Letters on self-education; with hints on style, and dialogues on political economyJames Hogg and Sons, 1861 - 577 páginas |
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Página 31
... Roman literature and our own . So thoroughly is this sometimes mis- understood , that I have seen it insisted on as a merit in a didactic poem , that the art which it professed to deliver might be learned and prac- tised in all its ...
... Roman literature and our own . So thoroughly is this sometimes mis- understood , that I have seen it insisted on as a merit in a didactic poem , that the art which it professed to deliver might be learned and prac- tised in all its ...
Página 36
... Roman Catholic divines , and too much with a view to an indulgent and dispensing morality ; and partly on the excessive subdivision and hair - splitting of cases ; which tends to the infinite injury of morals , by per- plexing and ...
... Roman Catholic divines , and too much with a view to an indulgent and dispensing morality ; and partly on the excessive subdivision and hair - splitting of cases ; which tends to the infinite injury of morals , by per- plexing and ...
Página 45
... Roman policy , if , during the Second Punic War , the Carthaginian language had been taught as a matter of course to the children of every Roman citizen ? But a third cause , which I believe has more efficacy than either of the former ...
... Roman policy , if , during the Second Punic War , the Carthaginian language had been taught as a matter of course to the children of every Roman citizen ? But a third cause , which I believe has more efficacy than either of the former ...
Página 67
... so say ) in one of its accidents ( namely the application to Greek and Roman writers ) , is one of the commonest and most natural . have often had the question debated , and in our F 2 Whose Education has been neglected . 67.
... so say ) in one of its accidents ( namely the application to Greek and Roman writers ) , is one of the commonest and most natural . have often had the question debated , and in our F 2 Whose Education has been neglected . 67.
Página 74
... Roman literature as inferior to the Greek . common with all the world , I must , of necessity , think it so in the drama , and generally in poetry κατ ' ἐξοχην . Indeed , for some forms of poetry , even of the lower order , it was the ...
... Roman literature as inferior to the Greek . common with all the world , I must , of necessity , think it so in the drama , and generally in poetry κατ ' ἐξοχην . Indeed , for some forms of poetry , even of the lower order , it was the ...
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Letters on Self-Education: With Hints on Style, and Dialogues on Political ... Thomas De Quincey Sin vista previa disponible - 2015 |
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Adam Smith amongst Aristotle Athens character Chimæra cloth Coleridge column composition conversation Dialogues distinction doctrine E.C. NEW POPULAR edition effect Eight Illustrations eloquence English enthymeme expression fact FANNY FERN Fcap feeling Fleet Street French full gilt German Grecian Greece Greek HALWIN HOGG & SONS human instance intellectual interest Isocrates JACOB ABBOTT James Godwin JAMES HOGG Kant knowledge language Latin law of value literature Malthus MARY HOWITT matter means mind mode nature necessity never Nicholas Ridley object orators Pericles Phad Phæd Phædrus Phil Philebus philosophic poets Political Economy POPULAR ILLUSTRATED BOOKS possible principle printed on toned producing labour profits prose purpose quantity of labour question reader relation rhetoric rhetorician Ricardo Roman sense sentence small crown 8vo speaking Story style suppose thing thought tion toned paper true truth value of labour wages whilst whole word writers
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Página 385 - ... shall, like the proud Keep of Windsor, rising in the majesty of proportion, and girt with the double belt of its kindred and coeval towers, as long as this awful structure shall oversee and guard the subjected land - so long the mounds and dykes of the low, fat, Bedford level will have nothing to fear from all the pickaxes of all the levellers of France.
Página 385 - State, shall, like the proud Keep of Windsor, rising in the majesty of proportion, and girt with the double belt of its kindred and coeval towers...
Página 368 - ... and multiply their knots and joints, interrupting the fineness and smoothness of its body. So are the steps and declensions of him that does not grow in grace : at first, when he springs up from his impurity by the waters of baptism and repentance, he grows straight and strong, and suffers but few interruptions of piety, and...
Página 279 - A wounded snake' or an Alexandrine verse would have been as useful. But he, feeling himself wanted, laid his length down like a railroad, exactly where he could be useful — with his positive pole towards Pericles, and his negative pole towards Alexander. Even Gibbon — even the frosty Gibbon — condescends to be pleased with this seasonable application of his two termini: —
Página 368 - ... joints, interrupting the fineness and smoothness of its body; so are the steps and declensions of him that does not grow in grace. At first, when he springs up from his impurity by the waters of baptism and repentance, he grows straight and strong, and suffers but few interruptions of piety ; and his constant courses of religion are but rarely intermitted, till they ascend up to a full age, or towards the ends of their life ; then they are weak, and their devotions often intermitted, and their...
Página 103 - Thus, for instance, long before Mr. Wordsworth had unveiled the great philosophic distinction between the powers of fancy and imagination, the two words had begun to diverge from each other; the first being used to express a faculty somewhat capricious* and exempted from law, the latter to express a faculty more self-determined.
Página 206 - 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 21 - Ipyov (or business), and literature as a irapepyov (an accessary, or mere by-business), how far is literature itself likely to benefit by such an arrangement ? Mr. Coleridge insists upon it that it will ; and at page 225 he alleges seven names, to which at page 233 he adds an eighth, of celebrated men who have " shown the possibility of combining weighty performances in literature with full and independent employment.
Página 276 - Now, reader, it is under this image of the dumb-bell we couch an allegory. 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...
Página 68 - ... and hardly within the dawn of consciousness — as myriads of modes of feeling are at this moment in every human mind for want of a poet to organize them? I say, when these inert and sleeping forms are organized, when these possibilities are actualized, is this conscious and living possession of mine power, or what is it?