Broome, Pope, Pitt, ThomsonAlexander Chalmers J. Johnson, 1810 |
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第 頁
... : with the Hyper- critics of Aristarchus Page 290 Testimonies of Authors concerning our Author and his Works ....... The Dunciad : Book I. II . ib . ........... 302 ............... .................. ........................
... : with the Hyper- critics of Aristarchus Page 290 Testimonies of Authors concerning our Author and his Works ....... The Dunciad : Book I. II . ib . ........... 302 ............... .................. ........................
第 3 頁
... critics . He was introduced to Mr. Pope , who was then visiting sir John Cotton at Mading- ley near Cambridge , and gained so much of his esteem , that he was employed , I believe , to make extracts from Eustathius for the notes to the ...
... critics . He was introduced to Mr. Pope , who was then visiting sir John Cotton at Mading- ley near Cambridge , and gained so much of his esteem , that he was employed , I believe , to make extracts from Eustathius for the notes to the ...
第 9 頁
... critic ; that if my credit should fail as a poet , I may have recourse to my remarks upon Homer , and be pardoned for my ... critics ; but , instead of making copies agreeable to the manuscripts , they have long inserted their own ...
... critic ; that if my credit should fail as a poet , I may have recourse to my remarks upon Homer , and be pardoned for my ... critics ; but , instead of making copies agreeable to the manuscripts , they have long inserted their own ...
第 10 頁
... Critics . errour , but still blameable , because it misguides the judgment . Such critics act no less erroneously , than a judge who should resolve to acquit a person , whether innocent or guilty , who comes before him upon his trial ...
... Critics . errour , but still blameable , because it misguides the judgment . Such critics act no less erroneously , than a judge who should resolve to acquit a person , whether innocent or guilty , who comes before him upon his trial ...
第 11 頁
... critic , yet proves himself to be a worse man ? Besides , no one is to be envied the skill in finding such faults as others are so dull as to mistake for beauties . What advantage is such a quicksightedness even to the possessors of it ...
... critic , yet proves himself to be a worse man ? Besides , no one is to be envied the skill in finding such faults as others are so dull as to mistake for beauties . What advantage is such a quicksightedness even to the possessors of it ...
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