 | Thomas Gray - 1807 - 728 pages
...throughout he shews himself well read in StageCoaches, Country Squires, Inns, and Inns of Court. His reflections upon high people and low people, and misses...shrewdly suspect their insipidity and want of feeling or observation) may make them insensible to these light things, (I mean such as characterize and paint... | |
 | Elegant epistles - 1812 - 320 pages
...throughout he shows himself well read in stage-coaches, country squires, inns, and inns of court. His reflections upon high people and low people, and misses...shrewdly suspect, their insipidity and want of feeling or observation) may make them insensible to these light things (I mean such as characterize and paint... | |
 | British prose literature - 1821 - 394 pages
...throughout he shows himself well read in stage-coaches, country 'squires, inns, and inns of court. His reflections upon high people and low people, and misses...shrewdly suspect their insipidity and want of feeling or observation) may make them insensible to these light things, (I mean such as characterize and paint... | |
 | Thomas Gray, William Mason - English poetry - 1820 - 548 pages
...throughout he shews himself well read in stage-coaches, country squires, inns, and inns of court. His reflections upon high people and low people, and misses...shrewdly suspect their insipidity and want of feeling or observation) may make them insensible to these light things, (I mean such as characterize and paint... | |
 | Thomas Gray - Poets, English - 1820 - 494 pages
...throughout he shows himself well read in stage-coaches, country 'squires, inns, and inns of court. His reflections upon high people and low people, and misses...shrewdly suspect their insipidity and want of feeling or observation) may make them insensible to these light things, (I mean such ns characterize and paint... | |
 | Thomas Gray, William Mason - Poetics - 1827 - 468 pages
...throughout he shews himself well read in stage- coaches, country squires, inns, and inns^pf court. His reflections upon high people and low people, and misses...shrewdly suspect their insipidity and want of feeling or observation) may make them insensible, to these light things (I mean such as characterize and paint... | |
 | Thomas Gray - 1835 - 338 pages
...throughout he shews himself well read in Stage-Coaches, Country Squires, Inns, and Inns of Court. His reflections upon high people and low people, and misses...shrewdly suspect their insipidity and want of feeling or observation) may make them insensible to these light things, (I mean such as characterize and paint... | |
 | People's and Howitt's journal - 938 pages
...composition. The poet Gray, referring to Fielding's Joseph Andrews, maintains, in a letter to West, that, however "the exaltedness of some minds, (or rather,...shrewdly suspect, their insipidity and want of feeling or observation) may make tlicin insensible to these light things (I mean Mich as characterise and paint... | |
 | American periodicals - 1851 - 604 pages
...referring to Fielding's Joseph Andrews, maintains, in a letter to West, that, however " the exalted ness of some minds, (or rather as I shrewdly suspect, their insipidity and want of feeling or observation) may make them insensible to these light things, (I mean such as characterize and paint... | |
 | William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, Sir John Murray IV, Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle) - English literature - 1855 - 614 pages
...much which in society is wearying and commonplace as well as to that which is intrinsically winning. ' However the exaltedness of some minds, or rather,...shrewdly suspect, their insipidity and want of feeling or observation, may make them insensible to these light things, I mean such as characterise and paint... | |
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