Hazlitt

Cited as Hazlitt. — 25 quotations

Affect

Do not affect the society of your inferiors in rank, nor court that of the great.

Cavalier

The plodding, persevering scupulous accuracy of the one, and the easy, cavalier, verbal fluency of the other, form a complete contrast.

Decompound

It divides and decompounds objects into . . . parts.

Derogate

Would Charles X. derogate from his ancestors? Would he be the degenerate scion of that royal line?

Discursive

The power he [Shakespeare] delights to show is not intense, but discursive.

dissipate

The extreme tendency of civilization is to dissipate all intellectual energy.

Egotism

His excessive egotism, which filled all objects with himself.

Feel

To intercept and have a more kindly feel of its genial warmth.

Finical

The gross style consists in giving no detail, the finical in giving nothing else.

Fortuitous

So as to throw a glancing and fortuitous light upon the whole.

Grace

Grace in women gains the affections sooner, and secures them longer, than any thing else.

Hand

I was always reckoned a lively hand at a simile.

Hold

His imagination holds immediately from nature.

Indifferency

Moral liberty . . . does not, after all, consist in a power of indifferency, or in a power of choosing without regard to motives.

Liberal

I confess I see nothing liberal in this “ order of thoughts,” as Hobbes elsewhere expresses it.

Liking

Would he be the degenerate scion of that royal line . . . to be a king on liking and on sufferance?

Mannered

His style is in some degree mannered and confined.

Muddle

They muddle it [money] away without method or object, and without having anything to show for it.

Muster

One of those who can muster up sufficient sprightliness to engage in a game of forfeits.

Skim

Homer describes Mercury as flinging himself from the top of Olympus, and skimming the surface of the ocean.

Stickle

The obstinacy with which he stickles for the wrong.

Stultify

The modern sciolist stultifies all understanding but his own, and that which he conceives like his own.

Substantive

Strength and magnitude are qualities which impress the imagination in a powerful and substantive manner.

Touch

Eyes La touch of Sir Peter Lely in them.

Unction

The delightful equivoque and unction of the passage in Farquhar.