Elegant epistles: a copious selection of instructive, moral, and entertaining letters [selected by V. Knox].1812 |
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Pagina 16
... kind and affectionate letter ; and I can assure you have had no pleasure equal to what it gave me since we parted . I believe we should be too much grieved at the swift passing of hours , if we did not look upon the near stages of time ...
... kind and affectionate letter ; and I can assure you have had no pleasure equal to what it gave me since we parted . I believe we should be too much grieved at the swift passing of hours , if we did not look upon the near stages of time ...
Pagina 38
... kind Jack Falstaff , merry Jack Falstaff , fat Jack Falstaff , beware the foul fiend , they call it Marri- age , beware on't ! As what I have advanced on the subject of matrimony is absolutely unanswer- able , I need not tell you where ...
... kind Jack Falstaff , merry Jack Falstaff , fat Jack Falstaff , beware the foul fiend , they call it Marri- age , beware on't ! As what I have advanced on the subject of matrimony is absolutely unanswer- able , I need not tell you where ...
Pagina 46
... kind hint , and am heartily glad to hear that you have made up your affair with your predecessor's widow . What becomes of your intended establishment at Waterford for the reception of foreigners * ? Does it go on ? It would be of great ...
... kind hint , and am heartily glad to hear that you have made up your affair with your predecessor's widow . What becomes of your intended establishment at Waterford for the reception of foreigners * ? Does it go on ? It would be of great ...
Pagina 54
... kind letter , by which I am glad to find that yoù approve of my resignation , and of my resolution to enjoy the comforts of a private life indeed , I had enough both of the pageantry and hurry of public life , to see their futility ...
... kind letter , by which I am glad to find that yoù approve of my resignation , and of my resolution to enjoy the comforts of a private life indeed , I had enough both of the pageantry and hurry of public life , to see their futility ...
Pagina 65
... kind interest which you take in whatever concerna me , makes you both desire and expect it . I am then neither better nor worse than when I wrote to you last ; I have tried many things , and am going on to try many others , but without ...
... kind interest which you take in whatever concerna me , makes you both desire and expect it . I am then neither better nor worse than when I wrote to you last ; I have tried many things , and am going on to try many others , but without ...
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Alte ediții - Afișează-le pe toate
Elegant epistles: a copious selection of instructive, moral, and ... Elegant epistles Vizualizare completă - 1812 |
Elegant epistles: a copious selection of instructive, moral, and ... Elegant epistles Vizualizare completă - 1812 |
Elegant epistles: a copious selection of instructive, moral, and ... Elegant epistles Vizualizare completă - 1812 |
Termeni și expresii frecvente
acquaintance Adieu admired Æneid affection affectionate agreeable amusement baron d'Holbach Bath believe Blackheath BRADSHAIGH Charles Avison CHESTERFIELD TO DR compliments DEAR DAYROLLES DEAR LORD DEAR SIR desire DUCHESS OF PORTLAND Dunciad ELIZABETH MONTAGU esteem excuse expect eyes faithful Falstaff father favour fear friendship give glad gout grace GRAY TO DR happy hear heart Hippomedon honour hope IGNATIUS SANCHO imagine kind lady ladyship learning Leasowes least leave live London LORD CHESTERFIELD madam mean melancholy ment mind Mnestheus Mount Morris never night obliged occasion one's opinion person Peterhouse pleased pleasure poor Pray present pretty racter RICHARDSON ROBINSON seen SHENSTONE sincere spirit STERNE sure tell temper thank thing THOMAS PITT thought Tibullus tion town true truth vanity wish woman word worse write
Pasaje populare
Pagina 145 - When you have seen one of my days, you have seen a whole year of my life ; they go round and round like the blind horse in the mill, only he has the satisfaction of fancying he makes a progress, and gets some ground ; my eyes are open enough to see the same dull prospect, and to know that, having made four-and-twenty steps more, I shall be just where I was...
Pagina 152 - ... for I spy no human thing in it but myself. It is a little chaos of mountains and precipices ; mountains, it is true, that do not ascend much above the clouds, nor are the declivities quite so amazing as Dover cliff'; but...
Pagina 152 - We have old Mr. Southern at a gentleman's house a little way off, who often comes to see us ; he is now seventy-seven years old,* and has almost wholly lost his memory ; but is as agreeable as an old man can be, at least I persuade myself so when I look at him, and think of Isabella and Oroonoko.
Pagina 199 - I live ! my gardens are in the window, like those of a lodger up three pair of stairs in Petticoat Lane, or Camomile Street, and they go to bed regularly under the same roof that I do : dear, how charming it must be to walk out in one's own garden, and sit on a bench in the open air with a fountain, and a leaden statue, and a rolling stone, and an arbour ! have a care of sore throats though, and the agoe.
Pagina 234 - For God's sake, persuade her to come and fix in England, for life is too short to waste in separation ; and, whilst she lives in one country, and I in another, many people will suppose it proceeds from choice ; — besides, I want thee near me, thou child and darling of my heart...
Pagina 148 - There shall the great owl make her nest, and lay, and hatch, and gather under her shadow : there shall the vultures also be gathered, every one with her mate.
Pagina 171 - Cat, the name you distinguish her by, I am no less at a loss, as well knowing one's handsome cat is always the cat one...
Pagina 230 - Sancho! any more than mine? It is by the finest tints, and most insensible gradations, that nature descends from the fairest face about St James's, to the sootiest complexion in Africa: — at which tint of these is it, that the ties of blood are to cease? and how many shades must we descend lower still in the scale, ere Mercy is to vanish with them?
Pagina 148 - But wild beasts of the desert shall lie there; and their houses shall be full of doleful creatures; and owls shall dwell there, and satyrs shall dance there.
Pagina 170 - In the first place he is the hardest author by far I ever meddled with. Then he has a dry conciseness that makes one imagine one is perusing a table of contents rather than a book ; it tastes for all the world like chopped hay, or rather like chopped logic ; for he has a violent affection to that art, being in some sort his own invention ; so that he often loses himself in little trifling distinctions and verbal niceties, and what is worse, leaves you to extricate yourself as you can.