Miscellaneous Works of Oliver Goldsmith: With a New Life of the Author, 4±ÇW&H Chambers, 1833 |
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... Merit , • 131 No. VI . SATURDAY , NOVEMBER 10 , 1759 . - On Education , On the Instability of Worldly Grandeur , Some Account of the Academies of Italy , No. VII . SATURDAY , NOVEMBER 17 , 1759 . 135 144 147 Of Eloquence , 150 Custom ...
... Merit , • 131 No. VI . SATURDAY , NOVEMBER 10 , 1759 . - On Education , On the Instability of Worldly Grandeur , Some Account of the Academies of Italy , No. VII . SATURDAY , NOVEMBER 17 , 1759 . 135 144 147 Of Eloquence , 150 Custom ...
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... merit of the age ; for joining in a cry which the judicious have long since left to be kept up by the vulgar ; and for adopting the sentiments of the mul- titude , in a performance that at best can please only a few . Complaints of our ...
... merit of the age ; for joining in a cry which the judicious have long since left to be kept up by the vulgar ; and for adopting the sentiments of the mul- titude , in a performance that at best can please only a few . Complaints of our ...
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... merit alone which was constantly proposed for their admiration . In exercises of this kind , the most stupid are generally most successful ; for there is not in nature a more imitative animal than a dunce . Hence ancient learning may be ...
... merit alone which was constantly proposed for their admiration . In exercises of this kind , the most stupid are generally most successful ; for there is not in nature a more imitative animal than a dunce . Hence ancient learning may be ...
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... what Mr Baumelle has remarked , prevent literary decline for the future , since it only increases the number of books without advancing their intrinsic merit . CHAPTER III . OF THE PRESENT STATE OF POLITE LEARNING OF POLITE LEARNING . 13.
... what Mr Baumelle has remarked , prevent literary decline for the future , since it only increases the number of books without advancing their intrinsic merit . CHAPTER III . OF THE PRESENT STATE OF POLITE LEARNING OF POLITE LEARNING . 13.
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... merits of every contemporary per- formance . After the age of Clement VII . the Italians seemed to think that there was more merit in praising or censuring well , than in writing well ; almost every subsequent performance since their ...
... merits of every contemporary per- formance . After the age of Clement VII . the Italians seemed to think that there was more merit in praising or censuring well , than in writing well ; almost every subsequent performance since their ...
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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