Mr. Pope's Literary Correspondence. Volume the Fifth. With Letters of Lord Bolingbroke. Lord Lansdowne. ...E. Curll, 1737 - 86 sider |
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... . that I ought to have writ a Postscript to my Friend GAY's , makes me not content to write less than a whole Letter ; and your feeming to * Written in the Year , 1723 . B take take his kindly , gives me Hopes you will look.
... . that I ought to have writ a Postscript to my Friend GAY's , makes me not content to write less than a whole Letter ; and your feeming to * Written in the Year , 1723 . B take take his kindly , gives me Hopes you will look.
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... look upon you to be ( as to me ) in a State between both ; you have from me , all the Paffions and good Wishes that can attend the Living , and all that Refpect and tender Senfe of Lofs that we feel for the Dead . Whatever you feem to ...
... look upon you to be ( as to me ) in a State between both ; you have from me , all the Paffions and good Wishes that can attend the Living , and all that Refpect and tender Senfe of Lofs that we feel for the Dead . Whatever you feem to ...
Side 1
... look upon me as one intailed upon them by you . Lord BOLING- BROKE is now returned ( as I hope ) to take me with all his other Heredi- tary - Rights ; and , indeed , he seems grown fo much a Philofopher , as to fet his Heart upon fome ...
... look upon me as one intailed upon them by you . Lord BOLING- BROKE is now returned ( as I hope ) to take me with all his other Heredi- tary - Rights ; and , indeed , he seems grown fo much a Philofopher , as to fet his Heart upon fome ...
Side 26
... look her Victims fall ; But the herself Receives from None , Or what's the fame to Me , from One ; One happy Man that dwells within those Arms , Taftes all her Joys , and rifles all her Charms . While dying Crouds of Lovers ftand , And look ...
... look her Victims fall ; But the herself Receives from None , Or what's the fame to Me , from One ; One happy Man that dwells within those Arms , Taftes all her Joys , and rifles all her Charms . While dying Crouds of Lovers ftand , And look ...
Side 31
... look after Ourselves , and not after the Secu- rity of Strangers . Here is nothing at all of News , neither that Dunkirk is taken , nor Namure befieged . So that I suppose the Army is in very good Health , for I hear nothing to the con ...
... look after Ourselves , and not after the Secu- rity of Strangers . Here is nothing at all of News , neither that Dunkirk is taken , nor Namure befieged . So that I suppose the Army is in very good Health , for I hear nothing to the con ...
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Mr. Pope's Literary Correspondence. Volume the Fifth. with Letters of Lord ... Alexander Pope Ingen forhåndsvisning tilgjengelig - 2016 |
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
Adieu affure againſt anſwer Beauty becauſe befides beft believe beſt Bishop of ROCHESTER cafe caufe Charms confefs converfation Dean SWIFT deferve Defign defire eafy efteem faid fame fancy fatisfied favour fear feems feen felf fend feveral fhall fhew fhould fince fincere firft firſt fome Fool foon friendſhip ftill fuch fuffer fure give greateſt hear Heart himſelf Homer Honour hope houſe ILIAD juft juſt Lady laft laſt leaft leaſt lefs leſs letter live Lord Love Lover Madam mind moft moſt Mufe muft muſt myſelf never Numbers Nymph obferved occafion Paffion Perfon pleafing pleas'd pleaſe pleaſure Poet POPE Praiſe prefent preferve profe Reaſon reft ſee ſelf Senfe ſhall ſhe ſmall ſtill tell thee thefe themſelves ther theſe thing thofe thoſe thou thought thro tranflation underſtand uſe Verfe Verſe whofe WILLIAM TRUMBULL wiſh write
Populære avsnitt
Side 193 - It was but this very morning that he had obtained her parents' consent, and it was but till the next week that they were to wait to be happy. Perhaps...
Side 92 - Lord Chancellor HARCOURT, at the Church of Stanton-Harcourt in Oxfordshire, 1720. To this sad shrine, whoe'er thou art, draw near, Here lies the friend most lov'd, the son most dear: Who ne'er knew joy, but friendship might divide, Or gave his father grief but when he dy'd.
Side 192 - I am quite out of the world, and there is fcarce any thing that can reach me except the noife of thunder, which undoubtedly you have heard too. We have read in old authors of high towers levelled by it to the ground, while the humble valleys have efcaped : The only thing that is proof againft it is the laurel^ which, however, I take to be no great...
Side 223 - Europe ; and an admiral on account of your skill in maritime affairs : whereas, according to the usual method of court proceedings, I should have been at the head of the army, and you of the church, or rather a curate under the dean of St. Patrick's.
Side 245 - And this for the very reason which possibly might hinder your coming, that my poor mother is dead.* I thank God, her death was as easy, as her life was innocent; and as it cost her not a groan, or even a sigh, there is yet upon her countenance such an expression of tranquillity, nay, almost of pleasure, that it is even amiable to behold it.
Side 81 - I have a due sense of the excellence of the British constitution. In a word, the things I have always wished to see, are, not a Roman Catholic, or a French Catholic, or a Spanish Catholic, but a true Catholic; and not a King of Whigs, or a King of Tories, but a King of England ; which God of his mercy grant his present Majesty may be, and all future majesties.
Side 121 - ... utterly forgetful of that world from which we are gone, and ripening for that to which we are to go. If you retain any memory of the past...
Side 162 - Of softest manners, unaffected mind, Lover of peace, and friend of human kind : Go, live ! for heaven's eternal year is thine, Go, and exalt thy mortal to divine.
Side 194 - ... of life were found in either. Attended by their melancholy companions, they were conveyed to the town, and the next day were interred in Stanton-Harcourt church-yard.
Side 67 - Ireland, as objects look larger through a medium of Fogs : and yet I am infinitely pleased with that too. I am much the happier for finding (a better thing than our Wits) our Judgments jump, in the notion that all Scribblers should be past by in silence.