Memoir of the Rev. Henry Francis Cary, M. A., Translator of Dante: With His Literary Journal and Letters, Volume 1E. Moxon, 1847 |
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Page x
... Birch and Mr. Digby . -Literary Journal for 1797. - Letter to his Wife PAGL 85 CHAPTER IV . 1798-1800 . Death of his Father's Second Wife . - Letter to his Wife.- Sermons . - Letters to his Wife and Mr. Price . - Literary Journal for ...
... Birch and Mr. Digby . -Literary Journal for 1797. - Letter to his Wife PAGL 85 CHAPTER IV . 1798-1800 . Death of his Father's Second Wife . - Letter to his Wife.- Sermons . - Letters to his Wife and Mr. Price . - Literary Journal for ...
Page xi
... Birch , and to his Wife . - Settles in the neighbourhood of London .-- Appointed reader at Berkeley Chapel . - Letter to his Father . - Literary Journal for 1811 and 1812 PAGE 226 CHAPTER VII . 1813-1815 . Mr. Cary resigns the ...
... Birch , and to his Wife . - Settles in the neighbourhood of London .-- Appointed reader at Berkeley Chapel . - Letter to his Father . - Literary Journal for 1811 and 1812 PAGE 226 CHAPTER VII . 1813-1815 . Mr. Cary resigns the ...
Page 39
... Birch , then demy , afterwards fellow of Magdalen College , Edward Bullock , Charles Digby ( late canon of Windsor ) , and William Digby ( now prebendary of Worcester ) , all of Christ Church . The few letters that remain of his ...
... Birch , then demy , afterwards fellow of Magdalen College , Edward Bullock , Charles Digby ( late canon of Windsor ) , and William Digby ( now prebendary of Worcester ) , all of Christ Church . The few letters that remain of his ...
Page 40
... Birch being at Magdalen . Price came to college later , and was but for a short time one of the set . Birch indeed had the highest opinion of your father's talents and acquirements ; but used to con- tend with him a good deal in ...
... Birch being at Magdalen . Price came to college later , and was but for a short time one of the set . Birch indeed had the highest opinion of your father's talents and acquirements ; but used to con- tend with him a good deal in ...
Page 41
... Birch saw both his English and his Latin , and thought he had only failed , because his Latin was a translation of his English ; not therefore so much thought in Latin . The dean , in talking to him about it , seemed to criticise his ...
... Birch saw both his English and his Latin , and thought he had only failed , because his Latin was a translation of his English ; not therefore so much thought in Latin . The dean , in talking to him about it , seemed to criticise his ...
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Abbots-Bromley Adieu admirable Adone affectionate Apollonius Apollonius Rhodius appears Aristophanes asino beautiful Began book believe brother Cannock canto chap Coleshill Concluded Continued Anacharsis Continued Burnet Continued Clarendon Continued Froissart Continued Muratori Continued Tiraboschi Cowper's Dante dear Birch DEAR GEORGINA DEAR JANE DEAR PRICE DEAREST JANE death delight dialogue Digby Dionysius Halicarnassensis edition end of book Epistle Eschylus Euripides expected faithful father Finished following letter Froissart give glad Greek H. F. CARY happy hear Herodotus hope Inferno Italian June Kingsbury l'asino Latin Lichfield LITERARY JOURNAL Milton mind MISS SEWARD month morning Muse night passage perhaps Pindar Plato pleasure poem poet poetical poetry Purgatorio Read canto remarkable Rhodius Sermons SISTER GEORGINA sonnet soon Sophocles spirits suppose tell thee Theocritus THOMAS PRICE thou thought Thucydides tion Tiraboschi to-morrow translation Vecchio verse Voltaire volume week wife wish write
Popular passages
Page 197 - By heaven, methinks it were an easy leap, To pluck bright honour from the pale-faced moon, Or dive into the bottom of the deep, Where fathom-line could never touch the ground, And pluck up drowned honour by the locks...
Page 211 - For there are in nature certain fountains of justice, whence all civil laws are derived but as streams : and like as waters do take tinctures and tastes from the soils through which they run, so do civil laws vary according to the regions and governments where they are planted, though they proceed from the same fountains.
Page 165 - For he whom God hath sent speaketh the words of God : for God giveth not the Spirit by measure unto him.
Page 211 - Necesse est ut eam, tion ut vivam : but it may be truly affirmed that there was never any philosophy, religion, or other discipline, which did so plainly and highly exalt the good which is communicative...
Page 183 - By that its.ill-deservings are to be measured, — not by the narrowness of the limits, either of time or place, within which the good providence of God hath confined its power of doing mischief. If, on any ground, it were safe to indulge a hope that the suffering of the wicked may have an end, it would be upon the principle adopted by the great Origen, and by other eminent examples of learning and piety which our own times have seen,— that the actual endurance of punishment in the next life will...
Page 165 - IN the midway1 of this our mortal life, I found me in a gloomy wood, astray Gone from the path direct : and e'en to tell, It were no easy task, how savage wild That forest, how robust and rough its growth, Which to remember only, my dismay Renews, in bitterness not far from death. Yet, to discourse of what there good befel, All else will I relate discover'd there.
Page 38 - I much wonder that you should listen to the idea, that a fondness for Italian poetry is the corruption of our taste, when you cannot but recollect that our greatest English poets, Chaucer, Spenser, and Milton have been professed admirers of the Italians, and that the sublimer province of poetry, imagination, has been more or less cultivated among us, according to the degree of estimation in which they have been held.
Page 22 - The pruner's voice the pleasing dream prolongs, Stock-doves and turtles tell their amorous pain, And, from the lofty elms, of love complain.
Page 184 - ... the next life will produce effects to which the apprehension of it in this had been insufficient, and end, after a long course of ages, in the reformation of the worst characters. But the principle that this effect is possible — that the heart may be reclaimed by force, is at best precarious ; and the only safe principle of human conduct is the belief, that unrepented sin will suffer endless punishment hereafter.