Selected Essays of William Hazlitt, 1778-1830Nonesuch Press, 1948 - 807 páginas |
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Página 317
... favourite object , little thinking that before long we shall find it move too fast . For my part , I started in life with the French Revolu- tion , and I have lived , alas ! to see the end of it . But I did not foresee this result . My ...
... favourite object , little thinking that before long we shall find it move too fast . For my part , I started in life with the French Revolu- tion , and I have lived , alas ! to see the end of it . But I did not foresee this result . My ...
Página 448
... favourite with sportsmen : the alloy of an amiable humanity , and the modest but touching descrip- tions of familiar incidents and rural objects scattered through it , have made it an equal favourite with every reader of taste and ...
... favourite with sportsmen : the alloy of an amiable humanity , and the modest but touching descrip- tions of familiar incidents and rural objects scattered through it , have made it an equal favourite with every reader of taste and ...
Página 773
... favourite , and that his love of the actual does not proceed from a want of taste for the ideal . His worst fault is an over - eagerness of enthusiasm , which occasionally makes him take a surfeit of his highest favourites . Mr. Lamb ...
... favourite , and that his love of the actual does not proceed from a want of taste for the ideal . His worst fault is an over - eagerness of enthusiasm , which occasionally makes him take a surfeit of his highest favourites . Mr. Lamb ...
Contenido
On the Love of Life | 8 |
On Living to Onesself | 24 |
On Reading Old Books | 40 |
Otras 47 secciones no mostradas
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Términos y frases comunes
abstract admiration appearance beauty better Burke caput mortuum character Coleridge colour common conversation Correggio death delight effect English Essay expression face fancy favour favourite feeling French French Revolution friends genius give habit hand Hazlitt head heart House of Commons human humour idea imagination impression indifference interest Job Orton Lamb laugh learned less live look Lord Lord Byron Lord Keppel manner means mind Molière nature Nether Stowey never object opinion ourselves pain painter painting pass passion perhaps person picture play pleasure poet poetry portrait prejudice pretensions principle prose reason Rembrandt round seems sense sentiment Shakespear shew sort soul sound speak spirit style supposed talk taste things thought tion Titian Tom Jones truth turn understanding vanity virtue vulgar William Hazlitt Winterslow wish words write