The works of Daniel De Foe [ed.] by W. Hazlitt, Volume 11840 |
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Pagina lxi
... condition as may make it impossible to keep it . " + He therefore urges the government not to press it upon them , as a matter of policy . Grateful for the favours he had received from the Scots , and stimulated by his preference for ...
... condition as may make it impossible to keep it . " + He therefore urges the government not to press it upon them , as a matter of policy . Grateful for the favours he had received from the Scots , and stimulated by his preference for ...
Pagina lxxiv
... condition , as they would have us to understand , of the continuance of his allow- ance . But we shall soon have to notice a most speaking instance of the falseness of these charges . When Harley himself , bred in revolutionary ...
... condition , as they would have us to understand , of the continuance of his allow- ance . But we shall soon have to notice a most speaking instance of the falseness of these charges . When Harley himself , bred in revolutionary ...
Pagina xc
... condition to return it . I have written this upon account of two printed papers relating to myself , of which the authors have so far owned themselves ashamed as to let them but just see the world and retire : and upon account of those ...
... condition to return it . I have written this upon account of two printed papers relating to myself , of which the authors have so far owned themselves ashamed as to let them but just see the world and retire : and upon account of those ...
Pagina cxxiii
... condition that they should be at home again at nine o'clock , thus showing that business must have concluded long before nine - probably , we should think , at seven . From his insisting so much on the wives of tradesmen acquainting ...
... condition that they should be at home again at nine o'clock , thus showing that business must have concluded long before nine - probably , we should think , at seven . From his insisting so much on the wives of tradesmen acquainting ...
Pagina 40
... condition as we were in , we expected no other ; only we desired we might be showed our business , and be allowed to learn it gradually ,, since he might be sure we had not been used to labour ; and , I added , that when he knew parti ...
... condition as we were in , we expected no other ; only we desired we might be showed our business , and be allowed to learn it gradually ,, since he might be sure we had not been used to labour ; and , I added , that when he knew parti ...
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Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
acquaintance afterwards answer army asked began better bill brought called captain carried child circumstances coach desire discourse Dissenters door dragoons Duke Duke of Savoy enemy England English father favour Foe's fortune gave gentleman give governess hand Harwich heard High Church honest honour horse husband Jack justice kind king King of Sweden knew lady lived lodging London looked madam majesty manner married master mind Moll Flanders mother never Newgate night obliged occasion party person pieces of eight plantation poor pretended Prince prisoners racter regiment resolved Robinson Crusoe Saxony says Scotland sent servants ship short Sir John Hepburn sloop soldiers soon speak stood story taken talk tell things thought told took town trade Whigs whole wife woman word writings
Populaire passages
Pagina cl - ... for, after all my ruminating upon it, and what course I should take with it, or where I should put it, I could not hit upon any one thing, or any possible method to secure it, and it perplexed me so, that at last, as I said just now, I sat down and cried heartily. When my crying was over...
Pagina 73 - It is true that the original of this story is put into new words, and the style of the famous lady we here speak of is a little altered ; particularly she is made to tell her own tale in modester words than she told it at first, the copy which came first to hand having been written in language more like one still in Newgate than one grown penitent and humble, as she afterwards pretends to be.
Pagina 74 - But as this work is chiefly recommended to those who know how to read it, and how to make the good uses of it...
Pagina xix - The original Power of the Collective Body of the People of England examined and asserted...
Pagina xlv - Caledonia, &c. A Poem in Honour of Scotland, and the Scots Nation (1706a).
Pagina cl - I took that up, and wrapt it all together, and carried it in that a good way. I have often since heard people say, when they have been talking of money that they could not get in, I wish I had it in a foul clout...
Pagina lv - A New Test of the Sense of the Nation: Being a Modest Comparison between the ADDRESSES to the late King James, and those to her present Majesty. In order to observe how far the Sense of the Nation may be judged of by either of them.
Pagina xiii - He says, that one of his ancestors remembered De Foe, and sometimes saw him walking in the streets of Bristol, accoutred in the fashion of the times, with a fine flowing wig, lace ruffles, and a sword by his side. Also, that he there obtained the name of " The Sunday Gentleman," because, through fear of the bailiffs, he did not dare to appear in public upon any other day.
Pagina 96 - I had been tricked once by that cheat called love, but the game was over; I was resolved now to be married or nothing, and to be well married or not at all.
Pagina xi - Fenwick, they proceeded to enact several laws for regulating the domestic economy of the nation ; among others they passed an act for the more effectual relief of creditors in cases of escape, and for preventing abuses in prisons and pretended privileged places.