Eighteenth Century Vignettes: Second seriesChatto & Windus, 1894 - 300 pagina's |
Vanuit het boek
Resultaten 1-5 van 19
Pagina 45
... told Langton , ' was well acted by all the characters , but Bellamy left nothing to be desired . I went the first night , and supported it , as well I might ; for Doddy , you know , is my patron , and I would not desert him . The play ...
... told Langton , ' was well acted by all the characters , but Bellamy left nothing to be desired . I went the first night , and supported it , as well I might ; for Doddy , you know , is my patron , and I would not desert him . The play ...
Pagina 90
... told Reynolds sadly ) was pro- foundly humiliating . All he had done seemed meagre and starved , as if made of nothing but tobacco - pipes . ' From this date his story becomes more than ever the record of his work , and of that work it ...
... told Reynolds sadly ) was pro- foundly humiliating . All he had done seemed meagre and starved , as if made of nothing but tobacco - pipes . ' From this date his story becomes more than ever the record of his work , and of that work it ...
Pagina 114
... told , did not in the least prevent the company from exhibiting much inconsiderate exultation . A more serious result was that this new success , besides consider- ably swelling the ranks of the Opposition , in- volved fresh concessions ...
... told , did not in the least prevent the company from exhibiting much inconsiderate exultation . A more serious result was that this new success , besides consider- ably swelling the ranks of the Opposition , in- volved fresh concessions ...
Pagina 127
... told Madame de Moncon- seil that Nivernais was loved , respected and admired by every honest man in Court and Town . ' This is the more to his credit because he liked neither the climate nor the people . He accommodates himself to our ...
... told Madame de Moncon- seil that Nivernais was loved , respected and admired by every honest man in Court and Town . ' This is the more to his credit because he liked neither the climate nor the people . He accommodates himself to our ...
Pagina 131
... told by letters , and in one of which Richardson emphatically vindicated his claim to rank among the ' best Writers followed ' Pamela ' before Fielding's death . Half - a - dozen years after that event , another and a greater than ...
... told by letters , and in one of which Richardson emphatically vindicated his claim to rank among the ' best Writers followed ' Pamela ' before Fielding's death . Half - a - dozen years after that event , another and a greater than ...
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
admirable afterwards appeared Arch Argyll artist Bath beautiful Bedford Berlin Boswell Bramble Bramble's brother called Captain Chodowiecki Clarissa Cleone copy Court Covent Garden daughter death described Dodsley Dodsley's doubt dress Duchess Duchess of Grafton Duke Duke's Earl England engravings Esther Johnson famous father favourite figure folio footmen fortunate French garden Garrick gentleman guineas hand Hogarth honour Horace Walpole Humphry Clinker Johnson Journal Lady Mary Coke later letters literary London look Lord Bute Lord Chesterfield Madame Madame de Sévigné master Melford ment Miss never Nivernais once painted Payne person picture poet politics Pope portrait present Prince Princess printed probably racter Ranelagh record Richardson Roger Payne Roubillac Samuel Johnson says scarcely seems side Silas sketch Smollett speaking Stella story Street Swift Thomas tion Told Traineau Tully's Head Vauxhall verses visited volume write wrote young
Populaire passages
Pagina 272 - If you had never seen it I would make you a most pompous description of it, and tell you how the floor is all of beaten princes—that you can't set your foot without treading on a Prince of Wales or Duke of Cumberland.
Pagina 25 - Verse sweetens toil, however rude the sound. All at her work the village maiden sings; Nor, while she turns the giddy wheel around, Revolves the sad vicissitude of things.
Pagina 19 - This day, being Sunday, January 28, 1727-8, about eight o'clock at night, a servant brought me a note, with an account of the death of the truest, most virtuous, and valuable friend that I, or perhaps any other person, was ever blessed with.
Pagina 71 - May the hatred of all the young, beautiful, and virtuous for ever be your portion, and may your eyes never behold anything but age and deformity ! May you meet with applause only from envious old maids, surly bachelors, and tyrannical parents; may you be doomed to the company of such ! and after death may their ugly souls haunt you ! " Now make Lovelace and Clarissa unhappy if you dare...
Pagina 158 - ... habitable islands, some of them stocked with deer, and all of them covered with wood; containing immense quantities of delicious fish, salmon, pike, trout, perch, flounders, eels, and powans, the last a delicate kind of fresh-water herring peculiar to this lake; and finally communicating with the sea, by sending off the Leven, through which all those species (except the powan) make their exit and entrance occasionally?
Pagina 92 - The antechapel where the statue stood Of Newton with his prism and silent face, The marble index of a mind for ever Voyaging through strange seas of Thought, alone.
Pagina 143 - London is literally new to me ; new in its streets, houses, and even in its situation : as the Irishman said, " London is now gone out of town." What I left open fields, producing hay and corn, I now find covered with. streets, and squares, and palaces, and churches. I am credibly informed, that, in the space of seven years, eleven thousand new houses have been built in one quarter of Westminster, exclusive of what is daily added to other parts of this unwieldy metropolis.
Pagina 277 - In strains more exalted the salt-box shall join, And clattering and battering and clapping combine ; With a rap and a tap, while the hollow side sounds. Up and down leaps the flap, and with rattling rebounds '." . I mentioned the periodical paper called
Pagina 145 - Every clerk, apprentice, and even waiter of a tavern or coffee-house, maintains a gelding by himself, or in partnership, and assumes the air and apparel of a petitmaitre. The gayest places of public entertainment are filled with fashionable figures, which, upon inquiry, will be found to be journeymen-tailors, serving-men, and abigails, disguised like their betters.