| Alexander Pope - 1824 - 596 páginas
...act of the farce. Might not my life* be entitled much more properly a Whatd'ye-call-it than a farce ? some comedy, a great deal of tragedy, and the whole interspersed with * Bolingbroke is reported, in a letter written to Pouilly, to have said, " You, and I, and Pope, are... | |
| Samuel Taylor Coleridge - 1836 - 274 páginas
...knave, and he makes me no amends; he numbs me like the torpor or teases me like a fly. * * •* * " I used to think sometimes formerly of old age and...anticipate sorrow, to dash the joys of youth, and be all my life a dying. I find the benefit of- this practice now, and find it more as I proceed on... | |
| Samuel Taylor Coleridge - 1836 - 286 páginas
...and he makes me no amends ; he numbs me like the torpor or teases me like a fly. # * * * " I vised to think sometimes formerly of old age and of death...anticipate sorrow, to dash the joys of youth, and be all my life a dying. I find the benefit of this practice now, and find it more as I proceed on my... | |
| Alexander Pope - 1847 - 480 páginas
...poem printed, is curious. It is written to Dodington : — properly a What-d'ye-catt-it than a farce ? some comedy, a great deal of tragedy, and the whole...Scaramouch, and Dr. Baloardo, the prototype of your hero. I used to think sometimes formerly of old age and of death : enough to prepare my mind ; not enough... | |
| Samuel Taylor Coleridge - 1858 - 274 páginas
...the knave, and he makes me no amends ; he numbs me like the torpor or teases me like a fly. ****** " I used to think sometimes formerly of old age and...anticipate sorrow, to dash the joys of youth, and be all my life a dying. I find the benefit of this practice now, and find it more as I proceed on my... | |
| 1858 - 674 páginas
...confines itself to the human and psychological ?): " I' used to think sometimes formerly of old age and death; enough to prepare my mind; not enough to anticipate...sorrow, to dash the joys of youth, and to be all my life a dying. I find the benefit of this practice now, and find it more as I proceed on my journey : little... | |
| 1864 - 672 páginas
...life," adds accomplished St. John, " be entitled much more properly a what-d'ye-call-it than a farce ? Some comedy, a great deal of tragedy, and the whole...scenes of Harlequin, Scaramouch, and Dr. Baloardo."} Accomplished St. John was always, and to the last, an accomplished actor. As for Dr. Swift, he expanded... | |
| Francis Jacox - 1870 - 432 páginas
...life," adds accomplished St. John, '-' be entitled much more properly a what-d'ye-call-it than a farce? Some comedy, a great deal of tragedy, and the whole...scenes of Harlequin, Scaramouch, and Dr. Baloardo." Accomplished St. John was always, and to the last an accomplished actor. As for Dr. Swift, he expanded... | |
| Francis Jacox - 1870 - 550 páginas
...life," adds accomplished St. John, " be entitled much more properly a what-d'ye-call-it than a farce? Some comedy, a great deal of tragedy, and the whole...scenes of Harlequin, Scaramouch, and Dr. Baloardo." Accomplished St. John was always, and to the last an accomplished actor. As for Dr. Swift, he expanded... | |
| Alexander Pope - 1871 - 532 páginas
...he sustains the character dies. The doctor was always the per- to perfection in this pompous, empty of death ; enough to prepare my mind, not enough to...sorrow, to dash the joys of youth, and to be all my life a- dying. I find the benefit of this practice now, and find it more as I proceed on my journey : little... | |
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