| 1872 - 610 pages
...without the vices and ' follies that attend them; and were they but as much strangers ' to revenge, as they are to avarice and ambition, they might ' in fact answer the poetical notions of the Golden Age.' These are evidently the ecclesiastical and romantic elements which helped... | |
| Alexander Pope - 1812 - 362 pages
...they without the vices and follies that attend them ; and were they but as much strangers to revenge, as they are to avarice and ambition, they might in fact answer the poetical notions of ,the golden age. But they have got, as an alloy to their happiness, an ill habit of murdering... | |
| George Berkeley - 1820 - 514 pages
...are without the vices and follies that attend them ; and were they but as much strangers to revenge as they are to avarice and ambition, they might in fact answer the poetical notions of the golden age. But they have got, as an alloy to their happiness, an ill habit "of murdering... | |
| Alexander Pope - Poets, English - 1822 - 396 pages
...they without the vices and follies that attend them ; and were they but as much strangers to revenge, as they are to avarice and ambition, they might in fact answer the poetical notions of the golden age. But they have got, as an alloy to their happiness, an ill habit of murdering... | |
| Alexander Pope - 1822 - 392 pages
...without the vices and follies that attend them ; and were f. they but as much strangers to revenge, as they are to avarice and ambition, they might in fact answer the poetical notions of the golden age. But they have got, as an alloy to their happiness, an ill habit of murdering... | |
| Alexander Pope - 1824 - 596 pages
...they without the vices and follies that attend them ; and were they but as much strangers to revenge, as they are to avarice and ambition, they might in fact answer the poetical notions of the golden age. But they have got, as an alloy to their happiness, an ill habit of murdering... | |
| Alexander Pope, William Roscoe - English literature - 1824 - 602 pages
...they without the vices and follies that attend them ; and were they but as much strangers to revenge, as they are to avarice and ambition, they might in fact answer the poetical notions of the golden age. But they have got, as an alloy to their happiness, an ill habit of murdering... | |
| 1826 - 434 pages
...are without the vices and follies that attend them ; and were they but as much strangers to revenge as they are to avarice and ambition, they might in fact answer the poetical notions of the golden age. But they have got, as an alloy to their happiness, an ill habit of murdering... | |
| Anniversary calendar - 1832 - 600 pages
...they without the vices and follies that attend them ; and were they but as much strangers to revenge, as they are to avarice and ambition, they might in fact answer the poetical notions of the golden age. But they have got, as an alloy to their happiness, an ill habit of murdering... | |
| George Berkeley - Philosophy, Modern - 1843 - 548 pages
...are without the vices and follies that attend them ; and were they but as much strangers to revenge, as they are to avarice and ambition, they might in fact answer the poetical notions of the golden age. But they have got, as an alloy to their happiness, an ill habit of murdering... | |
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