Specimens of the Table Talk of the Late Samuel Taylor Coleridge, 2 tomasJ. Murray, 1835 - 372 psl. |
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56 psl.
... Cicero , and so on , you may , with just two or three exceptions arising out of the different idioms as to cases , translate page after page into good mother English , word by word , without altering the order ; but you cannot do so ...
... Cicero , and so on , you may , with just two or three exceptions arising out of the different idioms as to cases , translate page after page into good mother English , word by word , without altering the order ; but you cannot do so ...
58 psl.
... to believe , they can hardly interfere , I think , with the uniqueness of the truly incomparable collections from the correspond- ence of Cicero and Pliny . - ED . what was Roman , then , as a matter of 58 TABLE TALK.
... to believe , they can hardly interfere , I think , with the uniqueness of the truly incomparable collections from the correspond- ence of Cicero and Pliny . - ED . what was Roman , then , as a matter of 58 TABLE TALK.
69 psl.
... Cicero , I am always vexed that the authors do not say what they have The to say at once in their own persons . introductions and little urbanities are , to be sure , very delightful in their way ; I would F 3 OF S. T. COLERIDGE . 69.
... Cicero , I am always vexed that the authors do not say what they have The to say at once in their own persons . introductions and little urbanities are , to be sure , very delightful in their way ; I would F 3 OF S. T. COLERIDGE . 69.
92 psl.
... Cicero and other writers . † * Acts xxviii . 2. and 4 . Upwards of a century before the reign of Nero , Cicero speaks at considerable length of our Malta in one of the Verrine orations . See Act . ii . lib . iv . c . 46 . “ Insula est ...
... Cicero and other writers . † * Acts xxviii . 2. and 4 . Upwards of a century before the reign of Nero , Cicero speaks at considerable length of our Malta in one of the Verrine orations . See Act . ii . lib . iv . c . 46 . “ Insula est ...
93 psl.
... Cicero ; because I consider his ex- pression of nudatæ urbes , in the working up of this article , a piece of rhetoric . Strabo merely marks the position of Melita , and says that the lap - dogs called Kvvídia Meλirała were sent from ...
... Cicero ; because I consider his ex- pression of nudatæ urbes , in the working up of this article , a piece of rhetoric . Strabo merely marks the position of Melita , and says that the lap - dogs called Kvvídia Meλirała were sent from ...
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Specimens of the Table Talk of the Late Samuel Taylor Coleridge, 2 tomas Samuel Taylor Coleridge Visos knygos peržiūra - 1835 |
Specimens of the Table Talk of the Late Samuel Taylor Coleridge, 2 tomas Samuel Taylor Coleridge Visos knygos peržiūra - 1835 |
Specimens of the Table Talk of the Late Samuel Taylor Coleridge, 2 tomas Samuel Taylor Coleridge Visos knygos peržiūra - 1835 |
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admiration argument August Beaumont and Fletcher beautiful believe Ben Jonson Bishop blank verse character Charles Charles Lamb Chaucer Christian church Cicero Coleridge Coleridge's delightful Devil divine doctrines doubt dramatists England English Epistle Euripides exquisite fact faith fancy Faust feeling genius German Goethe Greek heart HIERON House of Commons interest Jacobins Johnson king labour language Latin Lord LORD BYRON lost Malta Massinger mean Melite ment metre metrist Michael Milton mind mode Modern Quakerism moral nation nature never Papacy passage passion person Peter Wilkins philosopher pleasure poem poet poetry political economy principle prose Quakers racter reason Reformation religion Roman Rome scene seems sense Shakspeare Shakspeare's Silius Italicus Socinian sonnets Sophocles soul spirit style sublime sure thing thou thought Tibullus tion true truly truth verse Whig whilst whole words writings καὶ