The Monthly Review, Or, Literary Journal, 77. köideR. Griffiths, 1787 |
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Page 11
... kind of preaching which is adapted to produce a ftrong impreffion upon mixed auditories . Of the ftyle of thefe difcourfes , we fhall give the following fpecimen : Speaking of Midian in Arabia , the place to which Mofes retired , when ...
... kind of preaching which is adapted to produce a ftrong impreffion upon mixed auditories . Of the ftyle of thefe difcourfes , we fhall give the following fpecimen : Speaking of Midian in Arabia , the place to which Mofes retired , when ...
Page 18
... kind of tribute but what I will pay readily ; confidering that all we either mourn or fear is but the tribute we owe to Nature for our existence . It is in vain either to expect an exemption from these things , or to afk it . Are you ...
... kind of tribute but what I will pay readily ; confidering that all we either mourn or fear is but the tribute we owe to Nature for our existence . It is in vain either to expect an exemption from these things , or to afk it . Are you ...
Page 19
... kind we have met with in Dr. Reid's late Effays on the Intellectual Faculties of Man . But it may perhaps be more difficult to deduce conclufions of this kind from the ftructure of any particular language , or from the etymology of its ...
... kind we have met with in Dr. Reid's late Effays on the Intellectual Faculties of Man . But it may perhaps be more difficult to deduce conclufions of this kind from the ftructure of any particular language , or from the etymology of its ...
Page 26
... kind of compofition , wherein * The name of the village where he had his feat , in Hertfordshire , † See Rev. vol . Ixvii . p . 183 . it chufes to convey itself . It was no fudden it 26 Scott's Critical Essays on English Poets ...
... kind of compofition , wherein * The name of the village where he had his feat , in Hertfordshire , † See Rev. vol . Ixvii . p . 183 . it chufes to convey itself . It was no fudden it 26 Scott's Critical Essays on English Poets ...
Page 28
... kind of catachrefis , and the future navies , notwithstanding it prefents the mind with a new idea , is in fact but a redundance ; oaks are mentioned as oaks in one line , and future navies is but ano- ther name for oaks in the next ...
... kind of catachrefis , and the future navies , notwithstanding it prefents the mind with a new idea , is in fact but a redundance ; oaks are mentioned as oaks in one line , and future navies is but ano- ther name for oaks in the next ...
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Popular passages
Page 177 - Speak not of fate: ah! change the theme, And talk of odours, talk of wine, Talk of the flowers that round us bloom: Tis all a cloud, 'tis all a dream; To love and joy thy thoughts confine, Nor hope to pierce the sacred gloom.
Page 213 - Ask where's the North? at York, 'tis on the Tweed; In Scotland, at the Orcades ; and there, At Greenland, Zembla, or the Lord knows where.
Page 399 - Oh ! while along the stream of Time thy name Expanded flies, and gathers all its fame, Say, shall my little bark attendant sail, Pursue the triumph, and partake the gale...
Page 446 - Two Dialogues; containing a Comparative View of the Lives, Characters, and Writings, of Philip the late Earl of Chesterfield, and Dr. Samuel Johnson,
Page 298 - High and mighty king, your grace, and these your nobles here present, may be pleased benignly to bow your ears to hear the tragedy of a young man, that by right ought to hold in his hand the ball of a kingdom ; but by fortune is made himself a ball, tossed from misery to misery, and from place to place.
Page 423 - ... thereunto, borrowed even from the praises which are proper to virtue itself. As of a most notorious thief, and wicked outlaw...
Page 424 - ... of their houses to lead him in the darkness; that the day was his night, and the night his day; that he loved not to be long wooing of wenches to yield to him; but, where he came, he took by force the spoil of other men's love, and left but...
Page 152 - I put my hat upon my head And walk'd into the strand ; And there I met another man, Whose hat was in his hand.
Page 53 - This list is given by Sir John, as it should seem, with no other view than to draw a spiteful and malevolent character of almost every one of them. Mr. Dyer, whom Sir John says he loved with the affection of a brother, meets with the harshest treatment, because it was his maxim, that to live in peace with mankind, and in a temper to do good offices, was the most essential part of our duty.
Page xiii - The poet's eye, in a fine phrenzy rolling, Doth glance from heaven to earth, from earth to heaven ; And, as imagination bodies forth The forms of things unknown, the poet's pen Turns them to shape, and gives to airy nothing A local habitation, and a name.