Miscellaneous Works of Oliver Goldsmith: With a New Life of the Author, 4±ÇW&H Chambers, 1833 |
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17 ÆäÀÌÁö
... less than a hundred thousand pounds . This university has already pickled monsters , and dissected live puppies without number . Their transactions have been published in the learned world , at proper intervals , since their institution ...
... less than a hundred thousand pounds . This university has already pickled monsters , and dissected live puppies without number . Their transactions have been published in the learned world , at proper intervals , since their institution ...
19 ÆäÀÌÁö
... less of literature than of every other commodity . Here , though destitute of what may be properly called a language of their own , all the languages are understood , cultivated , and spoken . All useful inventions in arts , and new ...
... less of literature than of every other commodity . Here , though destitute of what may be properly called a language of their own , all the languages are understood , cultivated , and spoken . All useful inventions in arts , and new ...
21 ÆäÀÌÁö
... he at last thought proper to return to Copenhagen , where his ingenious productions quickly gained him that favour he deserved . He composed not less than eighteen comedies . Those in his own language are said to OF POLITE LEARNING . 21.
... he at last thought proper to return to Copenhagen , where his ingenious productions quickly gained him that favour he deserved . He composed not less than eighteen comedies . Those in his own language are said to OF POLITE LEARNING . 21.
27 ÆäÀÌÁö
... less happy than he found it . It was a good manner which the father of the late poet Saint Foix , took to reclaim his son from this juvenile error . The young poet had shut himself up for some time in his study ; and his father ...
... less happy than he found it . It was a good manner which the father of the late poet Saint Foix , took to reclaim his son from this juvenile error . The young poet had shut himself up for some time in his study ; and his father ...
29 ÆäÀÌÁö
... less ardour than formerly , and consequently the public must one day expect to see the advantages arising from it , and the exquisite pleasures it affords our leisure , entirely annihilated . For if , as it should seem , the rewards OF ...
... less ardour than formerly , and consequently the public must one day expect to see the advantages arising from it , and the exquisite pleasures it affords our leisure , entirely annihilated . For if , as it should seem , the rewards OF ...
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acquainted admiration amusement antiquity appeared attempts Ballymahon beauty character contempt continue David Mallet Dr Johnson Duke Duke of Ormond Earl of Mar eloquence endeavoured enemy England English excellence expect fame favour fortune French friends friendship frugality genius give Goldsmith hand happiness honour humour imagination imitation Jacobite justice King labour lady language laws learning letters lived Lord Bolingbroke Lysippus mankind manner MDCCLXXI means merit mind Natural History never object obliged observed occasion Olinda Oliver Goldsmith once Parnell party passion perceived perhaps person philosopher pleasing pleasure poem poet poetry polite Pope possessed praise present Pretender proper reader regard reputation ridiculous scarcely Scotland seemed seldom shew society soon sufficient supposed taste thing THOMAS PARNELL thought tion Tories trifling truth virtue Viscount Bolingbroke vulgar Whigs whole writer written Zoilus