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How To Use Hogarth In A Sentence

  • Hogarth Architects The use of traditional materials, like the oak in the mezzanine and kitchen and the elaborate cornicing, offset modern features like the glass walls, stark white colors and poured rubber floors. London Bachelor Pad
  • Fielding's own benefit, as appears from the curious ticket attributed to Hogarth and facsimiled by A.M. Ireland, took place on April 25, but we have no record of the amount of his gains. Fielding
  • The walls were hung with old theatre posters Mr. Garrick, Mr.. Woffington, Mr.. Siddons - Richard III: The Constant Couple; The Grecian Daughter, in cheap black print on old, creased paper, mounted on red board under glass in Hogarth frames. Bottled Spider
  • A Hogarth curve of red spray carnations and red roses was shown with a collection of assorted bottles and acacia seed pods.
  • Whether he was overparted, or overworked, in the Pompadour atmosphere; or whether he succumbed to the "continual headache" of which he speaks in his letter to Hogarth, his health gradually declined. De Libris: Prose and Verse
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  • Faces aflame with drink, grotesque moustaches, pot bellies ... I seemed to have stumbled into a painting by Hogarth.
  • Hogarth's `business trip' had been a visit to one of the more far-flung regions to purchase a mail order bride. TICKLED PINK
  • Mr. Dennis the hangman is a portrait that Hogarth would have painted with the same wholesome severity of satire which is employed upon it in _Barnaby Rudge_. The Life of Charles Dickens, Vol. I-III, Complete
  • A Hogarth curve of red spray carnations and red roses was shown with a collection of assorted bottles and acacia seed pods.
  • [130] 'Sigismunda;' a detestable miscreation of Hogarth's pencil, admired by none but himself. Poetical Works
  • A Hogarth curve of red spray carnations and red roses was shown with a collection of assorted bottles and acacia seed pods.
  • Jews rushed forward, one a tall fellow, the other an obese bulk with bright black eyes, the former holding a slender blade -- the knife with which "shechita", or slaughtering, was done: and while the corpulent Jew threw himself upon Hogarth, the other drew this knife through the flesh of Hogarth's shoulder, at the same time happening to cut the heavy Arab across the wrist. The Lord of the Sea
  • What Hogarth did not know when he wrote his feature story, was that the predicted danger had already proved a reality, and that on the morning of March 11 -- just one week earlier -- Herbert Fletcher DeCou, epigrapher to the expedition, and close friend of Norton, had been shot dead by two bullets fired at a range of 20 yards. The Mystery of DeCou's Assassination
  • The ordinary authorities affirm that he imitated and rivalled the popular miniaturist and enameller, Christian Zincke, who retired from practice in 1746; and he is loosely described as "the companion of Hogarth, Garrick, Foote, and the wits of the day. De Libris: Prose and Verse
  • A Hogarth curve of red spray carnations and red roses was shown with a collection of assorted bottles and acacia seed pods.
  • Hogarth, in an unusually loquacious mood, had explained to a disbelieving Posy that the Pinks were talented musicians. TICKLED PINK
  • Hogarth, in an unusually loquacious mood, had explained to a disbelieving Posy that the Pinks were talented musicians. TICKLED PINK
  • His wife is similarly developed little beyond the feisty, lusty, rosy-cheeked and wide-hipped countrywoman you might expect to find in a work by Hogarth.
  • Hogarth devised a line of beauty that has an uncanny similarity to a woman's back!
  • Gray speaks of "moping" owls; Chatterton exclaims, "Harke! the dethe owle loude dothe synge"; whilst Hogarth introduces the same bird in the murder scene of his _Four Stages of Cruelty_. Animal Ghosts Or, Animal Hauntings and the Hereafter
  • Among the more famous pictures is a Peg Woffington by Hogarth, not here "dallying and dangerous," but demure as a nun; also the "Modern Midnight Conversation" from the same hand; three or four bewitching Romneys; a room full of beauties of the Highways & Byways in Sussex
  • Hogarth started an apprenticeship as a silversmith in 1714, but never finished it.
  • Hogarth, in an unusually loquacious mood, had explained to a disbelieving Posy that the Pinks were talented musicians. TICKLED PINK
  • Hogarth, his sometime pupil, eloped with his daughter in 1729.
  • They were just do-se do-ing to their partners like billyo, when Lola and Hogarth appeared from the back room. TICKLED PINK
  • They were just do-se do-ing to their partners like billyo, when Lola and Hogarth appeared from the back room. TICKLED PINK
  • Their Hogarth Press had operated from the basement room in Tavistock Square.
  • Bentley's Miscellany at beginning of 1837, and commences “Oliver Twist”; Quarterly Review predicts his speedy downfall; pecuniary position at this time; moves from Furnival's Inn to Doughty Street; death of his sister-in-law Mary Hogarth; his friendships; absence of all jealousy in his character; habits of work; riding and pedestrianizing; walking in London streets necessary to the exercise of his art 49 Life of Charles Dickens
  • Mr. Dempster was not disposed to encourage her confidence; her strange inquiries about people he had been greatly interested in, recalled the seance which had so much startled Francis Hogarth, and he suspected that this must be the person who had written the letter the spirit had been questioned about, and, consequently, that she was Hogarth's mother; no mother, certainly, to be proud of! Mr. Hogarth's Will
  • Hogarth, in an unusually loquacious mood, had explained to a disbelieving Posy that the Pinks were talented musicians. TICKLED PINK
  • The scene of the coiffing is a print of Hogarth's translated to the stage; Rofrano's name "Octavian Musical Portraits Interpretations of Twenty Modern Composers
  • A skimmington appears in Samuel Butler's ‘Hudibras,’ a poem that may have inspired Hogarth to try his hand at the topic.
  • Dickens made good use of the 29 shillings he received for The Pickwick Papers by marrying Catherine Hogarth, a daughter of a newspaper editor. Bill Lucey: Remembering Our Mutual Friend, Charles Dickens, on his 200th Birthday
  • Hogarth, leaning on his elbows amongst the spillage stains, had his mouth open. TICKLED PINK
  • J 'attenderais pour la nuit mercredi, M. Hogarth - je vous remercie en avance pour mes sweet dreams - Trois bravos! cher homme. Colis - French Word-A-Day
  • Boswell 's biography says painter William Hogarth thought Johnson was an "idiot" until the writer spoke to reveal his eloquence.
  • Moving on from his Hogarthian images of the early 1990s, the elements of caricature have disappeared, although he remains preoccupied with brutalisation.
  • She is impudently vernal, like Hogarth's more plebeian Shrimp-Girl, and even more fluorescent in her dewiness.
  • Hogarth took off his boots under his blanket, and from them took out the vials; then, sitting up, commenced to call the warder, at the same time wetting the torn piece of shirt with some of the fluid. The Lord of the Sea
  • But what Harris could not do was to get near to Hogarth: his task was, as it were, to pluck Venus from the firmament; but he mused, he mused upon her, with musing astrologic eye, with grand patience, fascinated by her very splendours, not without hope. The Lord of the Sea

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