Concinnity and succinctness thereof all along. He teacheth a new way of Epistolizing ; and that Familiar Letters may not onely consist of Words, and a bombast of Complements, but that they are capable of the highest Speculations and solidst kind of Knowledge. Instructions for Forreine Travell: 1642 - Side 3av James Howell - 1642 - 88 siderUten tilgangsbegrensning - Om denne boken
| James Howell - 1869 - 96 sider
...Prose, in the Concinnity and succinctness thereof all along. He teacheth a new way of Epistolmng ; and that Familiar Letters may not onely consist of...Words, and a bombast of Complements, but that they arc capable of the highest Speculations and solidst kind of Knowledge. He chalks out a Topical and... | |
| William Clark Russell - 1876 - 538 sider
...sat in a company 1 Of this work Sergeant-Major Peter Fisher, poet-laureate to the Protector, says, "He teacheth a new way of Epistolizing ; and that 'Familiar Letters ' may not only consist of words and a bombast of compliments, but '"-at they are capable of the highest speculations... | |
| William Davenport Adams - 1880 - 724 sider
...in the Matter, Method, or Fancy, and in an untrodden Tract. He teacheth a new way of Kpistolizing: and that Familiar Letters may not onely consist of...that they are capable of the highest Speculations and splidst kind of Knowledge. He chalks out a Topical and exact way for Foreign Travel, not roving in... | |
| James Howell - 1890 - 704 sider
...one may discover a kinde of Vein of Poesie to run through the body of his Prose, in the Continuity and succinctness thereof all along. He teacheth a...of Epistolizing ; and that Familiar Letters may not only consist of Words and a bombast of Compliments, but that they are capable of the highest Speculations... | |
| James Howell - 1891 - 414 sider
...discover a kiude of vein of poesie to run through the body of his prose, in the concinuity and succintness thereof all along. He teacheth a new way of epistolizing ; and that Familiar Letters may not only consist of words, and a hombast of compliments, but that they are capable of the highest speculations... | |
| 1901 - 100 sider
...Vorrede seiner Ausgabe von Howells Gedichten (Lond. 1664) charakterisiert, wie folgt: „He (ie Howell) teacheth a new way of Epistolizing; and that Familiar Letters may not only consist of Words, and a bombast of Complements, but that they are capable of the highest Speculations... | |
| Alfred Horatio Upham - 1908 - 586 sider
...admirers as well as severe critics. Thus in 1664, Payne Fisher, in the preface to Howell's Poems, says: "He teacheth a new way of Epistolizing; and that Familiar ;. Letters may not only consist of Words and a bombast of Compliments, but that they are capable of the highest Speculations... | |
| Charles Wells Moulton - 1910 - 812 sider
...one may discover a kinde of Vein of Poesie to run through the body of his Prose, in the Continuity and succinctness thereof all along. He teacheth a...Epistolizing ; and that "Familiar Letters" may not only consist of Words and a bombast of Compliments, but that they are capable of the highest Speculations... | |
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