Moral and Political Dialogues: With Letters on Chivalry and Romance: by the Reverend Doctor Hurd. In Three VolumesT. Cadell in the Strand, 1776 - Ethics |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 61
Page 23
... thefe , fauntering within the circle of the grand Tour , the magic of travelling can call up more than I have ever yet seen . LORD SHAFTESBURY . It may be true , perhaps , that the ad- vantages of travelling are not fo great , or fo ...
... thefe , fauntering within the circle of the grand Tour , the magic of travelling can call up more than I have ever yet seen . LORD SHAFTESBURY . It may be true , perhaps , that the ad- vantages of travelling are not fo great , or fo ...
Page 25
... thefe inconveniences may be pretty well avoided , by the choice of an honeft and able governor . Such an one it will not be impoffible to find , if the perfons concerned be in carneft to look out for him : I do not say , in Cells , for ...
... thefe inconveniences may be pretty well avoided , by the choice of an honeft and able governor . Such an one it will not be impoffible to find , if the perfons concerned be in carneft to look out for him : I do not say , in Cells , for ...
Page 28
... thefe feparate clans , how many fond con- ceits , and over - weening fancies ! The world feems to them fhrunk up into their own private circle ; just as the heavens appear appear to children to be contained within the limits of 28 ON ...
... thefe feparate clans , how many fond con- ceits , and over - weening fancies ! The world feems to them fhrunk up into their own private circle ; just as the heavens appear appear to children to be contained within the limits of 28 ON ...
Page 31
... thefe princi ples ? are they just and reasonable ? or , am I going to build on precarious and infecure foundations ? ... MR . LOCKE . WHATEVER defect there , may be in this foundation , your Lordship , as a wife architect , is for ...
... thefe princi ples ? are they just and reasonable ? or , am I going to build on precarious and infecure foundations ? ... MR . LOCKE . WHATEVER defect there , may be in this foundation , your Lordship , as a wife architect , is for ...
Page 32
... thefe profound refearches into human nature . LORD SHAFTESBURY . I TAKE your meaning . Thefe re- searches , you would say , are so little pro found , that I might have spared myself the trouble of making them at all , at least in ...
... thefe profound refearches into human nature . LORD SHAFTESBURY . I TAKE your meaning . Thefe re- searches , you would say , are so little pro found , that I might have spared myself the trouble of making them at all , at least in ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
abfurd accompliſhed adventures againſt almoſt anſwer antient ARIOSTO beft beſt buſineſs cafe character Chivalry circumſtances claffic confideration converfation defign difcipline eſpecially faid Fairy Queen fame fancies faſhionable fatire fcene feem feen fenfe ferve feudal fhall fhew fhould focieties fome fomething foon foreign travel fpirit ftate ftill ftories ftudies fubject fuch fuperftition fuperior fuppofe furely fyftem genius Gothic Gothic fictions guife himſelf Iliad inftance inftruction itſelf juft juſt knights knowledge laft leaft learning leaſt lefs LETTER LOCKE LORD SHAFTESBURY Lordship mafter manners mind moft moral moſt muft muſt myſelf nature neceffary obfervation occafion paffion perfons philofopher pleaſe poem poet polite prefent proper purpoſe queftion racter reafon refpect reft Romance ſay ſchools ſenſe ſhall Sir TOPAZ ſome SPENSER ſtate ſtill ſtudy TASSO taſte thefe themſelves theſe thing thofe thoſe tion TOPAZ underſtand Univerſities uſe virtue young youth
Popular passages
Page 264 - With store of ladies, whose bright eyes Rain influence, and judge the prize Of wit, or arms, while both contend To win her grace, whom all commend.
Page 328 - There was no example of any such manners remaining on the face of the Earth: And as they never did subsist but once, and are never likely to subsist again, people would be led of course to think and speak of them, as romantic, and unnatural.
Page 207 - ... knights, as to give birth to the attentions of gallantry. But this gallantry would take a refined turn, not only from the...
Page 260 - And without more words you will readily apprehend that the fancies of our modern bards are not only more gallant, but, on a change of the scene, more sublime, more terrible, more alarming than those of the classic fablers. In a word, you will find that the manners they paint, and the superstitions they adopt, are the more poetical for being Gothic.
Page 267 - When an architect examines a Gothic structure by Grecian rules, he finds nothing but deformity. But the Gothic architecture has its own rules, by which when it comes to be examined, it is seen to have its merit, as well as the Grecian.
Page 259 - The ancients have not much of this poetry among them ; for, indeed, almost the whole substance of it owes its original to the darkness and superstition of later ages, when pious frauds were made use of to amuse mankind, and frighten them into a sense of their duty.
Page 272 - ... ideas of Unity, which have no place here; and are in every view foreign to the...
Page 279 - ... his critics seem not to have been aware of it — His chief hero was not to have the twelve virtues in the degree in which the knights had each of them their own...
Page 207 - Virtue fhould be plentifully found, Which of all goodly manners is the ground And roote of civil converfation : Right fo in faery court it did refound, Where courteous knights and ladies moft did won Of all on earth, and made a matchlefs paragon.
Page 247 - I mean the poetry we still read, and which was founded upon it. Much has been said, and with great truth, of the felicity of Homer's age for poetical manners. But as Homer was a citizen of the world, when he had...