A Sentimental Journey Through France and ItalyNimmo and Bain, 1882 - 394 pages |
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Page 24
... learning , and many of his more striking and peculiar expressions . Rabelais ( much less read than spoken of ) , the lively but licentious miscellany called Moyen de Parvenir , and D'Aubigné's Baron de Fæneste , with many other for ...
... learning , and many of his more striking and peculiar expressions . Rabelais ( much less read than spoken of ) , the lively but licentious miscellany called Moyen de Parvenir , and D'Aubigné's Baron de Fæneste , with many other for ...
Page 25
... a general sense , he that revives the wit and learning of a former age , and puts it into the form likely to captivate his own , confers a benefit on his contemporaries . But to plume himself with the very TO STERNE . 25.
... a general sense , he that revives the wit and learning of a former age , and puts it into the form likely to captivate his own , confers a benefit on his contemporaries . But to plume himself with the very TO STERNE . 25.
Page 26
... learning for his own , was the more unworthy in Sterne , as he had enough of original talent , had he chosen to exert it , to have dispensed with all such acts of literary petty larceny . Tristram Shandy is no narrative , but a ...
... learning for his own , was the more unworthy in Sterne , as he had enough of original talent , had he chosen to exert it , to have dispensed with all such acts of literary petty larceny . Tristram Shandy is no narrative , but a ...
Page 43
... learning , -where the sciences may be more fitly wooed , or more surely won , than here , —where Art is encouraged , and will soon rise high , —where Nature ( take her altogether ) has so little to answer for , —and , to close all ...
... learning , -where the sciences may be more fitly wooed , or more surely won , than here , —where Art is encouraged , and will soon rise high , —where Nature ( take her altogether ) has so little to answer for , —and , to close all ...
Page 182
... learning might furnish matter for a satire that would be useful and diverting : he resolved to proceed in a manner that should be altogether new , the world having been already too long nauseated with endless repetitions upon every ...
... learning might furnish matter for a satire that would be useful and diverting : he resolved to proceed in a manner that should be altogether new , the world having been already too long nauseated with endless repetitions upon every ...
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Common terms and phrases
Æolists ancient answer begged better betwixt bidet bookseller brain brothers CALAIS called chaise CHEVALIER DE SAINT-LOUIS Church coat Count Dessein discourse Don Quixote door eyes father fille de chambre Fleur France French gave Gil Blas give half hand hath head heart Heaven honour instantly Irenæus Jack Jaques Sterne La Fleur lady LAURENCE STERNE learning look Lord Louis d'ors Madame mankind manner MATEO ALEMAN matter mind modern Mons Monsieur NAMPONT nature never observed occasion Paris passage passed person Peter poor postilion present reader reason remise satire seemed Shandy Smelfungus spirit spleen Sterne story street tell thee things thou thought tion told took Traveller treatise Tristram Tristram Shandy true critic turn twas walked wherein whereof whole word Wotton writers Yorick
Popular passages
Page 352 - Last week I saw a woman flayed, and you will hardly believe how much it altered her person for the worse.
Page 113 - The bird in his cage pursued me into my room; I sat down close to my table, and leaning my head upon my hand, I began to figure to myself the miseries of confinement. I was in a right frame for it, and so I gave full scope to my imagination. I was going to begin with the millions of my fellow-creatures, born to no inheritance but slavery: but finding, however affecting the picture was, that I could not bring it near me, and that the multitude of sad groups in it did but distract me — — I took...
Page 111 - ... the cage to pieces. — I took both hands to it. The bird flew to the place where I was attempting his deliverance, and...
Page 391 - Ballads), and an Essay on the Life and Writings of CERVANTES by JOHN G. LOCKHART. Preceded by a Short Notice of the Life and Works of PKTER ANTHONY MOTTEUX by HENRI VAN LAUN.
Page 324 - The most accomplished way of using books at present is two-fold: either first, to serve them as some men do lords, learn their titles exactly, and then brag of their acquaintance. Or secondly, which is indeed the choicer, the profounder, and politer method, to get a thorough insight into the index, by which the whole book is governed and turned, like fishes by the tail.
Page 6 - ... till about the latter end of that year, and cannot omit mentioning this anecdote of myself and schoolmaster : — He had the ceiling of the school-room new white-washed ; the ladder remained there. I, one unlucky day, mounted it, and wrote with a brush, in large capital letters, LAU. STERNE, for which the usher severely whipped me. My master was very much hurt at this, and said, before me, that never should that name be effaced, for I was a boy of genius, and he was sure I should come to preferment.
Page 264 - ... and, according to the laudable custom, gave rise to that fashion. Upon which the brothers, consulting their father's will, to their great astonishment, found these words : Item, I charge and command my said three sons to wear no sort of silver fringe upon or about their said coats, &c., with a penalty, in case of disobedience, too long here to insert.
Page 114 - ... his chair and bed: a little calendar of small sticks were laid at the head, notched all over with the dismal days and nights he had passed there : — he had one of these little sticks in his hand, and with a rusty nail he was etching another day of misery to add to the heap.
Page 114 - As I darkened the little light he had, he lifted up a hopeless eye towards the door — then cast it down — shook hjs head — and went on with his work of affliction.
Page 253 - For about this time it happened a sect arose, whose tenets obtained and spread very far, especially in the grand monde, and among everybody of good fashion. They worshipped a sort of idol, who, as their doctrine delivered, did daily create men by a kind of manufactory operation.