The British Essayists: The IdlerJ. Johnson, J. Nichols and Son, R. Baldwin, F. and C. Rivington, W. Otridge and Son, W. J. and J. Richardson, A. Strahan, J. Sewell, R. Faulder, G. and W. Nicol, T. Payne, G. and J. Robinson, W. Lowndes, G. Wilkie, J. Mathews, P. McQueen, Ogilvy and Son, J. Scatcherd, J. Walker, Vernor and Hood, R. Lea, Darton and Harvey, J. Nunn, Lackington and Company, D. Walker, Clarke and Son, G. Kearsley, C. Law, J. White, Longman and Rees, Cadell, Jun. and Davies, J. Barker, T. Kay, Wynne and Company, Pote and Company, Carpenter and Company, W. Miller, Murray and Highley, S. Bagster, T. Hurst, T. Boosey, R. Pheney, W. Baynes, J. Harding, R. H. Evans, J. Mawman; and W. Creech, Edinburgh, 1802 - English essays |
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Page xiii
... means he sometimes committed his occasional ill - humour to paper , and that even in works where it might have been thought there was little temptation to indulge it . His opinion of Commissioners of Excise in the IDLER is , in truth ...
... means he sometimes committed his occasional ill - humour to paper , and that even in works where it might have been thought there was little temptation to indulge it . His opinion of Commissioners of Excise in the IDLER is , in truth ...
Page xiii
... means he sometimes committed his occasional ill - humour to paper , and that even in works where it might have been thought there was little temptation to indulge it . His opinion of Com- missioners of Excise in the IDLER is , in truth ...
... means he sometimes committed his occasional ill - humour to paper , and that even in works where it might have been thought there was little temptation to indulge it . His opinion of Com- missioners of Excise in the IDLER is , in truth ...
Page xv
... means reluctant to acknowledge an error , and especially if it had been attended with injury or uneasiness to any individual . Nor ought it to be omitted in this place that his capricious definitions were sometimes directed against ...
... means reluctant to acknowledge an error , and especially if it had been attended with injury or uneasiness to any individual . Nor ought it to be omitted in this place that his capricious definitions were sometimes directed against ...
Page xvii
... means and less art to escape discovery . What could the absence of a motto do to conceal Dr. JOHNSON's style ? Sitting , however , with this lively lady one day , he recollected a few mot- tos , which she wrote down , and which are here ...
... means and less art to escape discovery . What could the absence of a motto do to conceal Dr. JOHNSON's style ? Sitting , however , with this lively lady one day , he recollected a few mot- tos , which she wrote down , and which are here ...
Page xviii
... means which justice prescribes , and which are warranted by the immemorial prescriptions of honourable trade . We shall lay hold , in our turn , on their copies , degrade them from the pomp of wide margin , and dif- fuse typography ...
... means which justice prescribes , and which are warranted by the immemorial prescriptions of honourable trade . We shall lay hold , in our turn , on their copies , degrade them from the pomp of wide margin , and dif- fuse typography ...
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Common terms and phrases
amusement battle of Dettingen believe Betty Broom brothers were valiant called censure character charity common considered curiosity danger delight desire diligence dinner Ditto dread Drugget endeavour enemies English epithalamium essays expected eyes fame favour friends Friseur girls gout hands happiness Hare and Tortoise honour hope hour human idleness Idler imagine inquire JOHNSON justly Knights of Malta labour lady learned less lest live look Lord KEPPEL lost Louisbourg marriage mind misery mistress morning nation nature necessary ness never Newmarket once opinion pain paper passed Peterhouse pleased pleasure praise present racter readers reason resolved ridiculous SATURDAY scarcely seldom servant Sir JOSHUA Sir JOSHUA REYNOLDS sleep soldiers sometimes species suffer sure talk tell thing THOMAS WARTON thought tion told truth Universal Chronicle virtue Whirler wife wish writer XXXIII
Popular passages
Page 128 - Reynolds transfer to heroes and to goddesses, to empty splendour and to airy fiction, that art which is now employed in diffusing friendship, in reviving tenderness, in quickening the affections of the absent, and continuing the presence of the dead. Yet in a nation great and opulent there is room, and ought to
Page 37 - and is very seldom attained. The experiments that have been tried, are tried again; he that burned an animal with irons yesterday, will be willing to amuse himself with burning another to-morrow. I know not, that by living dissections any discovery has been made by which a single malady is more easily cured. And if the
Page 6 - N°. 7. SATURDAY, MAY 27, 1758. ONE of the principal amusements of the Idler is to read the works of those minute historians the writers of news, who, though contemptuously overlooked by the composers of bulky volumes, are yet necessary in a nation where much wealth produces much leisure, and one part of the people
Page 116 - These are the great occasions which force the mind to take refuge in religion: when we have no help in ourselves, what can remain but that we look up to a higher and a greater Power ? and to what hope may we not raise our eyes and hearts, when we consider that the greatest POWER is the BEST
Page 20 - to tell children of bugbears and goblins. Fear will find every house haunted; and idleness will wait for ever for the moment of illumination. This distinction of seasons is produced only by imagination operating on luxury. To temperance every day is bright, and
Page ix - Speaking of his own discourses, our great artist says, " Whatever merit they have, must be imputed, in a great measure, to the education which I may be said to have had under Dr. JOHNSON. I do not mean to say, though it
Page 111 - There are some, however, that know the prejudice of mankind in favour of modest sincerity. The vender of the beautifying fluid sells a lotion that repels pimples, washes away freckles, smooths the skin, and plumps the flesh ;,and yet, with a generous abhorrence of ostentation, confesses, that it will not restore the bloom
Page 88 - once pursued the same course of science, and from whence they soared to the most elevated heights of literary fame. This is that incitement which Tally, according to his own testimony, experienced at Athens, when he contemplated the porticos where Socrates sat, and the laurel-groves where Plato disputed. But there are other circumstances, and of the highest importance,