Characteristicks of Men, Manners, Opinions, Times: In Three Volumes, Volume 3John Darby in Bartholomew-close, 1732 - Ethics |
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Page 23
... Interest of a whole World concern'd ; He furely muft have been efteem'd a Guardian - Angel , who , as a prime Minifter , cou'd , for feveral Years , turn the very worst of Courts , and worst - condition'd of all Princes , to the ...
... Interest of a whole World concern'd ; He furely muft have been efteem'd a Guardian - Angel , who , as a prime Minifter , cou'd , for feveral Years , turn the very worst of Courts , and worst - condition'd of all Princes , to the ...
Page 101
... Interest , their Humour , or their Paffion ; ' tis no extraor- dinary Cafe to fee ' em enter into fuch a Plot as this against their own Understand- Vol . 3 . H ings , Mifc . 2.ings , and endeavour by all poffible means REFLECTIONS . 101 ...
... Interest , their Humour , or their Paffion ; ' tis no extraor- dinary Cafe to fee ' em enter into fuch a Plot as this against their own Understand- Vol . 3 . H ings , Mifc . 2.ings , and endeavour by all poffible means REFLECTIONS . 101 ...
Page 107
... Interest of " his own . " IN common Matters of Difpute , the angry Difputant makes the best Cause to appear the worst . A Clown once took a fancy to hear the Latin Difputes of Doc- tors at a Univerfity . He was ask'd what : pleasure he ...
... Interest of " his own . " IN common Matters of Difpute , the angry Difputant makes the best Cause to appear the worst . A Clown once took a fancy to hear the Latin Difputes of Doc- tors at a Univerfity . He was ask'd what : pleasure he ...
Page 112
... INTEREST , " and worldly EMULATION . " COME we now ( as authentick Rhe- toricians exprefs themselves ) to our Second Head : which we fhou'd again subdivide into Firfts and Seconds , but that this man- ner of carving is of late days ...
... INTEREST , " and worldly EMULATION . " COME we now ( as authentick Rhe- toricians exprefs themselves ) to our Second Head : which we fhou'd again subdivide into Firfts and Seconds , but that this man- ner of carving is of late days ...
Page 171
... Interests to a Crown , or to the private Will , Appe- tite , or Pleasure of a Prince . For fuppo- fing fuch a Genius as this had been to act his Part of Courtship in fome foreign and abfolute Court ; how much lefs infamous wou'd his ...
... Interests to a Crown , or to the private Will , Appe- tite , or Pleasure of a Prince . For fuppo- fing fuch a Genius as this had been to act his Part of Courtship in fome foreign and abfolute Court ; how much lefs infamous wou'd his ...
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Common terms and phrases
abfolute Affection againſt allow'd anſwer antient Author Beauty befides beſt Cafe call'd Caufe Cauſe Character Chriftian Church Conftitution cou'd Criticks Defign Difcourfe Divine eafily Enthufiafm eſtabliſh'd Eſtabliſhment facred faid Faith fame Fancy fays feems felf felves fhall fhew fhou'd fide fince fingle firft firſt fome form'd fpeaking ftill fuch fufficient fure Genius greateſt Hiftory higheſt himſelf holy Humour ibid Intereft it-felf juft juſt kind laft leaft leaſt lefs Letter Liberty Mankind manner Maſters Meaſure Mifc Miſc moft moral moſt muft muſt Nation natural neceffarily neceffary neceffity Number occafion our-felves Paffion Perfon perhaps Philofophers Piece Pleaſure Poet poffibly prefent Publick racter raiſe Reader Reaſon refpect Religion religious reprefent Senfe ſtill ſuch Tablature thefe themſelves theſe thing thofe thor thoſe thought thro tion Treatife Truth Twas Underſtanding uſe VIRTUE whilft whofe World wou'd Writing Zeal δὲ καὶ τὸ
Popular passages
Page 260 - Tis not the Possible, but the Probable and Likely, which must be the Poet's Guide in Manners. By this he wins Attention, and moves the conscious Reader or Spectator; who judges best from within, by what he naturally feels and experiences in his own Heart. The Perfection of Virtue is from long Art and Management, Self-controul, and, as it were, Force on Nature.
Page 180 - ... from the perfection of Nature in her just adapting of every limb and proportion to the activity, strength, dexterity, life and vigour of the particular species or animal designed.
Page 262 - We see in outward carriage and behaviour how ridiculous any one becomes who imitates another, be he ever so graceful. They are mean spirits who love to copy merely, nothing is agreeable or natural but what is original. Our manners, like our faces, though ever so beautiful, must differ in their beauty.
Page 140 - ... wrought out of nature and drawn from the necessary operation and course of things, working, as it were, of their own accord and proper inclination.
Page 164 - ... is formed of all this management and the clear notion we attain of what is preferable and principal in all these subjects of choice and estimation will not, as I imagine, by any person be taken for innate. Use, practice and culture must precede the understanding and wit of such an advanced size and growth as this.
Page 26 - The just composer of a legitimate piece is like an able traveller, who exactly measures his journey, considers his ground, premeditates his stages and intervals of relaxation and intention to the very conclusion of his undertaking, that he happily arrives where he first proposed when he set out.
Page 333 - I fay, let us fuppofe, that in this ftate of things, one or more of the moft Eminent then in the Church, either out of Defign, or out of fuperftitious...
Page 177 - But such is the nature of the liberal, polished, and refined part of mankind. So far are they from the mere simplicity of babes and sucklings that, instead of applying the notion of a future reward or...
Page 285 - Jcholaftical, under the appearance of a polite Work. It afpires to Dialogue, and carrys
Page 183 - Will it not be found in this respect, above all, "that what is beautiful is harmonious and proportionable'; what is harmonious and proportionable is true; and what is at once both beautiful and true is, of consequence, agreeable and good"?