| James Burgh - 1767 - 388 sivua
...nothing is more provoking to fome tempers than raillery, a prudent perfon will not always be fatirically witty where he can ; but only where he may without offence. For he will confider, that the fineft ftroke of raillery is but a witticifm -, and that there is hardly any perfon... | |
| James Burgh - 1795 - 594 sivua
...nothing is more provoking to fome tempers than raillery, a prudent perfon will not always be fatirically witty where he can ; but only where he may without offence. For he will confider, that the fineft ftroke of raillery is but a wittitfifm; and that there is hardly any perfon... | |
| General reader - 1827 - 246 sivua
...that fills the bones with pain, The mouth with blasphemy, the heart with wo. Cowper. F RAILLERY. — As nothing is more provoking to some tempers than...is not preferable to the pleasure of a horse-laugh. The Dignity of Human Nature. Sloth is the key to let in beggary. The Scriptures are the most ancient... | |
| Tryon Edwards - 1853 - 442 sivua
...right to resent injuries, but it is ridiculous to be angry at a jest. — Rochefoucault. RAILLERY. — As nothing is more provoking to some tempers than...witty where he can, but only where he may without offpnce. For he will consider that the finest stroke of raillery is but a witticism ; and that there... | |
| Tryon Edwards - 1908 - 776 sivua
...because we have a right to resent injuries, but it is ridiculous to be angry at a jest.— Rochefoucauld. As nothing is more provoking to some tempers than...and that there is hardly any person so mean, whose good will is not preferable to the pleasure of a horse-langh. — Burgh. Raillery is a mode of speaking... | |
| Tryon Edwards - 1908 - 788 sivua
...we have a right to resent injuries, but it is ridiculous to be angry at a jest. — Rochefoucauld. As nothing is more provoking to some tempers than...a witticism ; and that there is hardly any person но mean, whose good will is not preferable to the pleasure of a horse-laugh. — Burgh. Raillery... | |
| Gregg Camfield - 1997 - 255 sivua
...close to denouncing comedy altogether, as did James Burgh in his 1846 Rules for the Conduct of Life: As nothing is more provoking to some tempers than...and that there is hardly any person so mean, whose good will is not preferable to the pleasure of a horse laugh. If you should by raillery make another... | |
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