| Henry Sydney Grazebrook - 1873 - 440 pages
...it is impossible to open it without finding some important fact or discussion, something practically useful and applicable to the business of life. Coleridge...pages in any uninspired writer.' ..... Its merits had not escaped the notice of Dr. Johnson, though in politics opposed to much it inculcates, for in... | |
| Alfred Russell Smith - 1874 - 496 pages
...it is impossible to open it without finding some important fact or discussion, something practically useful and applicable to the business of life. Coleridge...number of pages in any uninspired writer.' Its merits had not escaped the notice of Dr. Johnson, though in politics opposed to much it inculcates, for in... | |
| James Mason - 1875 - 674 pages
...Coleridge, in a somewhat extravagant vein, says, 'There is more weighty bullion sense in Selden's Table-Talk than I ever found in the same number of pages in any uninspired writer.' Selden died on the last day of November 1654. DAVID JENKINS. There never was a more honest and patriotic... | |
| 1877 - 932 pages
...that any English writer has performed, but he is perhaps best known by his " Table Talk," of which Coleridge says, "There is more weighty bullion sense...book than I ever found in the same number of pages of any uninspired writer." His funeral sermon was preached here by Archbishop Usher, to whom he had... | |
| Augustus John Cuthbert Hare - 1878 - 522 pages
...that any English writer has performed, but he is perhaps best known by his " Table Talk," of which Coleridge says, " There is more weighty bullion sense...book than I ever found in the same number of pages of any uninspired writer." His funeral sermon was preached here by Archbishop Usher, to whom he had... | |
| Augustus John Cuthbert Hare - 1878 - 528 pages
...that any English writer has performed, but he is perhaps best known by his " Table Talk," of which Coleridge says, " There is more weighty bullion sense...book than I ever found in the same number of pages of any uninspired writer." His funeral sermon was preached here by Archbishop Usher, to whom he had... | |
| Samuel Austin Allibone - 1879 - 576 pages
...superior to the Ana of the Continent ; and another eminent authority thus speaks of Selden's volume: | f S 7 0Ƀ8x TWpC O& A /| " V NK M ${ < R" ,c 3 bC of any uninspired writer. ... 0 to have been with Selden over his glass of wine, making every accident... | |
| Robert Cochrane (miscellaneous writer.) - 1879 - 256 pages
...Coleridge, in a somewhat extravagant vein, says, 'There is more weighty bullion sense in Selden's TableTalk than I ever found in the same number of pages in any uninspired writer.' Selden died on the last day of November 1654. DAVID JENKINS. There never was a more honest and patriotic... | |
| Edward Arber - 1895 - 238 pages
...weighty bullion sense in CHRYSOSTOM did the works of ARISTOPHANES. — North and in all the landes this book than I ever found in the same number of pages of American Review, p. 57. January 1832. of Iewrie, Egipt, Grecia, Russia, and any uninspired writer.... | |
| Alfred Russell Smith - 1880 - 204 pages
...some important fact or discussion, somethmg practically useful and applicable to the business of lite. Coleridge says, ' There is more weighty bullion sense in this book than -t ever found in the same number of pages in any uninspired writer.' .... 1ts merits had not escaped... | |
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