Miscellaneous Works of Oliver Goldsmith: With a New Life of the Author, 4±ÇW&H Chambers, 1833 |
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5 ÆäÀÌÁö
... passions or pursuits of mankind , that they have not received the proper cultivation . As , in the best regulated societies , the very laws which at first give the government solidity , may in the end con- tribute to its dissolution ...
... passions or pursuits of mankind , that they have not received the proper cultivation . As , in the best regulated societies , the very laws which at first give the government solidity , may in the end con- tribute to its dissolution ...
9 ÆäÀÌÁö
... passion for letters , while they continue to be either amusing or useful . It was such writers as these , that rendered learning unfit for uniting and strengthening civil society , or for promoting the views of ambition . True ...
... passion for letters , while they continue to be either amusing or useful . It was such writers as these , that rendered learning unfit for uniting and strengthening civil society , or for promoting the views of ambition . True ...
15 ÆäÀÌÁö
... passion for the arts of taste , yet no country making more feeble efforts to promote either . The Virtuosi and Filosofi seem to have divided the Encyclopedia between each other . Both in- violably attached to their respective pursuits ...
... passion for the arts of taste , yet no country making more feeble efforts to promote either . The Virtuosi and Filosofi seem to have divided the Encyclopedia between each other . Both in- violably attached to their respective pursuits ...
16 ÆäÀÌÁö
... passion for polite literature ; but unhappily , like conquerors , who , invading the dominions of others , leave their own to desolation , instead of studying the German tongue , they continue to write in Latin . Thus , while they ...
... passion for polite literature ; but unhappily , like conquerors , who , invading the dominions of others , leave their own to desolation , instead of studying the German tongue , they continue to write in Latin . Thus , while they ...
31 ÆäÀÌÁö
... passions are not strong enough in youth to mislead him from that path of science which his tutors , and not his inclinations , have chalked out , by four or five years ' perse- verance , may probably obtain every advantage and honour ...
... passions are not strong enough in youth to mislead him from that path of science which his tutors , and not his inclinations , have chalked out , by four or five years ' perse- verance , may probably obtain every advantage and honour ...
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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