The Miscellaneous Works of Oliver Goldsmith, 1±ÇPutnam, 1855 |
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81 ÆäÀÌÁö
... excellence , which may amuse and serve to animate our inquiry . In deviating from others , in following an unbeaten road , though we perhaps may never arrive at the wished - for object , yet it is possible we may meet several ...
... excellence , which may amuse and serve to animate our inquiry . In deviating from others , in following an unbeaten road , though we perhaps may never arrive at the wished - for object , yet it is possible we may meet several ...
83 ÆäÀÌÁö
... excellence , our reputation , our friends , and our all must be ventured ; by aiming only at mediocrity , we run no risk , and we do little service . Prudence and greatness are ever per- suading us to contrary pursuits . The one ...
... excellence , our reputation , our friends , and our all must be ventured ; by aiming only at mediocrity , we run no risk , and we do little service . Prudence and greatness are ever per- suading us to contrary pursuits . The one ...
104 ÆäÀÌÁö
... excellence of the sculptor than the writer . How happy were it now , if men of real excellence in that pro- fession were to arise ! Were the painters of Italy now to appear , who once wandered like beggars from one city to another , and ...
... excellence of the sculptor than the writer . How happy were it now , if men of real excellence in that pro- fession were to arise ! Were the painters of Italy now to appear , who once wandered like beggars from one city to another , and ...
123 ÆäÀÌÁö
... excellence in this way are so pleasing , that numbers have written professed treatises to teach us the art ; schools have been established with no other intent ; rhetoric has taken place among the institutions , and pedants have ranged ...
... excellence in this way are so pleasing , that numbers have written professed treatises to teach us the art ; schools have been established with no other intent ; rhetoric has taken place among the institutions , and pedants have ranged ...
128 ÆäÀÌÁö
... excellence of the Bangorian Controversy , * and the absurdity of an intermediate state . The spruce preacher reads his lucubration without lifting his nose from the text , and never ventures to earn the shame of an enthusiast . By this ...
... excellence of the Bangorian Controversy , * and the absurdity of an intermediate state . The spruce preacher reads his lucubration without lifting his nose from the text , and never ventures to earn the shame of an enthusiast . By this ...
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admiration advantages affectation amusement ancient appear attempt attended beauty become called cause character consider continued critics desire England English entirely equal ESSAY Europe excellence expected expression eyes figure formed fortune France French friends genius give going hand happiness head heart human idea imagination imitation improvement instance interest Italy kind labors lady language late laws learning least less lived mankind manner means merit mind nature never object observed occasion once original passion perceive perhaps period person pleasing pleasure poet poetry polite possessed present produced proper reader reason regard respect ridiculous says scarcely seems seen sense serve short society soon speak spirit taste thing thought tion true truth turn universal virtue whole writer young