| Richard Hurd - Chivalry - 1788 - 428 pages
...parts ; the propriety of thephrafe j the height and power of it to move the affedtions ; the ftyle, UTTERLY UNKNOWN TO THE ANCIENTS, who could not conceive what kingly eloquence was, in refpect of which thofe noted demigogi were but hirelings and tribolary rhetoricians." Bifliop HACKET'sLifeof... | |
| Izaak Walton, Thomas Zouch - Authors, English - 1796 - 640 pages
...parts, the propriety of the phrafe, the height and power of it to move " the affections, the ftyle utterly unknown to the ancients, who could not conceive what kingly " eloquence was ; in refpect of which thofe noted demagogi were but hirelings, and triobulary " rhetoricians." Let it not... | |
| Tobias Smollett - Books - 1797 - 612 pages
...the parts, the propriety of the phrafe, the height and power of it to move the affeelions, the ftyle utterly unknown to the ancients, who could not conceive what kingly eloquence was; in refpeft of which thofe noted demagogi were but hirelings, and triobulary rhetoricians." ' Let it not... | |
| English literature - 1797 - 618 pages
...the parts, the propriety of the phrafe, the height and power of it to move the affections, the flyle utterly unknown to the ancients, who could not conceive what kingly eloquence was; in refpeft of which thofe noted demagog! were but hirelinos. and triobularv rhetoricians." £> C< O *... | |
| John Aikin - 1804 - 666 pages
...read upow an oration of king James, which he minutely analysed, particularly dwelling upon its style, unknown to the ancients, who could not conceive what kingly eloquence was. At this period of his life, however, our academic was in pursuit of court-promotion^ and in his dress... | |
| Richard Hurd - Theology, Doctrinal - 1811 - 406 pages
...the concinnity of the parts ; the propriety of the phrase j the height and power of it to move the affections ; the style, UTTERLY UNKNOWN TO THE ANCIENTS,...kingly eloquence was, in respect of which those noted demigogi were but hirelings and tribolary rhetoricians." Bishop HACKET.S Life of Archbishop WIU.IAMS,... | |
| Richard Hurd (bp. of Worcester.) - 1811 - 418 pages
...the pulpits of Athens and Rome, and insisted to read upon an oration of K. JAMES, which he analysed ; shewed the concinnity of the parts ; the propriety...of the phrase ; the height and power of it to move the affections ; the style, UTTERLY UNKNOWN TO THE ANCIENTS, who could not conceive what kingly. eloquence... | |
| Richard Hurd - Theology, Doctrinal - 1811 - 414 pages
...pulpits of Athens and Rome, and insisted to read upon an oration, of K. JAMES, which he analysed ; shewed the concinnity of the parts ; the propriety...of the phrase ; the height and power of it to move the affections ; the style, UTTERLY UNKNOWN TO THE ANCIENTS, who could not conceive what kingly eloquence... | |
| Richard Hurd - Theology, Doctrinal - 1811 - 406 pages
...and Rome, and insisted to read upon an oration of K. JAMES, which he analysed ; shewed the coneinnity of the parts ; the propriety of the phrase; the height and power of it to move the affections; the style, UTTERLY UNKNOWN TO THE ANCIENTS, who could not conceive what kingly eloquence... | |
| Izaak Walton - 1817 - 740 pages
...Rome, and insisted to read upon an " oration of King James, which he analysed, shewed the con" ci unity of the parts, the propriety of the phrase, the height and " power of it to move the affections, the style utterly unknown to " 4he ancienti, who could not conceive what kingly eloquence... | |
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