Selected Short Stories of Sinclair LewisDoubleday, Doran & Company, 1837 - 426ÆäÀÌÁö |
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104 ÆäÀÌÁö
... racter I can ever acquire , is that of being a philosophic vagabond . When I consider myself in the country which was once so formidable in war , and spread terror and desolation over the whole Roman empire , I can hardly account for ...
... racter I can ever acquire , is that of being a philosophic vagabond . When I consider myself in the country which was once so formidable in war , and spread terror and desolation over the whole Roman empire , I can hardly account for ...
180 ÆäÀÌÁö
... racter , or two at the most , with great propriety ; but to have almost every personage on the scene almost of the same character , and reflecting the follies of each other , was unartful in the poet to the last degree . The scene was ...
... racter , or two at the most , with great propriety ; but to have almost every personage on the scene almost of the same character , and reflecting the follies of each other , was unartful in the poet to the last degree . The scene was ...
280 ÆäÀÌÁö
... character of a polite preacher among the polite a much more useless , though more sought for cha- racter - requires a different method of proceeding . All I shall observe on this head is , to entreat the polemic divine , in his ...
... character of a polite preacher among the polite a much more useless , though more sought for cha- racter - requires a different method of proceeding . All I shall observe on this head is , to entreat the polemic divine , in his ...
310 ÆäÀÌÁö
... racter of a good customer : by this means he gets credit for something considerable , and then never pays for it . In all this , the young man who is the unhappy subject of our present reflections was very expert ; and could face ...
... racter of a good customer : by this means he gets credit for something considerable , and then never pays for it . In all this , the young man who is the unhappy subject of our present reflections was very expert ; and could face ...
355 ÆäÀÌÁö
... racter which the English inherit in a very remarkable degree . If we may judge from the writings of Aristophanes , his chief aim was to gratify the spleen and excite the mirth of his audience ; of an audience too , that would seem to ...
... racter which the English inherit in a very remarkable degree . If we may judge from the writings of Aristophanes , his chief aim was to gratify the spleen and excite the mirth of his audience ; of an audience too , that would seem to ...
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acquainted admiration ¨¡neid agreeable Alcander amusement appearance Asem Battersea beauty began Bidderman called character comedy continued David Mallet David Rizzio death distress dress Duke Duke of Ormond Earl of Mar eloquence employed endeavoured enemy England English ESSAY excellent eyes fame favour fond fortune friends friendship gave genius gentleman give hand happiness Homer honour humour Iliad imagination imitation justice king knew labour lady language learning letters lived Lord Bolingbroke mankind manner means merit mind nature never obliged observed occasion once Parnell party passion perceive Pergolese perhaps person philosopher pleased pleasure poet poetry polite Pope possessed praise present Pretender Pretender's racter received resolved retired ridiculous Saracen says Scotland Scribblerus Club seemed seldom society soon superiour taste thing thought tion tories Virgil virtue VISCOUNT BOLINGBROKE whigs whole word writing Zoilus