The Quarterly Review, 27 tomasJohn Murray, 1822 |
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10 psl.
... arrived at Lisbon in 1569 , when the plague was raging in that city ; a circumstance which has been considered as peculiarly unfortunate unfortunate for Camoens ; because , in that general calamity 10 Life and Writings of Camoens .
... arrived at Lisbon in 1569 , when the plague was raging in that city ; a circumstance which has been considered as peculiarly unfortunate unfortunate for Camoens ; because , in that general calamity 10 Life and Writings of Camoens .
35 psl.
... considered it so curious that , with a barbarous regard for antiquity , he ordered a native of Porto , who was an ingenious man , and had travelled much both in France and Italy , to take proper implements with him , and go to the ...
... considered it so curious that , with a barbarous regard for antiquity , he ordered a native of Porto , who was an ingenious man , and had travelled much both in France and Italy , to take proper implements with him , and go to the ...
38 psl.
... considered in Portugal as presumptuous as it would be in England for a poet to bring forward a new Paradise Lost . Ex- cepting that it has not the incongruous mixture of heathen mytho- logy , there is almost every fault which the author ...
... considered in Portugal as presumptuous as it would be in England for a poet to bring forward a new Paradise Lost . Ex- cepting that it has not the incongruous mixture of heathen mytho- logy , there is almost every fault which the author ...
48 psl.
... considered by our learned contemporaries , we shall quote him.— The letter U ( he says ) is neither more nor less than a vowel . ' But- At uade , ueni , uota refer , teneto uultum , Crevisse sonum perspicis et coisse crassum , Unde ...
... considered by our learned contemporaries , we shall quote him.— The letter U ( he says ) is neither more nor less than a vowel . ' But- At uade , ueni , uota refer , teneto uultum , Crevisse sonum perspicis et coisse crassum , Unde ...
61 psl.
... considered as a blemish . In the fragments of the old Roman poetry we meet with more in- stances of hiatus than in the whole work of Lucretius ; and in the few poems of Catullus again , more than in Virgil , who neverthe less contrives ...
... considered as a blemish . In the fragments of the old Roman poetry we meet with more in- stances of hiatus than in the whole work of Lucretius ; and in the few poems of Catullus again , more than in Virgil , who neverthe less contrives ...
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admiration American ancient appears architect architecture banks beautiful British called Camoens cause character command commander-in-chief considered consonant Coteau-du-lac court death digamma Dionysius doubt effect endeavoured enemy England English fact favour feeling force France friends give Glenvarloch Grecian Greek Homer honour hyænas Iliad island Isocrates king labour Lake Lake Ontario land language less letter Livy Lord Anson Lord Hardwicke Lusiad manner means Memoirs ment mind moral nation nature never Niagara Nigel object observed officers opinion oratory original Parthenon party Pasha passage Pelham perhaps persons poem poets political Portugueze possessed present probably produce racter readers reason river Roman Sackett's Harbour says Sheygya Sir George Prevost Sir James Yeo species style supposed temple thing tion troops truth Van Diemen's Land vowels Waddington Wady Halfa Walpole Walpole's whole words writers
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