| François de Salignac de La Mothe- Fénelon - 1810 - 184 páginas
...would not hinder you from driving him out of your commonwealth. You would say to him, ' Go choose * Who can behold, without indignation, how many mists...have brought on our knowledge >. how many rewards, that are due to more profitable and difficult arts, huve been still snatched away by the easy vani'y... | |
| George Campbell - 1832 - 320 páginas
...useless poetry, how can you show any favour to those* declaimers who talk only to show their parts 1 * Who can behold, without indignation, how many mists...have brought on our knowledge ? how many rewards, that are due to more profitable and difficult arts, have been still snatched away by the easy vanity... | |
| Sir Henry Craik - 1894 - 648 páginas
...passions : they give the mind a motion too changeable and bewitching to consist with right practice. Who can behold without indignation how many mists...have brought on our knowledge ? How many rewards, which are due to more profitable and difficult arts, have been still snatched away by the easy vanity... | |
| Sir Henry Craik - 1894 - 648 páginas
...passions : they give the mind a motion too changeable and bewitching to consist with right practice. Who can behold without indignation how many mists...have brought on our knowledge ? How many rewards, which are due to more profitable and difficult arts, have been still snatched away by the easy vanity... | |
| Sir Walter Alexander Raleigh, Walter Raleigh - 1894 - 322 páginas
...chief and most inveterate of the evils which the Society has to combat. "Who can behold," he exclaims, "without indignation, how many mists and uncertainties...tropes and figures have brought on our knowledge?" The "beautiful deceit," from use and education, has come to be esteemed, and a drastic remedy is needed.... | |
| Joel Elias Spingarn - 1908 - 376 páginas
...Passions; they give the mind a motion too changeable and bewitching to consist with right practice. Who can behold without indignation how many mists...these specious Tropes and Figures have brought on 5 our knowledg? How many rewards which are due to more profitable and difficult Arts have been still... | |
| Sir Henry Craik - 1917 - 648 páginas
...passions : they give the mind a motion too changeable and bewitching to consist with right practice. Who can behold without indignation how many mists...have brought on our knowledge ? How many rewards, which are due to more profitable and difficult arts, have been still snatched away by the easy vanity... | |
| Paul Milton Fulcher - 1927 - 336 páginas
...passions: they give the mind a motion too changeable and bewitching to consist with right practice. Who can behold without indignation how many mists...figures have brought on our knowledge? How many rewards, which are due to more profitable and difficult arts, have been still snatched away by the easy vanity... | |
| Robert L. Montgomery - 2010 - 229 páginas
...Passions; they give the mind a motion too changeable and bewitching to consist with right practice. Who can behold without indignation how many mists...TroPes and Figures have brought on our knowledge?" 3 Normally, English Translation, ed. Scott EBedge and Donal d Schier, rev. ed, (Ithaca: Cornell University... | |
| Thomas Krusche - 1987 - 384 páginas
...Passions; they give the mind a motion too changeable, and bewitching, to consist with right practice. Who can behold, without Indignation, how many mists...these specious Tropes and Figures have brought on our knowledge?28 Im geistigen Klima der "Restoration" verliert Dichtung jeden Wert als Erkenntnisquelle,... | |
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