The Port Folio, Volumen2Editor and Asbury Dickens, 1809 |
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Página 5
... called them fools for believing . Upon the rector's finding fault ; when he read it next , he placed the emphasis upon as if it had been foolish in the disciples to believe all . The rector again blaming this manner of placing the ...
... called them fools for believing . Upon the rector's finding fault ; when he read it next , he placed the emphasis upon as if it had been foolish in the disciples to believe all . The rector again blaming this manner of placing the ...
Página 10
... called him the attic Muse ; others , with more propriety , the attic Bee . He whose robe is short but smooth , is Sallust , the enemy of Cicero , in whose brevity is comprehended all that eloquence can dictate , though Seneca says that ...
... called him the attic Muse ; others , with more propriety , the attic Bee . He whose robe is short but smooth , is Sallust , the enemy of Cicero , in whose brevity is comprehended all that eloquence can dictate , though Seneca says that ...
Página 12
... called on this occasion into action ; they were con- founded by the contrariety of opinions , and the variety of resolutions that were suggested without being able to form any solid plan . If they proposed any means of defence , it was ...
... called on this occasion into action ; they were con- founded by the contrariety of opinions , and the variety of resolutions that were suggested without being able to form any solid plan . If they proposed any means of defence , it was ...
Página 15
... called to the councils of princes and infor- med of the public and private motives of their actions . Too often from the success of an event they form their ideas of its having been plan- ned , and some writers of bad disposition ...
... called to the councils of princes and infor- med of the public and private motives of their actions . Too often from the success of an event they form their ideas of its having been plan- ned , and some writers of bad disposition ...
Página 26
... called , was perfectly inconsistent with the character he had drawn ; that the infamous debauchee whose whole soul was concentered in a cup of sack , must lose all his interest , his humour , his peculiarities , and his comic vices , if ...
... called , was perfectly inconsistent with the character he had drawn ; that the infamous debauchee whose whole soul was concentered in a cup of sack , must lose all his interest , his humour , his peculiarities , and his comic vices , if ...
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accent Adam Smith admiration affection American amusement antimony appears attention beautiful Billy Taylor Blackletter called captain cause character christian colour command delight Derry door Edinburg elegant emotions expression Falstaff favour feelings frequently genius gentleman give grace hand happy heart honour HORATIO GATES human ideas labours lady Laertes language learned letter limestone literary M'Intosh manner means ment merit mind moral mountains mulatto nature never Nicholas Biddle o'er object observed occasion OLDSCHOOL opinion pain pass passions pause perhaps person Petrarch Philadelphia pleasure poem poet Polonius PORT FOLIO present principles QUIZ racter reader respect scarcely scene Seneca Lake sentiments Shakspeare shore Sir CH society soon soul spirit style sweet syllables talents taste thing thou thought tion tophe verse vessel virtue Voltaire whip-poor-will whole words writing young