The Microcosm: A Periodical Work, Volume 1John Smith, George Canning, Robert Percy Smith, John Hookham Frere C. Knight, 1809 |
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Page 5
... whole range , the inexhaustible fund of topics , which every event in life , every passion , every object present , lie before me ; add to these , the stores which history , reading , and morality , or the offspring of a muse just ...
... whole range , the inexhaustible fund of topics , which every event in life , every passion , every object present , lie before me ; add to these , the stores which history , reading , and morality , or the offspring of a muse just ...
Page 6
... whole extent of his abilities to circumvent his companions at their plays , or adjusting the important differences , which may arise between the con- tending heroes of his little circle ; or a general , the future terror of France and ...
... whole extent of his abilities to circumvent his companions at their plays , or adjusting the important differences , which may arise between the con- tending heroes of his little circle ; or a general , the future terror of France and ...
Page 14
... whole in his Majesty's service . So habitual indeed was this custom become to an officer of my acquaintance , that though he had lost one of his eyes in the defence of his country , he could not forego his favourite execration , but ...
... whole in his Majesty's service . So habitual indeed was this custom become to an officer of my acquaintance , that though he had lost one of his eyes in the defence of his country , he could not forego his favourite execration , but ...
Page 22
... harmonious cadence in my organs of elocution . " IIinc mihi prima mali labes : Hence the first origin of all my ill : " For when in return to the extravagant polite ness of the whole room , I began to attempt 22 No. III . MICROCOSM .
... harmonious cadence in my organs of elocution . " IIinc mihi prima mali labes : Hence the first origin of all my ill : " For when in return to the extravagant polite ness of the whole room , I began to attempt 22 No. III . MICROCOSM .
Page 23
... whole room , I began to attempt something like a compliment , it had so visible an effect on the nerves of my ... whole a lounging creeter . " Upon my bowing , a general silence ensued , till one of the com- pany , in a voice which left ...
... whole room , I began to attempt something like a compliment , it had so visible an effect on the nerves of my ... whole a lounging creeter . " Upon my bowing , a general silence ensued , till one of the com- pany , in a voice which left ...
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Common terms and phrases
admiration allusions Apathist attention barbarous Cæsar character Cicero conjecture consider countenance DEAR GREG Demosthenes Dryden effects elegant empire endeavour Epic poem equally Eton extravagant fame favour FEBRUARY 12 fellow-citizens genius glory GREGORY GRIFFIN Half past heart hero hint honor hope human idea Iliad illustrious immediately indulgence Juvenal kind Knave language lazy lakes letter liberty lounge Lucullus luxury Majesty mankind ment merit MICROCOSMOPOLITAN mind MONDAY muse Narcissus nature never NOTES to CORRESPONDENTS o'er oaths object observed opinion Ovid paper passion perhaps Pericles period Phidias Plato pleasing pleasure poet poetry Pope possessed praise precepts present pride principle proceed racter readers reflect retrograde motion ridiculous Roman ruins shifting sail society Sophocles soul superior suppose swear Tacitus tarts taste tell thing thro tion Tom Long Trajan Turkish Crescent Virgil virtues wish Your's
Popular passages
Page 100 - The Queen of Hearts, she made some tarts, All on a summer day: The Knave of Hearts, he stole those tarts, And took them quite away!
Page 6 - ... the leading features of the mind. He may see the embryo statesman, who hereafter may wield and direct at pleasure the mighty and complex system of European Politics, now employing the whole extent of his abilities to circumvent his companions at their plays, or adjusting the important differences, which may arise between the contending...
Page 116 - Do, pious marble, let thy readers know What they, and what their children owe To DRAYTON'S name, whose sacred dust We recommend unto thy trust. Protect his memory, and preserve his story : Remain a lasting monument of his glory ; And when thy ruins shall disclaim To be the treasurer of his name, His name that cannot fade shall be An everlasting monument to thee.] " Read ' Ml ' [Michael ?]. 1 Of Anderson's Life.
Page 45 - Thy sons (sad change !) in abject bondage sigh ; Unpitied toil, and unlamented die. Groan at the labours of the galling oar, Or the dark caverns of the mine explore. The glittering tyranny of Othman's sons, The pomp of horror which surrounds their thrones, Has awed their servile spirits into fear ; Spurned by the foot, they tremble and revere.
Page 94 - For the proof of which, I shall rather prefer calling the attention of my readers to an object, as yet untreated of by any of my immediate predecessors, than venture to throw in my observations on any work which has before passed the ordeal of frequent examination. And this I shall do for two reasons ; partly, because were I to choose a field, how fertile soever, of which many others had before me been reaping the fruits, mine would be at best but the gleanings of criticism; and partly, from a more...
Page 14 - It has been observed by some ancient philosopher, or poet, or moralist (no matter which), that nothing could be more pernicious to mankind, than the fulfilling of their own wishes. And in truth I am inclined to be of his opinion ; for many a friend of mine, many a. fellow-citizen of this lesser world, would, had his own heedless imprecations on himself taken effect, long ere this have groaned under the complication of almost every calamity capable of entering a human imagination. And with regard...
Page 154 - As the young olive, in some sylvan scene, Crown'd by fresh fountains with eternal green, Lifts the gay head, in snowy flowrets fair, And plays and dances to the gentle air; When lo ! a whirlwind from high heaven invades The tender plant, and...
Page 6 - Politics, now employing the whole extent of his ahilities to circumvent his companions at their plays, or adjusting the important differences, which may arise between the contending heroes of his little circle ; or a general, the future terror of France and Spain, now the dread only of his equals, and the undisputed lord and president of the boxing-ring.
Page 76 - ... dependence are felt or understood, the savage, elate with the idea of absolute independence, and unacquainted with all the advantages which accompany the arts of society, looks down with supreme contempt on a state whose every individual is entirely dependent upon and connected with the community. The wretched Esquimaux give themselves the exclusive title of men, and the Indian of North America, bestows on the Europeans, as compared with himself, the epithet of the accursed race. In a state of...
Page 74 - ... each a bullock and a ram, and attempting to curse the army of the hero, in imitation of Balaam, and with the same success. Dryden himself is strongly tinctured with the taste of the times ; and those Dalilahs of the Town, to use his own expression, are plentifully scattered throughout his works, esteemed in the present age for those passages only in which he ventured to oppose his own taste to that of his readers, and which have already past the ordeal of unmerited censure.