Historical and Critical Essays, Volumen2Ticknor, Reed and Fields, 1853 |
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Página 6
... things , which made it needless to notice them in reply , has entirely perished . During the transitional period between the old Roman frugality and the luxury succeeding to foreign conquest , a reproach of this nature would have stung ...
... things , which made it needless to notice them in reply , has entirely perished . During the transitional period between the old Roman frugality and the luxury succeeding to foreign conquest , a reproach of this nature would have stung ...
Página 12
... thing , he fancied , to have the credit of infidelity , without paying for a license ; to sport over those manors without a qualification . As a scholar , mean- time , he was trivial and incapable of labor . Even the Roman antiquities ...
... thing , he fancied , to have the credit of infidelity , without paying for a license ; to sport over those manors without a qualification . As a scholar , mean- time , he was trivial and incapable of labor . Even the Roman antiquities ...
Página 14
... the constitutional magistrate , could now move and exercise their public functions only through the dead- liest combinations of violence and fraud . This dread- • ful condition of things , which no longer acted through 14 CICERO .
... the constitutional magistrate , could now move and exercise their public functions only through the dead- liest combinations of violence and fraud . This dread- • ful condition of things , which no longer acted through 14 CICERO .
Página 15
Thomas De Quincey. ful condition of things , which no longer acted through that salutary opposition of parties , essential to the energy of free countries , but involved all Rome in a permanent panic , was acceptable to the senate only ...
Thomas De Quincey. ful condition of things , which no longer acted through that salutary opposition of parties , essential to the energy of free countries , but involved all Rome in a permanent panic , was acceptable to the senate only ...
Página 16
Thomas De Quincey. Names were now to be altered for the sake of things ; forms for the sake of substances : this already gave some verbal power of delusion to the senatorial faction . And a prospect still more startling to them all , was ...
Thomas De Quincey. Names were now to be altered for the sake of things ; forms for the sake of substances : this already gave some verbal power of delusion to the senatorial faction . And a prospect still more startling to them all , was ...
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Términos y frases comunes
Alexander amongst ancient applied argument Aristophanes Aristotle Athenian Athens Burke Cæsar called Catiline cause century character Christian church Cicero civil composition connected 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 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 party Paterculus peculiar perhaps Pericles Persia Pharsalia philosophic Pisistratus Plato poetry poets political Pompey Pompey's popular possible principle prose purpose question reader reason regard relation religion remarkable revolution rhetoric rhetorician Roman Rome schoolmen secret sense sentence separate Socrates speaking style sublime suppose syllogism thing thought thousand tion true truth vast whilst whole word writers Xenophon
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Página 232 - So am I as the rich, whose blessed key Can bring him to his sweet up-locked treasure, The which he will not every hour survey, For blunting the fine point of seldom pleasure. Therefore are feasts so solemn and so rare, Since, seldom coming, in the long year set, Like stones of worth they thinly placed are, Or captain jewels in the carcanet.
Página 255 - ... dykes of the low, fat, Bedford level will have nothing to fear from all the pickaxes of all the levellers of France. As long as our Sovereign Lord the King, and his faithful subjects, the Lords and Commons of this realm - the triple cord which no man can break...
Página 34 - 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 162 - Those globes at each end, are the two systems or separate clusters of Greek literature ; and that cylinder which connects them, is the long man that ran into each system, binding the two together. Who was that ? It was Isocrates. Great we cannot call him in conscience; and, therefore, by way of compromise, we call him long, which, in one sense, he certainly was; for he lived through four-and-twenty Olympiads, each containing four solar years. He narrowly escaped being a hundred years old; and though...
Página 255 - Such are their ideas ; such their religion, and such their law. But as to our country and our race, as long as the wellcompacted structure of our church and state, the sanctuary, the holy of holies of that ancient law, defended by reverence, defended...
Página 106 - It makes us blush to add, that even grammar .is so little of a perfect attainment amongst us, that with two or three exceptions, (one being Shakspeare, whom some affect to consider as belonging to a semi-barbarous age,) we have never seen the writer, through a circuit of prodigious reading, who has not sometimes violated the accidence or the syntax of English grammar.
Página 242 - ... for dispensations, and love God and religion less and less, till their old age, instead of a crown of their virtue and perseverance, ends in levity and unprofitable courses; light and useless as the tufted feathers upon the cane, every wind can play with it and abuse it, but no man can make it useful.
Página 328 - Wicked Joseph, listen to me: you've been telling us a fairy tale; and for my part, I've no objection to a fairy tale in any situation, because if one can make no use of it oneself, always one knows that a child will be thankful for it. But this tale, Mr. Joseph, happens also to be a lie; secondly, a fraudulent lie; thirdly, a malicious lie.
Página 160 - Phidias ; 8 and behind this immortal man walk Herodotus and Thucydides. What a procession to Eleusis would these men have formed ; what a frieze, if some great artist could arrange it as dramatically as Chaucer has arranged the Pilgrimage to Canterbury.
Página 82 - I will avail myself of your kindness," forthwith you would have shied like a skittish horse ; you would have run away in as much terror as any old Roman upon those occasions when bos loquebatur. At present you swallow such marvels as matters of course. The whole artificial dialect of books has come into play as the dialect of ordinary life. This is one form of the evil impressed upon our style by journalism : a dire monotony of bookish idiom has encrusted and stiffened all native freedom of expression,...