The Works of Richard Bentley, D. D.F. Macpherson, 1836 - 402 páginas |
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Æsop Agrigentum apud Archelaus Aristotle Athenæus Athens atque Attic Attic talent autem Bekk.-D brass Diodorus drachms Emend enim Epistles etiam Eurip Euripides extant fable fabula fuisse Græcis Greek hæc Hemst.-D Hesychius hunc illud ipse Laërt lege Letters litra litræ loco locum Lucian mihi neque obolus Olymp ounces passage Pausanias Phalaris Phalaris's Plato Plutarch poet Pollux Pythagoras quæ quam quid quidem quod says Schol Scholiast Schw.-D sestertius shew Sicilian Sicilian talent Sicily Socrates Sophist Stesichorus Suidas sunt suppose tamen tells true Tyrant verba vero Verum vide Vulgo word writ writing ἀπὸ αὐτοῦ γὰρ δὲ διὰ εἶναι εἰς ἐκ ἐν ἐν τῷ ἐξ ἐπὶ Εὐριπίδης Ἴων καὶ κατὰ μὲν μετὰ μὴ οἱ ὅτι οὐ οὐκ παρὰ περὶ πρὸς τὰ τὰς τε τῇ τὴν τῆς τὸ τοῖς τὸν τοῦ τοὺς τῶν ὡς
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Página 133 - I think he must have little skill in painting, that cannot find out this to be an original ; such diversity of passions, upon such variety of actions and passages of life and government, such freedom of thought, such boldness of expression, such bounty to his friends, such scorn of his enemies, such honour of learned men, such esteem of good, such knowledge of life, such contempt of death, with such fierceness of nature and cruelty of revenge, could never be represented but by him that possessed...
Página 133 - Phalaris to have more Race, more Spirit, more Force of Wit and Genius than any others I have ever seen, either Ancient or Modern.
Página 183 - Tis observable, that every one of the letters bear date after his banishment, and contain a complete narrative ol N 2 ISO ENGLISH GRAMMAR. (Rule SJ all his story afterwards ;" it oaghttobe "bears" and
Página 13 - Latin words which we have transplanted into our own soil ; which being now in a manner exhausted, one may easily presage that it will not have such changes in the two next centuries. Nay, it were no difficult contrivance, if the public had any regard to it, to make the English tongue immutable ; unless hereafter some foreign nation shall invade and over-run us.
Página 133 - Politian with some others have attributed them to Lucian : but I think he must have little skill in painting, that cannot find out this to be an original ; such diversity of passions upon such variety of actions and passages of life and government, such freedom of thought, such boldness of expression, such bounty to his friends, such scorn of his enemies...
Página 133 - Fables and Phalaris's Epistles, both living near the same time, which was that of Cyrus and Pythagoras. As the first has been agreed by all ages since for the greatest master in his kind, and all others of that sort have been but...
Página 84 - When you return to these again, you feel, by the emptiness and deadness of them, that you converse with some dreaming pedant with his elbow on his desk; not with an active, ambitious tyrant, with his hand on his sword, commanding a million of subjects.
Página 133 - ... expression, such bounty to his friends, such scorn of his enemies, such honour of learned men, such esteem of good, such knowledge of life, such contempt of death, with such fierceness of nature and cruelty of revenge, could never be represented but by him that possessed them; and I esteem Lucian to have been no more capable of writing than of acting what Phalaris did. In all one writ, you find the scholar or the sophist; and in all the other, the tyrant and the commander.
Página 171 - Near two thousand of his letters, a mode of composition in which Libanius was thought to excel, are still extant, and already published. The critics may praise their subtle and elegant brevity; yet Dr Bentley (Dissertation upon Phalaris, p.
Página 1 - Every living language, like the perspiring bodies of living creatures, is in perpetual motion and alteration ; some words go off, and become obsolete ; others are taken in, and by degrees grow into common use ; or the same word is inverted to a new sense and notion, which in tract of time makes as observable a change in the air and features of a language, as age makes in the lines and mien of a face.