The British Critic: A New Review, Nide 4F. and C. Rivington, 1815 |
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Sivu 124
... Berington follows the plan of Tiraboschi , and , like him , subdivides this first epoch from the death of Au- gustus to the fall of the western empire , into three periods . The first ends with the reign of Adrian ; the second reaches ...
... Berington follows the plan of Tiraboschi , and , like him , subdivides this first epoch from the death of Au- gustus to the fall of the western empire , into three periods . The first ends with the reign of Adrian ; the second reaches ...
Sivu 125
... Berington has overlooked history , and has taken ipse dixit for a mathematical demonstration * , which often imposes upon the reader the obligation of adopting the opinions of an au- thor , without examining their solidity . In a work ...
... Berington has overlooked history , and has taken ipse dixit for a mathematical demonstration * , which often imposes upon the reader the obligation of adopting the opinions of an au- thor , without examining their solidity . In a work ...
Sivu 126
... Berington . It is true that Tiraboschi considers Asinius Pollio as the very first man who vitiated eloquence , but it is not to the destruction of liberty , that the Italian author refers the cause of its decay . Had Mr. Berington ...
... Berington . It is true that Tiraboschi considers Asinius Pollio as the very first man who vitiated eloquence , but it is not to the destruction of liberty , that the Italian author refers the cause of its decay . Had Mr. Berington ...
Sivu 127
... Berington justifies our sup- position . Tiraboschi draws a very wide distinction between arts and sci- ences ; and we beg our reader to bear this difference well in mind , siuce Mr. Berington seems hardly to have noticed its meaning ...
... Berington justifies our sup- position . Tiraboschi draws a very wide distinction between arts and sci- ences ; and we beg our reader to bear this difference well in mind , siuce Mr. Berington seems hardly to have noticed its meaning ...
Sivu 128
... Berington has endeavoured to prove his second asser- tion , that want of imperial encouragement was the cause of the . decay of literature , which is partly true , but we must allow also for the operation of other causes . The history ...
... Berington has endeavoured to prove his second asser- tion , that want of imperial encouragement was the cause of the . decay of literature , which is partly true , but we must allow also for the operation of other causes . The history ...
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