Lives of the English Poets: Swift-LytteltonClarendon Press, 1905 |
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Página 37
... gave a thought to scandal . If , during his absence , she came to Dublin she ' should be lodged in some airy healthy part , and not in the Deanery : which besides , you know , cannot but be a very im- proper thing for that house to ...
... gave a thought to scandal . If , during his absence , she came to Dublin she ' should be lodged in some airy healthy part , and not in the Deanery : which besides , you know , cannot but be a very im- proper thing for that house to ...
Página 38
... gave least pleasure was that which describes the Flying Island , and that which gave most disgust must be the history of the Houyhnhnms 5 . * On April 8 he wrote : - ' I am just going for England . ' Works , xvii . 100 . In the ...
... gave least pleasure was that which describes the Flying Island , and that which gave most disgust must be the history of the Houyhnhnms 5 . * On April 8 he wrote : - ' I am just going for England . ' Works , xvii . 100 . In the ...
Página 39
... gave hopes which she never took care to satisfy , or he formed expectations which she never meant to raise , the event was that he always afterwards thought on her with malevolence , and particularly charged her with breaking her ...
... gave hopes which she never took care to satisfy , or he formed expectations which she never meant to raise , the event was that he always afterwards thought on her with malevolence , and particularly charged her with breaking her ...
Página 40
... gave you from the success of it , I gave you my reasons for it , and it was your business to have judged of my capacity by the solidity of my arguments . ' lb. p . 392 . See also ib . pp . 107 , 124 , 131 , 221 , 312 , 406 . Horace ...
... gave you from the success of it , I gave you my reasons for it , and it was your business to have judged of my capacity by the solidity of my arguments . ' lb. p . 392 . See also ib . pp . 107 , 124 , 131 , 221 , 312 , 406 . Horace ...
Página 42
... gave up herself to sorrowful resentment , and died under the tyranny of him by whom she was in the highest degree loved and honoured . What were her claims to this excentrick tenderness , by which the laws of nature were violated to ...
... gave up herself to sorrowful resentment , and died under the tyranny of him by whom she was in the highest degree loved and honoured . What were her claims to this excentrick tenderness , by which the laws of nature were violated to ...
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Addison afterwards Akenside Ante appeared Biog Bishop blank verse Bolingbroke Boswell Boswell's Johnson Broome called character Cibber copy criticism Deane Swift death Delany Dryden Dunciad edition elegant Elwin and Court Elwin and Courthope English Epistle epitaph Essay on Pope father favour Fenton genius Gent Gibbon Gray Hist Homer honour hope Horace Walpole Iliad Imit King labour Lady lines London Lord Lyttelton Mallet Mason Memoirs mentioned MILTON mind Misc Mitford never Night Thoughts numbers Orrery Oxford passage Pastorals perhaps Philips poem poetical poetry Poets Pope wrote Pope's Works Elwin praise Preface printed prose publick published quoted reader rhyme satire says seems Shenstone shew Spence Spence's Anec stanza Swift wrote Thomson tion told translation verses viii vols Warburton Warton well's Johnson writes written xvii Young