Imaginary Conversations of Literary Men and Statesmen: Richard I and the Abbot of Boxley. The Lord Brooke and Sir Philip Sidney. King Henry IV and Sir Arnold Savage. Southey and Porson. Oliver Cromwel and Walter Noble. Aeschines and Phocion. Queen Elizabeth and Cecil. King James I and Isaac Casaubon. Marchese Pallavicini and Walter Landor. General Kleber and some French officers. Bonaparte and the president of the senate. Bishop Burnet and Humphrey Hardcastle. Peter Leopold and the President Du Paty. Demosthenes and Eubulides. The Abbé Delille and Walter Landor. The Emperor Alexander and Capo D'Istria. Kosciusko and Poniatowski. Middleton and MagliabechiTaylor and Hessey, 1824 - Imaginary conversations |
Common terms and phrases
Abbé ABBOT admirably ALEXANDER amongst appears army Austria beautiful better Boileau Bonaparte called CAPO D'ISTRIA CASAUBON character church CONVERSATION creature CROMWEL DELILLE DEMOSTHENES Du Paty emperor enemy England English equal ESCHINES EUBULIDES Euripides Europe faith father favour foren France French genius glory greater Greek hands happy Harbottle Hardcastle hath heard heart Henry Henry IV honour ISAAC CASAUBON Italian Italy jesuit judge king Kleber KOSCIUSKO labour LANDOR language LEOPOLD less MAGLIABECHI Majesty marchese ment MIDDLETON mind moral Muretus nation ness never NOBLE observed offence palace PALLAVICINI Paty perhaps Pericles PHOCION Pindar Plato poet poetry PONIATOWSKI pope PORSON PRESIDENT priest princes punishment Pythagoras racter reason religion remark saint Saladin satire shew SIDNEY Sir Arnold Savage soldiers SOUTHEY sovran spirit thee thing thou tion turn Tuscany verse Virgil Voltaire WALTER LANDOR worth writer young
Popular passages
Page 51 - He spake of love, such love as spirits feel In worlds whose course is equable and pure ; No fears to beat away, no strife to heal, The past unsighed for, and the future sure...
Page 264 - D'un double cadenas font fermer les boutiques ; Que, retiré chez lui , le paisible marchand Va revoir ses billets et compter son argent ; Que dans le Marché-Neuf tout est calme et tranquille , Les voleurs à l'instant s'emparent de la ville. Le bois le plus funeste et le moins fréquenté Est , au prix de Paris, un lieu de sûreté.
Page 244 - What your father and your grandfather used as an elegance in conversation, is now abandoned to the populace, and every day we miss a little of our own, and collect a little from strangers : this prepares us for a more intimate union with them, in which we merge at last altogether. Every good writer has much idiom ; it is the life and spirit of language...
Page 301 - Gul in her bloom? Where the citron and olive are fairest of fruit, And the voice of the nightingale never is mute, Where the tints of the earth, and the hues of the sky, In colour though varied, in beauty may vie...
Page 26 - How many, who have abandoned for public life the studies of philosophy and poetry, may be compared to brooks and rivers, which in the beginning of their course have assuaged our thirst, and have invited us to tranquillity by their bright resemblance of it, and which afterward partake the nature of that vast body whereinto they run, its dreariness, its bitterness, its foam, its storms, its everlasting noise and commotion...
Page 152 - His Majesty the Emperor of the French, King of Italy, Protector of the confederation of the Rhine, and Mediator of Switzerland, was graciously pleased to make the following reply.
Page 275 - L'honneur est comme une île escarpée et sans bords : On n'y peut plus rentrer dès qu'on en est dehors.
Page 162 - There it no God! It was then surmised more generally and more gravely that there was something in him, and he stood upon his legs almost to the last. Say what you will, once whispered a friend of mine, there are things in him strong as poison and original as sin.
Page 192 - ... is hoped she will have interest enough to stop enquiry, and will have received no other harm than a few such circuitous lines as designate the latitudes on a globe, and the name, partly derived from her native place, and partly from her recent misfortune, of La Nereide Frustata... the whipt Nereid. Nicknames and whippings, when they are once laid on, no one has discovered how to take off.
Page 19 - Ah my friend, there is a greater difference, both in the stages of life and in the seasons of the year, than in the conditions of men: yet the healthy pass through the seasons, from the clement to the inclement, not only...