The Monthly Review, Or, Literary JournalR. Griffiths, 1824 - Books |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 69
Page 16
... writer from saying enough , and obliging an indifferent one to say too much . Such are , we are unwillingly compelled to remark , the prin- cipal materials of Mr. Dyer's work : but , as our readers may wish for a specimen of his naïveté ...
... writer from saying enough , and obliging an indifferent one to say too much . Such are , we are unwillingly compelled to remark , the prin- cipal materials of Mr. Dyer's work : but , as our readers may wish for a specimen of his naïveté ...
Page 140
... writer should address their understandings rather than tickle their ears . The following accumulation of words may serve as an instance : Reputations are formed by chance : contemporary writers receive them ready made to their hands ...
... writer should address their understandings rather than tickle their ears . The following accumulation of words may serve as an instance : Reputations are formed by chance : contemporary writers receive them ready made to their hands ...
Page 311
... writer breaks away from his fair leader , and wanders among the pages of Perefixe , Sully , or some other historian quoted in the notes which illustrate that work : but we quickly catch him again in the steps of Madame de Gen- lis ...
... writer breaks away from his fair leader , and wanders among the pages of Perefixe , Sully , or some other historian quoted in the notes which illustrate that work : but we quickly catch him again in the steps of Madame de Gen- lis ...
Contents
Greece Modern Songs | 1 |
N B For REMARKABLE PASSAGES in the Criticisms | 9 |
Bingleys Biography of Roman Cha DuplessisMornays Memoirs 449 | 21 |
28 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
animal antient appears Attalus attention beauty blood Boards body Bogotá called carbonic acid cause character chlorine church coagulation considerable considered cubic foot declension Duke Duke of Burgundy effect England English examination feel feet fibrin formation France French friends give gneiss Grammar Greece Greek hand happy heart heat Henry Henry III human instances Italy Joanna King knowlege lady language Latin less letter light Lord Lord Byron manner Martigny Mary means ment merit mind nations nature nerves never o'er object observed opinion original passage perhaps persons pleura poem porphyries possess present produced quartz readers remarks respect rocks Rome schal Shakspeare shew slaves speak specimen spirit supposed syenites thee thing thou tion trachytes translation truth tubercles Upper Canada volume whole word writer youth