The Port Folio, Band 2Editor and Asbury Dickens, 1809 |
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Seite 3
... taste and understanding of the reader . In the midst of this uncertainty , Mr. Walker appears to have sug- gested a good criterion . " The principal circumstance , " says he , " that distinguishes em- phatical words from others , seems ...
... taste and understanding of the reader . In the midst of this uncertainty , Mr. Walker appears to have sug- gested a good criterion . " The principal circumstance , " says he , " that distinguishes em- phatical words from others , seems ...
Seite 20
... taste , not often derived from , or associated with those studies , which he more particularly cultivates . But we had not advan- ced far with our critical examination , before we became satisfied that these impressions , had been ...
... taste , not often derived from , or associated with those studies , which he more particularly cultivates . But we had not advan- ced far with our critical examination , before we became satisfied that these impressions , had been ...
Seite 21
... taste , nice and discriminating . Like a genuine eclectic , he has selected , with intelligence and judg- ment , from the stores accumulated by his diligence , and digested the parts , thus carefully collated , into a whole , which ...
... taste , nice and discriminating . Like a genuine eclectic , he has selected , with intelligence and judg- ment , from the stores accumulated by his diligence , and digested the parts , thus carefully collated , into a whole , which ...
Seite 22
... taste in the liberal arts , and who rigorously observed his own maxims , that an implicit obedience to the rules of art , as established by the Great Mas . ters , should be exacted from the juvenile student . When Genius has recei- ved ...
... taste in the liberal arts , and who rigorously observed his own maxims , that an implicit obedience to the rules of art , as established by the Great Mas . ters , should be exacted from the juvenile student . When Genius has recei- ved ...
Seite 31
... taste , his temper , or his fortune ; how is any man the wiser , in any art or science worth knowing , by hearing that so many Austrians were killed in this affair , and so many Frenchmen in that . " A newspaper , considered as one ...
... taste , his temper , or his fortune ; how is any man the wiser , in any art or science worth knowing , by hearing that so many Austrians were killed in this affair , and so many Frenchmen in that . " A newspaper , considered as one ...
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accent Adam Smith admiration affection American amusement antimony appears attention beautiful Billy Taylor Blackletter called captain cause character christian colour command delight Derry door Edinburg elegant emotions expression Falstaff favour feelings frequently genius gentleman give grace hand happy heart honour HORATIO GATES human ideas labours lady Laertes language learned letter limestone literary M'Intosh manner means ment merit mind moral mountains mulatto nature never Nicholas Biddle o'er object observed occasion OLDSCHOOL opinion pain pass passions pause perhaps person Petrarch Philadelphia pleasure poem poet Polonius PORT FOLIO present principles QUIZ racter reader respect scarcely scene Seneca Lake sentiments Shakspeare shore Sir CH society soon soul spirit style sweet syllables talents taste thing thou thought tion tophe verse vessel virtue Voltaire whip-poor-will whole words writing young