Aristarchus; Or, The Principles of Composition: Containing a Methodical Arrangement of the Improprieties Frequent in Writing and Conversation: with Select Rules for Attaining to Purity and Elegance of Expression ...J. Hearne, 1822 - 396 pages |
From inside the book
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Page 21
... BLAIR . The Study of Composition , important in itself at all Times , has acquired additional Importance from the Taste and Manners of the present Age . It is an Age wherein Im- provements , in every Part of Science , have been ...
... BLAIR . The Study of Composition , important in itself at all Times , has acquired additional Importance from the Taste and Manners of the present Age . It is an Age wherein Im- provements , in every Part of Science , have been ...
Page 36
... regarded Authority more than Reason and Analogy , we should be , at this Moment , in the Situation of Hottentots . " How barbarously we yet * Dr. Blair . Lectures , vol . ii . p . 219 . " write and speak , your Lordship knows . I 36 VERBS .
... regarded Authority more than Reason and Analogy , we should be , at this Moment , in the Situation of Hottentots . " How barbarously we yet * Dr. Blair . Lectures , vol . ii . p . 219 . " write and speak , your Lordship knows . I 36 VERBS .
Page 56
... Dr. Johnson . + Romans , vi . 23 . Alexander Ross against Hobbs . 86 . § Dr. Goldsmith . Dr. Blair's Lectures on Rhetoric , vol . ii . 229 . 7. An ostentatious , a feeble , a harsh , 56 VERBS . MISCELLANEOUS SENTENCES ...
... Dr. Johnson . + Romans , vi . 23 . Alexander Ross against Hobbs . 86 . § Dr. Goldsmith . Dr. Blair's Lectures on Rhetoric , vol . ii . 229 . 7. An ostentatious , a feeble , a harsh , 56 VERBS . MISCELLANEOUS SENTENCES ...
Page 57
... Blair , vol . i . 401 . + Dr. Blair . vol . ii . 343 . Mr. Turner's Latin Exercises . 102 . SA Dog with three Necks and three Heads . Accord- ing to the Fiction of Heathen Poets , it was the Keeper of Pluto's Palace in Hell . his own ...
... Blair , vol . i . 401 . + Dr. Blair . vol . ii . 343 . Mr. Turner's Latin Exercises . 102 . SA Dog with three Necks and three Heads . Accord- ing to the Fiction of Heathen Poets , it was the Keeper of Pluto's Palace in Hell . his own ...
Page 62
... Blair's Assertion . He , who is learning to arrange his Sentences with Accuracy and Order , is learning , at the same Time , to think with Accuracy and Order , which alone will justify all the Care and Attention we can bestow . And ...
... Blair's Assertion . He , who is learning to arrange his Sentences with Accuracy and Order , is learning , at the same Time , to think with Accuracy and Order , which alone will justify all the Care and Attention we can bestow . And ...
Other editions - View all
Aristarchus, Or the Principles of Composition: Containing a Methodical ... Philip Withers No preview available - 2017 |
Aristarchus: Or, the Principles of Composition; Containing a Methodical ... Philip Withers No preview available - 2013 |
Aristarchus Or the Principles of Composition: Containing A Methodical ... Philip Withers No preview available - 2008 |
Common terms and phrases
Abbreviation abstract Idea absurd Action admit Adverb affirm Alphabet ancient Animal Argument Aristarchus ascer Attribute Author Bishop of London Blair Cause Censure Characters COLLECTIVE Noun Common Sense Common Terminations comprehend Construction Copula Definition Deity desire Diction Dictionary Difference Distinction elegant Ellipsis Energy English English Language Error Essay Existence Expression Form Genus Gerund Give me Leave Gothic Grammar Grammarians Greek guage half Crown happy Hebrew Hence Honour Horse human Imagination Individuals inelegant Infinitive Instance Invention Johnson Language Latin learned Letters logographical Lord Lord Monboddo Lordship Love means ment metaphysical Mind Mode Motion Multitude Name Nature Noun Number Occasions Opinion Origin Participles Passage perfect CONCEPTION Phrase Power Predicate Prefix PRESENT Tense Principles proper Proposition Propriety Purley Reason Remarks Roman Rule Saxon Scaliger Sentence signifies Solecism Sounds speak Species Speech Subject suppose Symbols Terms tion to-I Truth Twelve Tables Verb plural verbal Vulgar Words World write
Popular passages
Page 124 - In the worst inn's worst room, with mat half-hung, The floors of plaster, and the walls of dung, On once a flock-bed, but repair'd with straw, With tape-tied curtains, never meant to draw, The George and Garter dangling from that bed Where tawdry yellow strove with dirty red, Great Villiers lies — alas!
Page 131 - I got on horseback within ten minutes after I got your letter. When I got to Canterbury, I got a chaise for town; but I got wet through before I got to Canterbury, and I have got such a cold as I shall not be able to get rid of in a hurry. I got to the Treasury about noon, but first of all I got shaved and dressed. I soon got into the secret of getting a memorial before the Board, but I could not get an answer then ; however, I got intelligence from the messenger that I should, most likely, get one...
Page 171 - Who wickedly is wise, or madly brave, Is but the more a fool, the more a knave. Who noble ends by noble means obtains, Or failing, smiles in exile or in chains, Like good Aurelius let him reign, or bleed Like Socrates, that man is great indeed. What's fame? a fancied life in others' breath, A thing beyond us, ev'n before our death.
Page 359 - The proper distinction in the use of these particles, is elegantly marked in a passage of Dr. Robertson's History of Scotland. When one of the old Scottish kings was making an inquiry into the tenure by which his nobles held their lands, they started up, and drew their swords; 'By these,' said they, 'we acquired our lands, and with these we will defend them.
Page 22 - The Structure of Language is extremely artificial; and there are few sciences in which a deeper or more refined logic is employed, than in grammar. It is apt to be slighted by superficial thinkers, as belonging to those rudiments of knowledge, which were inculcated upon us in our earliest youth. But what was then inculcated before we could comprehend its principlesi would abundantly repay our study in maturer years ; and to the ignorance of it, must be attributed many of those fundamental defects...
Page 25 - Human Understanding. For some Part of the inestimable Benefit of that Book has, merely on account of its Title, reached to many Thousands more than, I fear, it would have done, had he called it (what it is merely) A Grammatical Essay, or a Treatise on Words, or on Language.
Page 224 - As Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness, so is the Son of man lifted up; that whosoever believeth in him may not perish, but have everlasting life.
Page 22 - The exercise of taste and of sound criticism, is in truth one of the most improving employments of the understanding. To apply the principles of good sense to composition and discourse ; to examine what is beautiful, and why it is so -, to employ ourselves in distinguishing accurately between the specious and the solid, between affected and natural ornament, must...
Page 23 - Whatever the advantages or defects of the English language be, as it is our own language it deserves a high degree of our study and attention, both with regard to the choice of words which we employ, and with regard to the syntax, or the arrangement of those words in a sentence.
Page 9 - If your delight be then in thrones and sceptres, O ye kings of the people, honour wisdom, that ye may reign for evermore.