A Manual of English Prose LiteratureWilliam Blackwood and Sons, 1872 - 634 sider |
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Side 43
... translation from Sir Walter Scott . De Quincey reviewed the pseudo - translation hurriedly , and spoke of it in rather high terms , chance having directed him to the only tolerable passages in the work . There- upon a London firm ...
... translation from Sir Walter Scott . De Quincey reviewed the pseudo - translation hurriedly , and spoke of it in rather high terms , chance having directed him to the only tolerable passages in the work . There- upon a London firm ...
Side 75
... translating certain words by any single word , he says— " To take an image from the language of eclipses , the correspondence between the disk of the original word and its translated representative is , in thousands of instances , not ...
... translating certain words by any single word , he says— " To take an image from the language of eclipses , the correspondence between the disk of the original word and its translated representative is , in thousands of instances , not ...
Side 155
... translation of ' Legendre's Geometry , ' with an original Essay on Proportion , as well as his first notable work , the translation of ' Wilhelm Meister . ' During the next two years he laboured at translations from LIFE . 155.
... translation of ' Legendre's Geometry , ' with an original Essay on Proportion , as well as his first notable work , the translation of ' Wilhelm Meister . ' During the next two years he laboured at translations from LIFE . 155.
Side 156
... translations from German romance . He then ( in 1828 ) retired to the farm of Craigenputtoch , in Dumfriesshire , a ... translation of ' Wilhelm Meister . ' He had retired to his own " bit of earth " to " secure the independence through ...
... translations from German romance . He then ( in 1828 ) retired to the farm of Craigenputtoch , in Dumfriesshire , a ... translation of ' Wilhelm Meister . ' He had retired to his own " bit of earth " to " secure the independence through ...
Side 169
... translating " Able- Man " ) at the head of affairs , and capable , obedient officials under him through all degrees of importance . How to realise the ideal he does not show ; and , as we have said , he takes no account of the ...
... translating " Able- Man " ) at the head of affairs , and capable , obedient officials under him through all degrees of importance . How to realise the ideal he does not show ; and , as we have said , he takes no account of the ...
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abstruse Addison admiration antithesis appearance Ben Jonson called Carlyle Carlyle's character Chartism Church Church of England clauses clear criticism death described diction doctrine effect ELEMENTS OF STYLE England English Essays Euphuism example expression favour favourite feelings figures Figures of Speech French French Revolution give Grasmere Henry VII History honour Hooker human humour intellectual interest Jeremy Taylor Johnson King labour language Latin less literary literature living Lord Macaulay Macaulay's manner matter means ment mind moral narrative nature never object opinion opium original Oxford paragraph particular passage pathos peculiar perhaps period periodic sentence person perspicuous pleasure poet poetry political popular probably prose published QUALITIES OF STYLE Quincey Quincey's quoted reader regards says sense sentences similitudes simplicity sometimes speech statement sublimity synecdoches Tatler tences things tion translation Whigs Wicliffe words writer wrote