Gaieties and Gravities: A Series of Essays, Comic Tales, and Fugitive Vagaries. Now First Collected, Volumen3H. Colburn, 1825 - 353 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 38
Página
... human soul could live ? We trifle all , and he who best deserves Is but a trifler . What art thou whose eye Follows my pen , or what am I that write ? Both triflers . " BZ 4524/3 HURDIS . LONDON : HENRY COLBURN , NEW BURLINGTON STREET ...
... human soul could live ? We trifle all , and he who best deserves Is but a trifler . What art thou whose eye Follows my pen , or what am I that write ? Both triflers . " BZ 4524/3 HURDIS . LONDON : HENRY COLBURN , NEW BURLINGTON STREET ...
Página 18
... humanity of the Society in making some provision against similar calamities . Under the head of Topographical Literature , I would earnestly request the attention of the Institu- tion to various anomalous and contradictory designa ...
... humanity of the Society in making some provision against similar calamities . Under the head of Topographical Literature , I would earnestly request the attention of the Institu- tion to various anomalous and contradictory designa ...
Página 26
... human reason in general , no more solemn or imperious duty can devolve upon the Society than the correction of so enormous and crying an evil . The whole sixty - four different modes of syllogism should be instantly abolished by act of ...
... human reason in general , no more solemn or imperious duty can devolve upon the Society than the correction of so enormous and crying an evil . The whole sixty - four different modes of syllogism should be instantly abolished by act of ...
Página 34
... human habits in the different ages and nations of the world , nothing is more affecting than to contem- plate the reverses to which whole classes of our fellow- creatures are exposed by sudden fluctuations of fa- shion ; and in all the ...
... human habits in the different ages and nations of the world , nothing is more affecting than to contem- plate the reverses to which whole classes of our fellow- creatures are exposed by sudden fluctuations of fa- shion ; and in all the ...
Página 46
... human knowledge ; and in their inability to escape from this narrow range , content themselves , like the squirrel in his cage , with repeating the unprofitable rotations which afford exercise to their faculties without ad- vancing ...
... human knowledge ; and in their inability to escape from this narrow range , content themselves , like the squirrel in his cage , with repeating the unprofitable rotations which afford exercise to their faculties without ad- vancing ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Términos y frases comunes
Adam Wright Apollo appear Barber beauty become bells blind called candles Carbonari catachresis Chilvers chimæra colours comedy Court cried Croak cuckoo death deemed delight Dick Dieppe dramatist earth endeavoured exclaimed eyes fear feel fool fortune France French gazing give Hail to thee hand happy head heart honour human hyæna instantly iron tongues John Bull jokes King King Arthur lady laugh less letter literary live look Lord Louis the Fourteenth Ma'am Madame de Staël marriage MARSHAL SOULT ment mind monarch moral morning mother Muggs Nasamones nature never night object obolus observe occasion old white once Paris perhaps pleasure present reader recollect replied round royal rubble-work Smart Society talent taste theatre there's thing thou thought Timbuctoo tion tongue took Versailles whole wife women writers young