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Belle Assemblée:

Or, Court and Fashionable Magazine; Containing Interesting and Original Literature, and Records of the Beau-monde (Google eBook)
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J. Bell, 1831 - Women
  

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Page 74 - I was really astonished (I ought not to have been so) and mortified at the ineffable distance in point of sense, harmony, effect, and even Imagination, passion and Invention, between the little Queen Anne's man, and us of the Lower Empire.
Page 76 - TERESA : — I have read this book in your garden; my love, you were absent, or else I could not have read it. It is a favourite book of yours, and the writer was a friend of mine. You will not understand these English words, and others will not understand them — which is the reason I have not scrawled them in Italian.
Page 278 - THE poet in a golden clime was born, With golden stars above; Dower'd with the hate of hate, the scorn of scorn, The love of love.
Page 76 - ... years of age, and two out of a convent. I wish that you had stayed there, with all my heart — or, at least, that I had never met you in your married state.
Page 92 - Why should I regret it ? can it afford me any pleasure ? have I not enjoyed it to a surfeit ? Few men can live faster than I did. I am, literally speaking, a young old man.
Page 77 - He says also that Dante's chief defect is a want, in a word, of gentle feelings. Of gentle feelings ! — and Francesca of Rimini — and the father's feelings in Ugolino — and Beatrice — and ' La Pia ! ' Why, there is gentleness in Dante beyond all gentleness, when he is tender.
Page 76 - Their moral is not your moral ; their life is not your life ; you would not understand it : it is not English, nor French, nor German, which you would all understand. The conventual education, the cavalier servitude, the habits of thought and living are so entirely different, and the difference becomes so much more striking the more you live intimately with them, that I know not how to make you comprehend a people who are at once temperate and profligate, serious...
Page 78 - For my own part, I am violent, but not malignant; for only fresh provocations can awaken my resentments.. To you, who are colder and more concentrated, I would just hint, that you may sometimes mistake the depth of a cold anger for dignity, and a worse feeling for duty. I assure you that I bear you now (whatever I may have done) no resentment whatever. Remember, that if you have injured me in aught, this forgiveness is something ; and that, if I have injured you, it is something more still, if it...
Page 74 - With regard to poetry in general, I am convinced, the more I think of it, that he and all of us — Scott, Southey, Wordsworth, Moore, Campbell, I— are all in the wrong, one as much as another ; that we are upon a wrong revolutionary...
Page 74 - Wordsworth, Moore, Campbell, I, — are all in the wrong, one as much as another ; that we are upon a wrong revolutionary poetical system, or systems, not worth a damn in itself, and from which none but Rogers and Crabbe are free ; and that the present and next...

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