Memoir of John Aikin, M.D.Baldwin, Cradock, and Joy, 1823 - English poetry |
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Page vi
... sentiment , rather than the bustle of incident or the splendor of description . Nothing , however , could be further from her design than to intrude upon the atten- tion of the public by the introduction of anecdotes or observations not ...
... sentiment , rather than the bustle of incident or the splendor of description . Nothing , however , could be further from her design than to intrude upon the atten- tion of the public by the introduction of anecdotes or observations not ...
Page 13
... sentiments to the world . " After a residence of three years in Manchester , he quitted it with sentiments of attachment to its inhabitants which never forsook him , and which were warmly returned on their parts . To complete his ...
... sentiments to the world . " After a residence of three years in Manchester , he quitted it with sentiments of attachment to its inhabitants which never forsook him , and which were warmly returned on their parts . To complete his ...
Page 17
... sentiments , when party contests ran the highest ; which , nevertheless , through all the mutations of half a century , stood with- out even a suspicion of insecurity , and yielded at length only to the inevitable stroke which levels ...
... sentiments , when party contests ran the highest ; which , nevertheless , through all the mutations of half a century , stood with- out even a suspicion of insecurity , and yielded at length only to the inevitable stroke which levels ...
Page 27
... sentiment of this poor player's as if he had all the schools of all the philosophers , ancient and modern , in his head . Shakespeare is a poet , -let him not be degraded into a mere moralist . I can lose myself in ecstasy in his ...
... sentiment of this poor player's as if he had all the schools of all the philosophers , ancient and modern , in his head . Shakespeare is a poet , -let him not be degraded into a mere moralist . I can lose myself in ecstasy in his ...
Page 49
... sentiments of reciprocal esteem and affec- tion excited in the bosom of Mr.Wakefield towards his new associates will best be collected from the following passage of his interesting and ingenuous Memoirs of his own life . " I reflect to ...
... sentiments of reciprocal esteem and affec- tion excited in the bosom of Mr.Wakefield towards his new associates will best be collected from the following passage of his interesting and ingenuous Memoirs of his own life . " I reflect to ...
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Common terms and phrases
acquaintance afforded afterwards agreeable Aikin amusement appeared ardor Barbauld biographical character cheerful considerable critical delight dissenters Dorking Edmund Aikin effect elegant eminent employment Enfield engaged English Essay esteem excellent father favorite feelings friends GILBERT WAKEFIELD habits happiness Haygarth honor human interest JOHN AIKIN judgement Kibworth kind Leatherhead Leicestershire letter literary Liverpool London LUCY AIKIN manner Memoirs ment merit mind moral nature neral objects observed occupied opinion Ovid party period persons philosophical pieces pleasure poetical poetry poets political present Priestley principles printed profes Pulteney pursuits racter remarks rendered residence respect river Mole Ryegate scarcely scene sentiments situation society spirit talents taste things thought tion topics town trees truth tutor university of Edinburgh various Virgil volume Wakefield walk Warrington Warrington academy whole William Enfield wish writer Yarmouth
Popular passages
Page 278 - Ceres' bounty spread, Uprears some ancient oak his rev'rend head ; Chaplets and sacred gifts his boughs adorn, And spoils of war by mighty heroes worn. But the first vigour of his root now gone, He stands dependent on his weight alone; All bare his naked branches are display'd, And with his leafless trunk he forms a shade: Yet though the winds his ruin daily threat, As every blast would heave him from his seat ; Though thousand fairer trees the field supplies, That...
Page 276 - Ac velut annoso validam cum robore quercum Alpini Boreae nunc hinc nunc flatibus illinc Eruere inter se certant; it stridor, et...
Page 348 - ... or parallelism. At this time he likewise augmented his fund for Scripture interpretation by the acquisition of various Oriental dialects. After quitting Warrington, at the dissolution of the academy, he took up his residence successively...
Page 165 - I confess myself decidedly of the opinion of those who would rather form the two sexes to a resemblance of character than contrast them. Virtue, wisdom, presence of mind, patience, vigour, capacity, application, are not sexual qualities ; they belong to mankind — to all who have duties to perform and evils to endure.
Page 388 - About eight o'clock he desired to have three pamphlets, which had been looked out by his directions the evening before. He then dictated, as clearly and distinctly as he had ever done in his life, the additions and alterations which -he wished to have made in each. Mr.
Page 387 - I was going on to read to the end of the chapter, but he stopped me at the 45th verse. He dwelt for some time on the advantage he had derived from reading the scriptures daily, and advised me to do the same, saying that it would prove to me, as it had done to him, a source of the purest pleasure. He desired me to reach him a pamphlet which was at his bed's head, Simpson on The Duration of Future Punishment. "It will be a source of satisfaction to you to read that pamphlet...
Page 388 - I then took a pen and ink to his. bed-side. He then repeated over again, nearly word for word, what he had before said ; and when I had done, I rea.d it over to him. He said, "That is right ; I have now done.
Page 350 - ... throughout life than he. Although his principles had induced him to renounce his clerical office in the church of England, and he had become a...
Page 394 - A pamphlet which appeared in 1793, under the title of A Letter Commercial and Political addressed to the Right Hon. William Pitt, by Jasper Wilson, Esq.
Page 354 - ... and improvements, and that exquisite feeling of particular beauties, which distinguish him as an annotator of the writers of Greece and Rome. As a classical editor he appeared in a selection from the Greek tragedians, in editions of Horace, Virgil, Bion, and Moschus, and, finally, in his Lucretius, — a vast performance, which alone might seem the labour of many industrious years.