Select British Classics, Volume 21J. Conrad, 1803 |
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Pagina 142
... imagination has been thought by some the least of his excellencies , has doubtless , con- ceived and carried on the machinery in his " Rape of the Lock , " with vast exuberance of fancy . The ima- ges , customs , and employments of his ...
... imagination has been thought by some the least of his excellencies , has doubtless , con- ceived and carried on the machinery in his " Rape of the Lock , " with vast exuberance of fancy . The ima- ges , customs , and employments of his ...
Pagina 156
... imagination immediately improved to aggravate his disappointment : over these he mused perpetually with inexpressible anguish , he related them to every friend , and lamented them with the most passionate exclamations . And yet , what ...
... imagination immediately improved to aggravate his disappointment : over these he mused perpetually with inexpressible anguish , he related them to every friend , and lamented them with the most passionate exclamations . And yet , what ...
Pagina 183
... imagination : but it requires much greater strength of mind to form an assemblage of natural objects , and range them with propriety and beauty , than to bring together the greatest variety of the most splended images , without any ...
... imagination : but it requires much greater strength of mind to form an assemblage of natural objects , and range them with propriety and beauty , than to bring together the greatest variety of the most splended images , without any ...
Inhoudsopgave
LETTERS from six characters | 71 |
The folly of human wishes and schemes to cor rect the moral government of the world history of Nourraddin and Amana | 72 |
The history of Nourraddin and Amana concluded | 73 |
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Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
acquainted ADVENTURER Alcinous Almerine altar Amana Amphinomus Anticlea appeared Aristotle beauty behold Bozaldab breast Caliban caliph Catiline Catullus character considered countenance death desire despair despised Diphilus disappointed discovered distress dreadful DRYDEN effect Elfarina endeavour epic poetry equal Euripides evil excellence eyes fable father favour felicity fortune genius gratify happiness heart hero Homer honour hope hour human Iliad images imagination impatience kind labour lady learned Longinus look mankind manner Mantua marriage Menander ment mind misery moral Nardic nature ness never Nouraddin Nourassin object Odyssey opinion Osmin palace passion perceived perpetually person pleasure poem poet present prince produced Prospero Quintilian racter reason SATURDAY scarcely sentiments Shakspeare Shelimah shew smile Soliman soul spirit suffered Sycorax tears tender thee Theocritus thou thought tion truth TUESDAY ulmo Ulysses Virgil virtue wish wretched writers Yamodin δε