The Monthly Review, Or, Literary JournalR. Griffiths, 1822 - Books |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 78
Page 112
... Friendship , ' the fair writer quotes the well known maxim , " Live with your friends as if they might one day become ... friends : " for the frigid and apparently unamiable advice , contained in the first sentence , is both balanced and ...
... Friendship , ' the fair writer quotes the well known maxim , " Live with your friends as if they might one day become ... friends : " for the frigid and apparently unamiable advice , contained in the first sentence , is both balanced and ...
Page 153
... friends , " a model of the dry , grave , and judicial style of argument . " Had we , however , been al- lowed to judge of his probable success in this logical pursuit from his subsequent writings , we should certainly have be- lieved ...
... friends , " a model of the dry , grave , and judicial style of argument . " Had we , however , been al- lowed to judge of his probable success in this logical pursuit from his subsequent writings , we should certainly have be- lieved ...
Page 156
... friend , shall I say upon this interesting subject ? You yourself were present at the performance of the piece ; you know how little the theatrical people are entitled to encomiums ; what , therefore , could justify your friends here ...
... friend , shall I say upon this interesting subject ? You yourself were present at the performance of the piece ; you know how little the theatrical people are entitled to encomiums ; what , therefore , could justify your friends here ...
Contents
Letters to Julia | 62 |
AFRICA Southern Travels | 79 |
Brookes Elegy on Percy Bysshe Shel | 112 |
27 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
amusing antient appears beautiful Belshazzar Board of Longitude Boards Bushmen called Cape Town cause character circumstances common corn Cyrenaica Daïri Dongola effect effectual demand England English exchange father feeling former French genius give Greek hand heart hundred hundred quarters increase inhabitants instance interest knowlege Kobou labor lady language learned letter Lord Lord Byron manner means ment merit mind nation nature never Nitocris o'er object observations occasion opinion Ovid Parga pass passage perhaps perihelion persons poem poetical poetry political possess present principle production quantity racter readers remarks respect ruins says scarcely seems Sismondi society species specimen spirit Strabo style sufficient supposed taste Theodore Ducas thing thou tion Titsingh town travellers Tripoli Troad Ulric Upper Canada volume Werner whole writer young