Book, Chapter

 1  Pre     |         was, at a period when the art of English letter writing
 2  Int,   2|        who know so little of true art that they mistake those
 3    1,   6| commercialized" that incomparable art. (I was holding forth along
 4    1,   9|          from the school of stern art,~Whose mind gropes for lofty
 5    3,  84|     turned upon the comic actor's art,~The masque is dropped,
 6    3,  87|         that very reason; love or art never yet made anyone rich."~
 7    3,  87|      stands~ Invoking a neglected art, for succor at   its hands.~  ~
 8    4, 123|          The spoils of the world. Art caters to appetite. Wrasse~
 9    4, 123|           safely can venture.~Can art or sane reason rouse wallowing
10    5, 130|       thou, thine armor cast away~Art mute in heaven; and but
11    5, 145|            it must be seasoned by art and reconciled to the unwilling
12    5, 145|           lavish wealth as a fine art. Upon their return to Rome
13    5, 153|           studied with the nicest art~Deck'd out with necklaces
14    5, 153|        shame, lay by this envious art;~Is this to act a sister'
15    5, 154|          as they are agitated, by art or accident, they occasionally
16    5, 154|           Semiramis for the cruel art which she invented of frustrating
17    5, 154|           useful of all arts, the art of flattery; who eagerly
18    5, 154|          skill in the Tesserarian art is a sure road to wealth
19    5, 154|       powerful of the Romans. The art of obtaining the signature
20    6     |           all the grandeur of her art; such an one art thou, C -- -- -,
21    6     |           of her art; such an one art thou, C -- -- -, French
22    6     |           of a freedwoman. Ovid's Art of Love and the Satires
23    6     |       practice that truly liberal art are the repositories of
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