Parriana: Miscellaneous materials bearing on Parr's controversiesEdmund Henry Barker Henry Colburn, 1829 |
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Page iii
... received so many personal favours from Dr. HURD , that I shall ever , as a man , esteem and respect him , yet as a writer , his sneers have ever displeased me , and I am not sorry to see them attacked . Let me add , however , that he ...
... received so many personal favours from Dr. HURD , that I shall ever , as a man , esteem and respect him , yet as a writer , his sneers have ever displeased me , and I am not sorry to see them attacked . Let me add , however , that he ...
Page iv
... received some entertainment from an extraneous circum- stance . STEEVENS is concerned in the St. James's Chronicle ; he hates HURD , and he is afraid of you . From the first moment , therefore , your pamphlet had appeared , that paper ...
... received some entertainment from an extraneous circum- stance . STEEVENS is concerned in the St. James's Chronicle ; he hates HURD , and he is afraid of you . From the first moment , therefore , your pamphlet had appeared , that paper ...
Page vii
... received notions and approved forms of language in a more refined age . It doubt- less required great vigilance and great taste to alter the phraseology of such a writer without impairing his " ( the ) " sense . Mr. Fellowes had often ...
... received notions and approved forms of language in a more refined age . It doubt- less required great vigilance and great taste to alter the phraseology of such a writer without impairing his " ( the ) " sense . Mr. Fellowes had often ...
Page viii
... received . He had volunteered , like Sir Mungo Malagrowther , to be the whipping - boy to the king , whom he had set up for himself , and he therefore could not justly complain , if he was made to smart for it . Surely if WARBURTON had ...
... received . He had volunteered , like Sir Mungo Malagrowther , to be the whipping - boy to the king , whom he had set up for himself , and he therefore could not justly complain , if he was made to smart for it . Surely if WARBURTON had ...
Page x
... received strict justice from PARR in regard to censure and to praise ; and if the censure outweighed the praise , it was not the defect of PARR's scales , but the defici- ency of HURD's merits , which made so awful a balance against the ...
... received strict justice from PARR in regard to censure and to praise ; and if the censure outweighed the praise , it was not the defect of PARR's scales , but the defici- ency of HURD's merits , which made so awful a balance against the ...
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Common terms and phrases
admiration Æneid appears atque Bentley Bishop Hurd Bishop of Gloucester Bishop of Worcester Bishop Warburton character Christian Church Cicero Colchester composition critic Dissertation divine edition Epistle Essay etiam excellent expression favour Fingal Forster genius Georgics Gilbert Wakefield give Greek hæc Halifax honour Horace Hurd Hurd's instance Johnson Jortin language late Latin Latin language learned Leland Letter Lind literary Lond Lord Lord Mansfield Lowth MACPHERSON Markland mind moral nature never object observed opinion OSSIAN pamphlet Parr Parr's passage perhaps Poems poet poetry Porson Porsonian praise Preface preposition principles published quæ quam Quintilian quod reader reason religion remarks respect Richard Porson says scholar Sermons shew Socinian spirit sublime supposed thing thou thought Tibur tion Tracts translated truth verse Virgil Wakefield Warburton Warburtonian words writings written καὶ