Writings, Volumen11Ticknor, 1864 |
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Página 48
... common to the two cases -that the change sought by the revolutionary party was not an arbitrary change , but in the way of a natu- ral nisus , working secretly throughout two or three generations . It was a tendency that would be denied ...
... common to the two cases -that the change sought by the revolutionary party was not an arbitrary change , but in the way of a natu- ral nisus , working secretly throughout two or three generations . It was a tendency that would be denied ...
Página 51
... common prudence , that he should embark upon any political career . Merely the costs of an ædileship , to which he would have arrived in early life , would have swallowed up the entire hundred thousand pounds of his mature good luck ...
... common prudence , that he should embark upon any political career . Merely the costs of an ædileship , to which he would have arrived in early life , would have swallowed up the entire hundred thousand pounds of his mature good luck ...
Página 57
... common with all his professional brethren , Cicero never scruples to ascribe the foulest lust and abominable propensities to any public antagonist ; never asking himself any question but this Will it look probable ? He personally ...
... common with all his professional brethren , Cicero never scruples to ascribe the foulest lust and abominable propensities to any public antagonist ; never asking himself any question but this Will it look probable ? He personally ...
Página 61
... common reading was · auream coronam ' until Lipsius suggested lauream ; which correction has since been generally adopted into the text . This distinction is remarkable when contrasted with the same trophy as after- wards conceded to ...
... common reading was · auream coronam ' until Lipsius suggested lauream ; which correction has since been generally adopted into the text . This distinction is remarkable when contrasted with the same trophy as after- wards conceded to ...
Página 80
... common and excessive hatred of obscurity ; from which quality , indeed , the very intellectual defects of both , equally with their good taste , alienated them to intensity . The pure racy idiom of colloquial or household English , we ...
... common and excessive hatred of obscurity ; from which quality , indeed , the very intellectual defects of both , equally with their good taste , alienated them to intensity . The pure racy idiom of colloquial or household English , we ...
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Alexander amongst ancient applied argument Aristophanes Aristotle Athenian Athens Burke Cæsar called Catiline cause century character Christian church Cicero circumstances civil composition connected Demosthenes doctrine effect Eleusis eloquence enemy English enthymeme Essenes Euripides evil expression fact false falsehood fancy feeling Freemasonry French German Grecian Greece Greek literature Herodotus hoax honor human idea impossible instance intellect interest Isocrates Jeremy Taylor Josephus language Lord means merit metre Milton mind mode modern moral mystery nature necessity never notice object orators Pagan Paterculus peculiar Pericles Persia Pharsalia philosophic Pisistratus Plato poetry poets political Pompey Pompey's popular possible principle prose purpose question reader reason regard religion remarkable rhetoric rhetorician Roman Rome secret sense sentence separate society Socrates speaking style sublime suppose syllogism thing thought thousand tion true truth vast Whately whilst whole word writers Xenophon
Pasajes populares
Página 35 - Great princes' favourites their fair leaves spread But as the marigold at the sun's eye, And in themselves their pride lies buried, For at a frown they in their glory die. The painful warrior famoused for fight, After a thousand victories once foil'd, Is from the book of honour razed quite, And all the rest forgot for which he toil'd : Then happy I, that love and am beloved Where I may not remove nor be removed.
Página 95 - ... it. In fact, under the rude yet also artificial character of newspaper style, each separate monster period is a vast arch, which, not receiving its keystone, not being locked into self-supporting cohesion, until you nearly reach its close, imposes of necessity upon the unhappy reader all the onus of its ponderous weight through the main process of its construction.
Página 160 - ... through four-and-twenty Olympiads, each containing four solar years. He narrowly escaped being a hundred years old ; and though that did not carry him from centre to centre, yet, as each system might be supposed to protend a radius each way of twenty years, he had, in fact, a full personal cognisance (and pretty equally) of the two systems, remote as they were, which composed the total world of Grecian genius. Two circumstances have made this man interesting to all posterity ; so that people,...
Página 190 - For what reason have we insisted on this unpleasant view of a phenomenon incident to the limitation of our faculties, and apparently without remedy ? Upon another occasion it might have been useful to do so, were it only to impress upon every writer the vast importance of compression. Simply to retrench one word from each sentence, one superfluous epithet, for example, would probably increase the disposable time of the public by one twelfth part; in other words, would add another month to the year,...
Página 112 - And after it has ceased to be a badge of inspiration, metre will be retained as a badge of professional distinction ; — Pythagoras, for instance, within five centuries of Christ, Thales or Theognis, will adopt metre out of a secondary prudence ; Orpheus and the elder Sibyl, out of an original necessity. Those people are, therefore, mistaken who imagine that prose is either a natural or a possible form of composition in early states of society. It is such truth only as ascends from the earth, not...
Página 158 - Now, let us step on a hundred years forward. We are now within hail of Alexander ; and a brilliant consistory of Grecian men that is by which he is surrounded. There are now exquisite, masters of the more refined comedy ; there are, again, great philosophers, for all the great schools are represented by able successors ; and, above all others, there is the one philosopher who played with men's minds...
Página 274 - ... in vain ? He had infused into it much knowledge and much thought ; had often polished it to elegance, often dignified it with splendour, and sometimes heightened it to sublimity : he perceived in it many excellences, and did not discover that it wanted that without which all others are of small avail, the power of engaging attention and alluring curiosity.
Página 184 - Never in one word was so profound a truth conveyed. Mr. Wordsworth was thinking, doubtless, of poetry like his own : viz. that which is eminently meditative. And the truth is apparent on consideration : for, if language were merely a dress, then you could separate the two ; you could lay the thoughts on the left hand, the language on the right. But, generally speaking, you can no more deal thus with poetic thoughts than you can with soul and body. The union is too subtle, the intertexture too ineffable,...
Página 229 - Few writers have shown a more extraordinary compass of powers than Donne; for he combined - what no other man has ever done - the last sublimation of dialectical subtlety and address with the most impassioned majesty. Massy diamonds compose the very substance of his poem on the Metempsychosis, thoughts and descriptions which have the fervent and gloomy sublimity of Ezekiel or ./Eschylus, whilst a diamond dust of rhetorical brilliancies is strewed over the whole of his occasional verses and his prose.
Página 76 - It is in counterfeit passion, in the mimical situations of novels, or in poems that are efforts of ingenuity and no ebullitions of absolute unsimulated feeling, that female writers endeavour to sustain their own jaded sensibility, or to reinforce the languishing interest of their readers by extravagances of language. No woman in this world, under a movement of resentment from a false accusation, or from jealousy, or from confidence betrayed, ever was at leisure to practise vagaries of caprice in...