An Introduction to the Classics: Containing a Short Discourse on Their Excellencies; and Directions how to Study Them to Advantage. With an Essay on the Nature and Use of Those Emphatical and Beautiful Figures which Give Strength and Ornament to WritingC. Rivington, 1737 - 271 psl. |
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psl.
... true Elo- quence of the Writers of the New Teftament . In Two Parts . In the firft of which thefe Divine Writers are vindicated against the Charge of barba- rous Language , falfe Greek , and Soleciims . In the fecond is fhewn , that all ...
... true Elo- quence of the Writers of the New Teftament . In Two Parts . In the firft of which thefe Divine Writers are vindicated against the Charge of barba- rous Language , falfe Greek , and Soleciims . In the fecond is fhewn , that all ...
2 psl.
... true Sterling all over the learned World . English is chiefly valuable in this Island and its Colonies , and current within its own Seas . It cannot fuftain the Sublime with that Strength and Grace that the Greek and Latin do . And this ...
... true Sterling all over the learned World . English is chiefly valuable in this Island and its Colonies , and current within its own Seas . It cannot fuftain the Sublime with that Strength and Grace that the Greek and Latin do . And this ...
5 psl.
... true Religion and good Learning for the moft part flourish and decay together . We at the fame time triumph'd over Barbarifm and Superftition ; and at once got into our Hands the Claffics and the facred Writers . Polite Literature , if ...
... true Religion and good Learning for the moft part flourish and decay together . We at the fame time triumph'd over Barbarifm and Superftition ; and at once got into our Hands the Claffics and the facred Writers . Polite Literature , if ...
7 psl.
... true Claffics , that Men of Tafte in all Ages and Nations have fo eagerly stu- died , and unanimously admir'd . § . I. THE Ancients ( of whom we fpeak ) had good natural Parts , and applied them right ; they understood their own ...
... true Claffics , that Men of Tafte in all Ages and Nations have fo eagerly stu- died , and unanimously admir'd . § . I. THE Ancients ( of whom we fpeak ) had good natural Parts , and applied them right ; they understood their own ...
27 psl.
... true in their Subftance , and fo taking and lively in the manner of their Expreffion , that they fatisfy the foundeft Judgment , and please the moft fprightly Imagination . From thefe glorious Authors we have In- ftruction without the ...
... true in their Subftance , and fo taking and lively in the manner of their Expreffion , that they fatisfy the foundeft Judgment , and please the moft fprightly Imagination . From thefe glorious Authors we have In- ftruction without the ...
Pagrindiniai terminai ir frazės
addrefs admir'd admirable Advantage againſt agreeable Anacreon Authors beautiful becauſe beſt Callimachus Chriftian Claffics Compariſon confiderable Converfation Cuſtom Cycnus defcribes Defcription Defign Dido Difcourfe Diſcourſe divine Dryd Eloquence Euripides excellent Expreffion exprefs facred faid fame fays feem feveral fhall fhew Figure fion firft firſt fome fomething fpeaks freſh ftrong fublime fuch Georgics gives Grace Greek Herodotus Hiftorian Hiftory himſelf Honour illuftrate Inftances inftruct juft laft Language Learning Livy Loft Mafter Majefty ment Metaphor Metonymy moft moſt muft muſt Nature nefs noble Numbers Obfervation Occafion Orator Paffage Paffion Perfon Phrynicus Pindar plain Plato pleaſant pleaſe Pleaſure Poems Poet Praiſe prefent proper purſue Quintilian racter raiſe Reader Reafon reprefents Senfe Senſe Sentence ſhall ſhould ſpeak Speech Style Subject Tacitus thefe themſelves Theocritus theſe Thing thofe thoſe thou Thought thro tion Trope Tully Underſtanding us'd Uſe Verfe Virg Virgil Words World Writers Xenophon
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