The works of Alexander Pope, with notes and illustrations, by himself and others. To which are added, a new life of the author [&c.] by W. Roscoe, Volume 71847 |
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Página 12
... talk , and I speak as I think ; and am , with great sincerity , Your , & c . SIR , LETTER XVII . MR . POPE TO MR . DENNIS . May 3 , 1721 . I CALLED to receive the two books of your letters from Mr. Congreve , and have left with him the ...
... talk , and I speak as I think ; and am , with great sincerity , Your , & c . SIR , LETTER XVII . MR . POPE TO MR . DENNIS . May 3 , 1721 . I CALLED to receive the two books of your letters from Mr. Congreve , and have left with him the ...
Página 21
... talk so vain , That held my sorrows in so soft a chain ? A sleep so sweet I never could enjoy Since my dear lord left Ithaca for Troy : Curs'd Troy - oh ! why did I thy name disclose ? Thy fatal name awakens all my woes : But fly - some ...
... talk so vain , That held my sorrows in so soft a chain ? A sleep so sweet I never could enjoy Since my dear lord left Ithaca for Troy : Curs'd Troy - oh ! why did I thy name disclose ? Thy fatal name awakens all my woes : But fly - some ...
Página 33
... talking upon paper , may indeed prove me a fool , but it will prove me one of the best sort of fools , the honest ones . And since what folly we have will infallibly buoy up at one time or other in spite of all our art to keep it down ...
... talking upon paper , may indeed prove me a fool , but it will prove me one of the best sort of fools , the honest ones . And since what folly we have will infallibly buoy up at one time or other in spite of all our art to keep it down ...
Página 45
... talks of you as he ought , I mean as I do , and one always thinks that to be just as it ought . His health and mine are now so good , that we wish with all our souls you were a witness of it . We never meet but we lament over you : we ...
... talks of you as he ought , I mean as I do , and one always thinks that to be just as it ought . His health and mine are now so good , that we wish with all our souls you were a witness of it . We never meet but we lament over you : we ...
Página 47
... talk of , you would really think it a foolish good kind of thing , with some qualities as well deserving to be half laughed at , and half esteemed , as any in the world : its grand foible , in regard you , is the most like reason of any ...
... talk of , you would really think it a foolish good kind of thing , with some qualities as well deserving to be half laughed at , and half esteemed , as any in the world : its grand foible , in regard you , is the most like reason of any ...
Termos e frases comuns
acquaintance Adieu admire agreeable appears assure Atterbury Basha beauty Belgrade believe BISHOP OF ROCHESTER Bowles Circassian compliment Congreve Constantinople conversation copy Countess of Tripoly DEAR SIR death deserve desire DIGBY Dunciad edition entertain esteem expect eyes faithful fancy favour friendship give glad Gorboduc happy hear heart Homer honour hope Hughes Hungary imagine Janissaries journey kind LADY MARY WORTLEY least letter LINTOT live look Lord Lord Bathurst Madam manner MARY WORTLEY MONTAGU melancholy methinks mind nature never night obliged occasion opinion pass pleased pleasure poet poetical poetry Pope Pope's Pray published reason received Sarah Drew sent servant Siege of Damascus sincere soul spirit sure talk taste tell thing thought told town translation truth Turkish language Twickenham Twitenham verses Vienna virtue Warton wish word write
Passagens mais conhecidas
Página 211 - His figure was beautiful ; but his manner was irresistible, by either man or woman. It was by this engaging, graceful manner, that he was enabled, during all his war, to connect the various and jarring powers of the Grand Alliance, and to carry them on to the main object of the war, notwithstanding their private and separate views, jealousies, and wrongheadednesses.
Página 94 - I received the news of Mr. Addison's being declared secretary of state with the less surprise, in that I know that post was almost offered to him before. At that time he declined it, and [I] really believe that he would have done well to have declined it now. Such a post as that, and such a wife as the countess, do not seem to be, in prudence, eligible for a man that is asthmatic, and we may see the day...
Página 404 - In regard to the right honourable lady (says he, in the letter to Lord Hervey,) your lordship's friend, I was far from designing a person of her condition by a name so derogatory to her as that of Sappho, a name prostituted to every infamous creature that ever wrote verse or novels. I protest I never applied that name to her in any verse of mine, public or private, and I firmly believe not in any letter or conversation. Whoever could invent a falsehood to support an accusation, I pity; and whoever...
Página 38 - You may easily imagine how desirous I must be of a correspondence with a person who had taught me long ago, that it was as possible to esteem at first sight as to love ; and who has since ruined me for all the conversation of one sex, and almost all the friendship of the other. I am but too sensible, through your means, that the company of men wants a certain softness to recommend it, and that of women wants everything else.
Página 207 - English stages, and it is only by a blind confidence in the reputation of Milton that a drama can be praised in which the intermediate parts have neither cause nor consequence, neither hasten nor retard the catastrophe.
Página 9 - Mr. Addison desired me to tell you that he wholly disapproves the manner of treating Mr. Dennis in a little pamphlet by way of Dr. Norris's account. When he thinks fit to take notice of Mr. Dennis's objections to his writings, he will do it in a way Mr. Dennis shall have no just reason to complain of.
Página 152 - I have made them : my building rises high enough to attract the eye and curiosity of the passenger from the river, where, upon beholding a mixture of beauty and ruin, he...
Página 105 - I have a mind to fill the rest of this paper with an accident that happened just under my eyes, and has made a great impression upon me. I have just passed part of this summer at an old romantic seat of my Lord Harcourt's, which he lent me. It overlooks a common-field, where, under the shade of a haycock, sat two lovers, as constant as ever were found in romance, beneath a spreading beech. The name of the one (let it sound as it will) was John Hewet; of the other, Sarah Drew. John was a well-set...
Página 42 - Amphitrion's taylor, and cheats him of a laced coat, and his banker of a bag of money, a Jew of...
Página 81 - I read over your Homer here with an infinite pleasure, and find several little passages explained, that I did not before entirely comprehend the beauty of: many of the customs, and much of the dress then in fashion, being yet retained. I...