Miscellanies of literature, by the author of 'Curiosities of literature'.1840 |
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Page 3
... learned and the unlearned , and , as it were , throw a bridge between those two great divisions of the public . Literary Miscellanies are classed among philologi- cal studies . The studies of philology formerly consisted rather of the ...
... learned and the unlearned , and , as it were , throw a bridge between those two great divisions of the public . Literary Miscellanies are classed among philologi- cal studies . The studies of philology formerly consisted rather of the ...
Page 8
... learned writ- ers have been neglected , while their learning has not been lost to the world , by having been given by writers with more amenity . It is , therefore , the duty of an author , to learn to write as well as to learn to think ...
... learned writ- ers have been neglected , while their learning has not been lost to the world , by having been given by writers with more amenity . It is , therefore , the duty of an author , to learn to write as well as to learn to think ...
Page 9
... learned rival . Goldsmith might have preferred the felicity of his own genius , which like a native stream flowed from a natural source , to the elaborate powers of Johnson , which in some respect may be compared to those artificial ...
... learned rival . Goldsmith might have preferred the felicity of his own genius , which like a native stream flowed from a natural source , to the elaborate powers of Johnson , which in some respect may be compared to those artificial ...
Page 12
... learned to taste their novelty . Lucilius , the sa- tirist , said , that he did not write for Persius , for Scipio , and for Rutilius , persons eminent for their science , but for the Tarentines , the Consentines , and the Sicilians ...
... learned to taste their novelty . Lucilius , the sa- tirist , said , that he did not write for Persius , for Scipio , and for Rutilius , persons eminent for their science , but for the Tarentines , the Consentines , and the Sicilians ...
Page 14
... learned Menage calls Molière " un grand et habile picoreur ; " and Boileau tells us , that La Fontaine borrowed his style and matter from Marot and Rabelais , and took his subjects from Boccaccio , Poggius , and Ariosto . Nor was the ...
... learned Menage calls Molière " un grand et habile picoreur ; " and Boileau tells us , that La Fontaine borrowed his style and matter from Marot and Rabelais , and took his subjects from Boccaccio , Poggius , and Ariosto . Nor was the ...
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Common terms and phrases
Addison admirable Æneid alludes ancient Anthony Wood appears Aristotle attack Bentley Bishop Bolingbroke bookseller called Cambridge Castle Cibber contempt criticism curious Curll declared delight Dennis discovered Divine Dryden Dunciad edition elegant English Essay on Criticism fame fancy favour feelings genius give Gondibert hath historian Hobbes honour Horace Horace Walpole human humour imagination invention James Johnson Joseph Warton king labour learned letter Leviathan libel literary character literature lived Lord Lord Bolingbroke melancholy mind Molière nature never observed opinions original panegyric party passion perhaps perpetual person philosopher poem poet poetical poetry political Pope Pope's preface preserved principle printed Prynne published Puritans racter reader reply ridicule Royal Society satire says secret seems spirit Stubbe studies style taste temper things thought tion Toland truth vanity verse volume Warburton Whig write written wrote youth
Popular passages
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