The Works of Samuel Johnson, Volumen2L. Hansard & sons, 1810 |
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Página 12
... sentiments regret the loss of their numbers , it is surely time to pro- vide that the harmony of the moderns may be more permanent . :: A new pronunciation will make almost a new speech ; and therefore , since one great end of this ...
... sentiments regret the loss of their numbers , it is surely time to pro- vide that the harmony of the moderns may be more permanent . :: A new pronunciation will make almost a new speech ; and therefore , since one great end of this ...
Página 51
... sentiments or doc- trine of their authors ; the word for the sake of which they are inserted , with all its appendant clauses , has been carefully preserved ; but it may sometimes happen , by hasty detruncation , that the general ...
... sentiments or doc- trine of their authors ; the word for the sake of which they are inserted , with all its appendant clauses , has been carefully preserved ; but it may sometimes happen , by hasty detruncation , that the general ...
Página 54
... sentiments , by shewing how one author copied the thoughts and diction of another : such quotations are indeed little more than repetitions , which might justly be censured , did they not gratify the mind , by afford- ing a kind of ...
... sentiments , by shewing how one author copied the thoughts and diction of another : such quotations are indeed little more than repetitions , which might justly be censured , did they not gratify the mind , by afford- ing a kind of ...
Página 97
... sentiment to its original source , and therefore , though the term enemy of man ap- plied to the devil is in itself natural and obvious , yet some may be pleased with being informed , that Shakespeare probably borrowed it from the first ...
... sentiment to its original source , and therefore , though the term enemy of man ap- plied to the devil is in itself natural and obvious , yet some may be pleased with being informed , that Shakespeare probably borrowed it from the first ...
Página 127
... sentiment than they could conveniently con- vey , and that rapidity of imagination which might hurry him to a second thought before he had fully explained the first . But my opinion is , that very few of his lines were difficult to his ...
... sentiment than they could conveniently con- vey , and that rapidity of imagination which might hurry him to a second thought before he had fully explained the first . But my opinion is , that very few of his lines were difficult to his ...
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