A Dictionary of Quotations in Prose: From American and Foreign Authors, Including Translations from Ancient SourcesAnna Lydia Ward T. Y. Crowell, 1889 - 701 Seiten |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-5 von 87
Seite
... book itself renders its use easy to the ordinary reader . A chronological table gives the place and year of the ... books from which quotations have been made in this work . The analytical index , embracing more than ten thousand ...
... book itself renders its use easy to the ordinary reader . A chronological table gives the place and year of the ... books from which quotations have been made in this work . The analytical index , embracing more than ten thousand ...
Seite 28
... Books . New England Two Centuries Ago . Kindness out of season destroys authority . 287 Saadi : The Gulistan . Ch ... book without meaning something , though he may not have the faculty of writing consequentially , and expressing his ...
... Books . New England Two Centuries Ago . Kindness out of season destroys authority . 287 Saadi : The Gulistan . Ch ... book without meaning something , though he may not have the faculty of writing consequentially , and expressing his ...
Seite 29
... book made , renders succession to the author ; for as long as the book exists , the author remaining auratos , immortal , cannot perish . 289 Richard Aungerryle ( Richard de Bury ) : Philobiblon . The pen is the tongue of the hand : a ...
... book made , renders succession to the author ; for as long as the book exists , the author remaining auratos , immortal , cannot perish . 289 Richard Aungerryle ( Richard de Bury ) : Philobiblon . The pen is the tongue of the hand : a ...
Seite 30
... Books . It is not easy for a man to speak of his own books . 301 Dickens : Speeches , Literary and Social . III . Feb. 1 , 1842 . An author is a solitary being , who , for the same reason he pleases one , must consequently displease ...
... Books . It is not easy for a man to speak of his own books . 301 Dickens : Speeches , Literary and Social . III . Feb. 1 , 1842 . An author is a solitary being , who , for the same reason he pleases one , must consequently displease ...
Seite 31
... books asks himself some time in his life , and which must be par- doned because it cannot be helped . 316 Leigh Hunt : The Literary Examiner . My Books . 1823 . The only happy author in this world is he who is below the care of ...
... books asks himself some time in his life , and which must be par- doned because it cannot be helped . 316 Leigh Hunt : The Literary Examiner . My Books . 1823 . The only happy author in this world is he who is below the care of ...
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
A. W. Hare Amiel B. R. Haydon beauty Ben Jonson Ben-Hur Benjamin Franklin Books Boswell's Bronson Alcott Bruyère Carlyle character Christian Daniel Webster Disraeli Earl Earl of Beaconsfield Epictetus Friendship genius George Birkbeck George Birkbeck Hill George Eliot Gold-Foil Guesses at Truth Hapgood happiness Hazlitt heart Henry Ward Beecher human Humphrey Ward Imaginary Conversations Isaac Disraeli J. C. and A. W. James Abram Garfield Johnson Joseph Roux King Henry labor Landor Lectures Letters and Social Lew Wallace liberty Lowell mind Moral Maxims nature never Note-Book Orations Oxford edition Parish Priest Plymouth Pulpit poet Poetry Poor Richard's Almanac Proverbs from Plymouth religion Rochefoucauld Ruskin Sentences and Moral Sermons Shakespeare soul Speech Table Talk Talks on Familiar things Thomas thou Thoughts Timothy Titcomb J. G. Titcomb J. G. Holland Trans Translator Victor Hugo virtue William Ellery Channing wisdom