The Complete Works of William Hazlitt, Volume 6 |
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Page 35
The most pungent ridicule , is that which is directed to mortify vanity , and to expose affectation ; but vanity and affectation , in their most exorbitant and studied excesses , are the ruling principles of society , only in a highly ...
The most pungent ridicule , is that which is directed to mortify vanity , and to expose affectation ; but vanity and affectation , in their most exorbitant and studied excesses , are the ruling principles of society , only in a highly ...
Page 124
... that is , it has all the liveliness in the sketches of character , and smartness of common dialogue and repartee , without the tediousness of the story , and endless affectation of sentiment which disfigures the others .
... that is , it has all the liveliness in the sketches of character , and smartness of common dialogue and repartee , without the tediousness of the story , and endless affectation of sentiment which disfigures the others .
Page 143
There is no want , for example , in the Marriage- a - la - Mode , or in Taste in High Life , of affectation verging into idiotism , or of languid sensibility , that might― ' Die of a rose in aromatic pain .
There is no want , for example , in the Marriage- a - la - Mode , or in Taste in High Life , of affectation verging into idiotism , or of languid sensibility , that might― ' Die of a rose in aromatic pain .
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