon money , and throw it away on any object or in any manner that first presents itself , merely to have it off their hands , so that you wonder what has become of ...
Página 581
polished manners , and borrowed from the French , came into fashion , and lasted till the Revolution . Some examples of the same thing were given in the time of Charles I by Sir J. Suckling and others , but they were eclipsed and ...
polished manners , and borrowed from the French , came into fashion , and lasted till the Revolution . Some examples of the same thing were given in the time of Charles I by Sir J. Suckling and others , but they were eclipsed and ...
Página 768
... to our admiration and our sympathy by a sort of prescriptive title and traditional privilege . Mr. Lamb , on the contrary , being " native to the manner here , " though he too has borrowed from previous sources , instead of availing ...
... to our admiration and our sympathy by a sort of prescriptive title and traditional privilege . Mr. Lamb , on the contrary , being " native to the manner here , " though he too has borrowed from previous sources , instead of availing ...
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Contenido
On the Love of Life | 8 |
On Living to Onesself | 24 |
On Reading Old Books | 40 |
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Términos y frases comunes
admiration answer appearance asked beauty become better called character circumstances common conversation death delight effect equally existence expect expression face fancy fear feeling follow French friends genius give greater hand head hear heart hope human idea imagination impression instance interest keep knowledge laugh learned least leave less light live look manner matter means mind nature never object observation once opinion original ourselves pain painting pass passion perhaps person picture play pleasure poet poetry present principle question reason respect round seems sense side sometimes sort sound speak spirit stand striking style supposed talk taste things thought tion true truth turn understanding virtue whole wish write