Biographia Classica: The Lives and Characters of All the Classic Authors, the Grecian and Roman Poets, Historians, Orators, and Biographers. With an Historical and Critical Account of Them and Their Writings ...D. Browne, 1750 |
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Page v
... common Refuge of little Authors ; fince those must be forry Excufes for a Man's Writing but indifferently , which are strong Reafons why he should not have written at all . I am not aware of any notable Objection that can be offer'd ...
... common Refuge of little Authors ; fince those must be forry Excufes for a Man's Writing but indifferently , which are strong Reafons why he should not have written at all . I am not aware of any notable Objection that can be offer'd ...
Page 4
... common manner ; nothing lefs than Gods and Heroes must be vifibly con- cerned about it . Thus we find among the different Accounts which Hermias has collected concerning his Blindness , that when Homer re- folved to write of Achilles ...
... common manner ; nothing lefs than Gods and Heroes must be vifibly con- cerned about it . Thus we find among the different Accounts which Hermias has collected concerning his Blindness , that when Homer re- folved to write of Achilles ...
Page 16
... Common- wealths from hence took the Model of their Po- liticks . Hence the Philofophers found the first Principles of Morality , which they taught the People . Hence Phyficians have ftudied Difeafes and their Cures ; Aftronomers have ...
... Common- wealths from hence took the Model of their Po- liticks . Hence the Philofophers found the first Principles of Morality , which they taught the People . Hence Phyficians have ftudied Difeafes and their Cures ; Aftronomers have ...
Page 19
... common Terms with other more flowing and polite , to make a middle Compo- fition between the auftere and harfh , and the graceful or florid ; and by that means he wonder- fully mixes Art and Nature , Paffion and Man- ners ; as Dionyfius ...
... common Terms with other more flowing and polite , to make a middle Compo- fition between the auftere and harfh , and the graceful or florid ; and by that means he wonder- fully mixes Art and Nature , Paffion and Man- ners ; as Dionyfius ...
Page 41
... common Account one of the seven renowned Sages of Greece . She had the Acquaintance of the two famous Poets , Steficho- rus and Alcaus . The laft of thefe is faid to have been her Suitor , and a Rebuke which fhe gave him , is ftill ...
... common Account one of the seven renowned Sages of Greece . She had the Acquaintance of the two famous Poets , Steficho- rus and Alcaus . The laft of thefe is faid to have been her Suitor , and a Rebuke which fhe gave him , is ftill ...
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Common terms and phrases
admirable againſt Alcaus Anacreon Aratus Athenian Auguftus becauſe beſt Books Cæfar Callimachus Catullus Character Cicero Comedy compofed Compofitions Criticks Death Defign defired difputed EDITIONS Efteem elegant Elegy Emperor Epigrams Euripides excellent Expreffion Fables faid fame Father Favour fays fecond feems felf fent feven feveral fhall fhew fhort fhould fince firft firſt fome fometimes foon fpeaks ftill fuch fuppofed Genius greateſt Greek Hefiod himſelf Homer Honour Horace Iliad Juvenal King laft Latin Learning loft Love Lucan Lucretius Mafter moft moſt Mufe muſt Name Nature Notis Numbers obferves Occafion Ovid Paffions Perfon Philofopher Piece Pindar Plautus Pleaſure Plutarch Poem Poet Poetry Praiſe prefent Propertius publick Quintilian racter reafon Roman Rome Sappho Satire ſay Scaliger Scholiis ſeems Seneca ſhe Sophocles Statius Style Suidas Terence thefe themſelves Theocritus theſe thing thofe thoſe Tibullus Tragedy Typis uſed Verfes Verſe Virgil whofe writ Writings wrote
Popular passages
Page 181 - We ought to have a certain knowledge of the principal character and distinguishing excellence of each; it is in that we are to consider him, and in proportion to his degree in that we are to admire him. No author or man...
Page 14 - Aristotle had reason to say, he was the only poet who had found out living words ; there are in him more daring figures and metaphors than in any good author whatever. An arrow is impatient to be on the wing, a weapon thirsts to drink the blood of an enemy, and the like.
Page 45 - Tis neither love nor poesy Can arm, against death's smallest dart, The poet's head or lover's heart; But when their life, in its decline, Touches the' inevitable line, All the world's mortal to them then, And wine is aconite to men; Nay, in death's hand, the grape-stone proves As strong as thunder is in Jove's.
Page 181 - No author or man ever excelled all the world in more than one faculty, and as Homer has done this in invention, Virgil has in judgment. Not that we...
Page 182 - ... all about him, and conquers with tranquillity. And when we look upon their machines, Homer...
Page 45 - The Odes of Anacreon," says Rapin, " are flowers, beauties, and perpetual graces : it is familiar to him to write what is natural; he has an air so delicate, easy, and graceful, that, among all the ancients, there is nothing comparable to the method he took, nor to that kind of writing he followed. He flows soft and easy, every whew diffusing the joy and indolence of his mind through all his compositions, and tuning his harp to the pleasant and happy temper of his soul.
Page 251 - Nero himfelf was not only fond of it to the higheft degree, but, as moft bad poets are, 'was vain and conceited of his performances in that kind. He valued himfelf more upon his...
Page 282 - I can bear; he fully satisfies my expectation; he treats his subject home; his spleen is raised, and he raises mine. I have the pleasure of concernment in all he says; he drives his reader along with him, and when he is at the end of his way, I willingly stop with him. If he went another stage, it would be too far; it would make a journey of a progress, and turn delight into fatigue.
Page 193 - Scaliger says, only shows his white teeth, he cannot provoke me to any laughter. His urbanity, that is, his good manners, are to be commended, but his wit is faint; and his salt, if I may dare to say so, almost insipid.
Page 1 - Mentes returning to Ithaca, found Homer cured. They embarked together, and after much time fpent in vifiting the Coafts...