The European Magazine, and London Review, Volume 43Philological Society of London, 1803 |
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Page 9
... readers , and they will hardly find better employment . I remain , DEAR SIR , Your obliged humble Servant , J. HEREFORD . GREEN - ARBOUR COURT , WHERE DR . GOLDSMITH RESIDED IN 1758 AND 1759 . ( See FRONTISPIECE . ) THE abode of genius ...
... readers , and they will hardly find better employment . I remain , DEAR SIR , Your obliged humble Servant , J. HEREFORD . GREEN - ARBOUR COURT , WHERE DR . GOLDSMITH RESIDED IN 1758 AND 1759 . ( See FRONTISPIECE . ) THE abode of genius ...
Page 11
... reader's attention ) , and the rest of the family . 1 In order to elucidate this verfe , it will be neceffary to observe , that this was the Lady whom Dr. Arbuthnot has to elegantiy defcribed by the epithet of " Brimftone Bitch , " and ...
... reader's attention ) , and the rest of the family . 1 In order to elucidate this verfe , it will be neceffary to observe , that this was the Lady whom Dr. Arbuthnot has to elegantiy defcribed by the epithet of " Brimftone Bitch , " and ...
Page 18
... reading what you write but beg to be excufed froin writing for you to read . Most entirely do I agree with you , Sir , on all French politics , and their confequences here it is hard indeed to be forced to call affaffinations and ...
... reading what you write but beg to be excufed froin writing for you to read . Most entirely do I agree with you , Sir , on all French politics , and their confequences here it is hard indeed to be forced to call affaffinations and ...
Page 27
... double night - cap . Book . Perhaps if your readers were to take the hint it would not be amifs . You know Swift fays , they should Query , Piccadilly , E 2 always EXHIBITION AT THE LOUVRE , 1802 . portraits had been FOR JANUARY 1803 . 27.
... double night - cap . Book . Perhaps if your readers were to take the hint it would not be amifs . You know Swift fays , they should Query , Piccadilly , E 2 always EXHIBITION AT THE LOUVRE , 1802 . portraits had been FOR JANUARY 1803 . 27.
Page 28
... readers ; whether landscapes in black and white pleafes them ; whether they would have them adorned with hiftory , maps , fea pieces , domeftic fcenes , love ftories , emblematical figures , reprefentations of the Mufes , the Arts ...
... readers ; whether landscapes in black and white pleafes them ; whether they would have them adorned with hiftory , maps , fea pieces , domeftic fcenes , love ftories , emblematical figures , reprefentations of the Mufes , the Arts ...
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Popular passages
Page 336 - Fie, fie upon her! There's language in her eye, her cheek, her lip, Nay, her foot speaks ; her wanton spirits look out At every joint and motive of her body.
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Page 142 - ... you are to be drawn on hurdles, to the place of execution,. where you are to be hanged by the neck, but not until you are dead...
Page 396 - As a proof of his desire to maintain peace, he wished to know what he had to gain by going to war with England. A descent was the only means of offence he had, and that he was determined to attempt, by putting himself at the head of the expedition. But how could it be supposed, that after having gained the height on which he stood, he...
Page 436 - French as being hateful to the inhabitants of that country, which represent them as having merited that hatred from the ruin and devastation with which their progress through it has been marked; and I am ready, if there be one who refuses to sanction this...
Page 213 - ... to perform that ceremony. The executioner then took the head by the hair, and carrying it to the edge of the parapet on the right hand, held it up to the view of the populace, and exclaimed, " This is the head of a traitor, Edward Marcus Despard.
Page 352 - I think your critics call them ; brevity, simplicity, and proper words in proper places, form, in my opinion, the perfection of eloquence. But I interrupt you. MERCURY. I mentioned the necessity which an English writer, who aims at popularity, is now under of using long words : I ought to have added, that it is also thought genteel sometimes to shorten ordinary expressions. For reformation...
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Page 163 - A physician in a great city seems to be the mere plaything of fortune; his degree of reputation is, for the most part, totally casual — they that employ him know not his excellence; they that reject him know not his deficience. By any acute observer who had looked on the transactions of the medical world for half a century a very curious book might be written on the "Fortune of Physicians.