Life and Manners: From The Autobiography of an English Opium-eaterTicknor, Reed, and Fields, 1853 - 347 sider |
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Side 292
... Paley may appear to the reader , it struck me forcibly that more falsehood , or more absolute falsehood , or more direct inversion of the truth , could not , by any artifice , of ingenuity , have been crowded into one short sentence . Paley ...
... Paley may appear to the reader , it struck me forcibly that more falsehood , or more absolute falsehood , or more direct inversion of the truth , could not , by any artifice , of ingenuity , have been crowded into one short sentence . Paley ...
Side 307
... Paley as accidentally connected with my debut in literary conversation : and I have taken occa- sion to say how much I admired his style and its unstudied graces how profoundly I despised his philosophy . I shall here say a word or two ...
... Paley as accidentally connected with my debut in literary conversation : and I have taken occa- sion to say how much I admired his style and its unstudied graces how profoundly I despised his philosophy . I shall here say a word or two ...
Side 308
... Paley , and , perhaps , traduced him , have hung like bees over one par- ticular paragraph in his Evidences , as though it were a flower transplanted from Hymettus . Dr. Parr pronounced it the finest sentence in the English language ...
... Paley , and , perhaps , traduced him , have hung like bees over one par- ticular paragraph in his Evidences , as though it were a flower transplanted from Hymettus . Dr. Parr pronounced it the finest sentence in the English language ...
Side 309
... Paley was what the regular rhetorical artists designate as a periodic writer , when , in fact , no one con- ceivable character of style more pointedly contradicted the true description of his merits . - But , leaving the style of Paley ...
... Paley was what the regular rhetorical artists designate as a periodic writer , when , in fact , no one con- ceivable character of style more pointedly contradicted the true description of his merits . - But , leaving the style of Paley ...
Side 310
... Paley has answered the wrong one . Thinking that he was answering A , and meaning to answer A , he has , in fact , answered B. One question arises thus : - Justice is a virtue ; temperance is a virtue ; and so forth . Now , what is the ...
... Paley has answered the wrong one . Thinking that he was answering A , and meaning to answer A , he has , in fact , answered B. One question arises thus : - Justice is a virtue ; temperance is a virtue ; and so forth . Now , what is the ...
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50 cents absolute admiration afterwards amongst Arklow army ascer Bagenal Harvey beautiful believe belongs Bishop brother called Castlebar character circumstances Cloth common connected Demosthenes discipline Dublin effect England English Enniscorthy express fact father Father Murphy feelings final French gentleman German Gorey guineas happened heard honor human idea interest Ireland Irish Kant Killala King known Lady language less literature Liverpool London Lord Lord Brougham Lord Cornwallis means ment miles mind moral nature never notice object occasion original Oxford Paley particular party peculiar perhaps person philosophy philosophy of space Price 75 cents principle profession purpose question rank reader rebels recollect respect road Roman Royal scene seemed sense society speaking spirit suppose things thought tion true truth United Irishmen University Vinegar Hill Wexford whilst whole woman words young Ziph
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Side 91 - ... guile seduced, no force could violate; And, when she took unto herself a Mate, She must espouse the everlasting Sea. And what if she had seen those glories fade, Those titles vanish, and that strength decay; Yet shall some tribute of regret be paid When her long life hath reached its final day: Men are we, and must grieve when even the Shade Of that which once was great, is passed away.
Side 38 - Thence to the gates cast round thine eye, and see What conflux issuing forth, or entering in, Praetors, proconsuls to their provinces Hasting, or on return, in robes of state ; Lictors and rods, the ensigns of their power, Legions and cohorts, turms of horse and wings ; Or embassies from regions far remote, In various habits, on the Appian road...
Side 322 - The pleasant bull here committed conceals a most melancholy truth, and one of large extent. Innumerable are the services to truth, to justice, or society, which never can be adequately valued by those who reap their benefits, simply because the transition from the early and bad state to the final or improved state cannot be retraced or kept alive before the eyes. The record perishes. The last point gained is seen ; but the starting point, the point from which it was gained, is forgotten.
Side 73 - ... and the continual regeneration of order from a system, of motions which for ever touch the very brink of confusion ; tha't such a spectacle, with such circumstances, may happen to be capable of exciting and sustaining the very grandest emotions of philosophic melancholy to which the human spirit is open. The reason is, in part, that such a scene presents a sort of mask of human life, with its whole equipage of pomps and glories, its luxury of sight and sound, its hours of golden youth, and the...
Side 71 - Fieri non debuit, factum valet. Were it otherwise, languages would be robbed of much of their wealth. And, universally, the class of purists, in matters of language, are liable to grievous suspicion, as almost constantly proceeding on half knowledge, and on insufficient principles. For example, if I have read one, I have read twenty letters, addressed to newspapers, denouncing the name of a great quarter in London, MaryIc-bonc, as ludicrously ungrammatical.
Side 38 - Legions and cohorts, turms of horse and wings ; Or embassies from regions far remote, In various habits, on the Appian road, Or on the...
Side 123 - ... the treatment he had received immediately after the action. He had returned to the castle for his sabre, and advanced with it to the gate, in order to deliver it up to some English officer, when it was seized and forced from his hand by a common soldier of Eraser's.
Side 52 - ... belongs to the coming metropolis, forces itself upon the dullest observer, in the growing sense of his own utter insignificance. Everywhere else in England, you yourself, horses, carriage, attendants (if you travel with any) are regarded with attention, perhaps even curiosity: at all events you are seen. But after passing the final post-house on every avenue to London, for the latter ten or twelve miles, you become aware that you are no longer noticed : nobody sees you ; nobody hears you; nobody...
Side 290 - ... of thinking, but also as to elevation and sublimity. Milton was not an extensive or discursive thinker, as Shakspeare was ; for the motions of his mind were slow, solemn, sequacious, like those of the planets ; not agile and assimilative ; not attracting all things within its own sphere ; not multiform : repulsion was the law of his intellect — he moved in solitary grandeur.