The Pleasures of Human Life: Investigated Cheerfully, Elucidated Satirically, Promulgated Explicitly, and Discussed Philosophically. In a Dozen Dissertations on Male, Female and Neuter Pleasures. Interspersed with Various Anecdotes, and Expounded by Numerous AnnotationsLongman, Hurst, Rees, and Orme, 1807 - 223 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 8
Página 2
... Amusements , Fashionable Propensities , and all events of Notoriety will occasionally be canvassed and investigated . In furtherance of our views , we have thought it necessary , by and with the advice of council , to sketch out a plan ...
... Amusements , Fashionable Propensities , and all events of Notoriety will occasionally be canvassed and investigated . In furtherance of our views , we have thought it necessary , by and with the advice of council , to sketch out a plan ...
Página 38
... amusement , he has spent the greater part of his life , and is now daily and diligently occupied in the the pusuit . He returns to the same enter- tainment day after day , " as if increase of appetite had grown with what it fed on ...
... amusement , he has spent the greater part of his life , and is now daily and diligently occupied in the the pusuit . He returns to the same enter- tainment day after day , " as if increase of appetite had grown with what it fed on ...
Página 58
... amusement and delight in quarrelling about a single word ; only think what felicity must result from a well supported and obstinate controversy about ideas , or about the whole volume of language . Some learned authors derive the name ...
... amusement and delight in quarrelling about a single word ; only think what felicity must result from a well supported and obstinate controversy about ideas , or about the whole volume of language . Some learned authors derive the name ...
Página 81
... amusement , instruction , and subsistence from the same source , we feel an association of ideas astonishing and de- lightful . We find ourselves ennobled and exalted by the comparison ; for as literature is the high - road to knowledge ...
... amusement , instruction , and subsistence from the same source , we feel an association of ideas astonishing and de- lightful . We find ourselves ennobled and exalted by the comparison ; for as literature is the high - road to knowledge ...
Página 175
... amusement and inform- ation , both to the natives , to persons of the surrounding country , and to foreigners , i . e . such as live in the re- mote northerly and westerly parts of our island . We would recommend the ingenious author of ...
... amusement and inform- ation , both to the natives , to persons of the surrounding country , and to foreigners , i . e . such as live in the re- mote northerly and westerly parts of our island . We would recommend the ingenious author of ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Términos y frases comunes
amusement appear articled clerk authors beautiful BENEVOLUS Bobby Cacoethes called cheerful cobler critical delight DIBDIN DISSERTATION diurnal Doctor Edinburgh Review elegant employed endeavour English language erudition fair fancy folly fool former frequently friends frivolous gaming genius gentlemen glish grand happy head hear honour ilish intelligence lady lative latter laugh lawyer learning LEGAL FICTIONS literary London London Gazette Lord Lord Chesterfield lottery Lusorists Magazines mankind masquerade mind Miseries nature never Newspapers observes papers persons Philosophical Pindar plea Pleasures of Human PLEASURES OF LITERATURE poet politics poor prove published PUFF pursuit quarto readers Review Romeo and Juliet satire smil society sometimes sort soul spirit surely Tacitus tained talents taste thing thor tions tivate trepan truth ture Wanted-by whilst whole woman word writing young
Pasajes populares
Página xiv - Care to our coffin adds a nail, no doubt; . And every Grin, so merry, draws one out.
Página 208 - Here lies our good Edmund, whose genius was such, We scarcely can praise it, or blame it too much ; Who, born for the Universe, narrow'd his mind, And to party gave up what was meant for mankind.
Página 27 - The great source of pleasure is variety. Uniformity must tire at last, though it be uniformity of excellence. We love to expect ; and, when expectation is disappointed or gratified, we want to be again expecting.
Página 86 - In a time of war the nation is always of one mind, eager to hear something good of themselves and ill of the enemy.
Página 164 - O'er its pale cheeks the horrid manly red. Much did it talk, in its own pretty phrase, Of genius and of taste, of play'rs and plays ; Much too of writings which itself had wrote, Of special merit, though of little note ; For Fate, in a strange humour, had decreed That what it wrote none but itself should read ; Much too it chatter'd of...
Página 107 - ... the duty of criticism is neither to depreciate nor dignify by VOL. XVII. 13 partial representations, but to hold out the light of reason, whatever it may discover ; and to promulgate the determinations of truth, whatever she shall dictate.
Página 165 - Known but to few, or only known by name, Plain Common Sense appear'd, by Nature there Appointed, with plain Truth, to guard the chair. The pageant saw, and, blasted with her frown, To its first state of nothing melted down.
Página 127 - Law is like a book of surgery, there are a great many terrible cases in it. It is also like physic, they that take least of it are best off. Law is like a homely gentlewoman, very well to follow.
Página 85 - No species of literary men has lately been so much multiplied as the writers of news. Not many years ago the nation was content with one gazette ; but now we have not only in the metropolis papers for every morr.ing and every evening, but almost every large town has its weekly historian...
Página 83 - Ryves, and is said to have been originally published in " one, and sometimes two sheets, quarto," beginning the 22d of August, 1642. It has since gone through four editions, the last published in 1723, with a curious frontispiece, representing a kind of Dutch Mercury in the centre, and ten other compartments, with fancied views of places where some of the diabolical scenes were acted. The " Mercurius Aulicus " was published in Oxford, 1642.