Part 149 (1/2)

LESSON II--PROSE

”_To_ censure works, _not ly all personal censure is here avoided, unless _where necessary_ to illustrate soeneral proposition”--_Kames, El of Crit, Introduction_, p 27

”_There re subjects, so as to give them a ridiculous appearance”--_Ib_, Vol i, p 303

”Theof poetry, _like_ any other _handicraft_, may be learned by industry”--_Macpherson's Preface to Ossian_, p xiv

”Whatever is found ed to be e or beautiful than it is in reality”--_Kames, El of Crit_, Vol i, p 243

”Thus the body of an anireat vessels; these[,] of _sain[,] of still _smaller_, without end, _as_ far as we can discover”--_Id, ib_, p 270

”This cause of beauty, is too extensive to be handled _as a branch_ of any other subject: for _to_ ascertain with accuracy even the proper urative power, _would require_ a large volume; _an_ useful _work_ indeed, but not to be attee stock of time, study, and reflection”--_Id_, Vol ii, p 16

”O the hourly _dangers_ that we here walk _in_! Every sense, and member, _is_ a snare; every creature, and every duty, _is_ a snare to us”--_Baxter, Saints's Rest_

”_For_ a ive_ his opinion of what he sees _but_ in part, _is_ an unjustifiable _piece_ of rashness and folly”--_Addison_

”_That_ the senti_ the divine authority of the Old Testament were correct, _appears_ from the testimony of Jesus Christ and his apostles”--_Gurney's Essays_, p 69

”So in Society we are not our _own_, but Christ's, and the church's, to good works and services, yet all in love”--_Barclay's Works_, Vol i, p

84

”He [_Dr Johnson_] sat up in his bed, _clapped_ his hands, _and cried, 'O brave we_!'--a peculiar _exclamation_ of _his_ when he rejoices”-- _Boswell's Life of Johnson_, Vol iii, p 56

”Single, double, and treble e but examples of antithesis”--_Knowles's Elocutionist_, p xxviii

”The curious _thing, and what_, I would almost say, _settles_ the point, _is_, that we do _Horace_ no service, even according to our view of the s can be _more like each other_ than Horace's _Malthinus_ and Seneca's _Mecenas_”-- _Philological Museu, conduct, behaviour_, abstracted froard to what is, in fact and event, the consequence of _it, is itself_ the natural object of this moral discernment, as speculative truth _and_ [say _or_] falsehood is _of_ speculative reason”--_Butler's analogy_, p 277

”_To_ do what is _right_, with unperverted faculties, _is_ ten _ti”--_Porter's analysis_, p 37

”Some _natures the_ more _pains_ a man takes to reclaim them, _the_ worse they are”--L'ESTRANGE: _Johnson's Dict, w Pains_

”Says _John Milton_, in that i, where every word leaps with intellectual life, '_Who_ kills a e; but _who_ destroys a good book, _kills_ reason itself, kills the ie of God, as it were, in the eye Many a ood book is the precious life-blood of a master spirit, embalmed and treasured up on purpose for a life beyond life!'”--_Louisville Examiner_, June, 1850

LESSON III--PROSE

”The philosopher, the saint, or the hero--_the_ wise, _the_ good, or the great man--very often lies hid and concealed in a plebeian, _which_ a proper education ht”--_Addison_

”The _year before_, he had so used the matter, that _what_ by force, _what_ by policy, he had taken from the Christians _above_ thirty small castles”--_Knolles_