The Fool of Quality: Or, The History of Henry, Earl of Moreland, Volum 2W. Johnston, 1767 - 298 sider |
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Side 18
... himself was there , with a croud of his dependents , and all the male and female relations and friends of the deceased . I gave my Arabella the falts to smell to ; and , as the weakly and bashfully ad- vanced to the bar , a confused and ...
... himself was there , with a croud of his dependents , and all the male and female relations and friends of the deceased . I gave my Arabella the falts to smell to ; and , as the weakly and bashfully ad- vanced to the bar , a confused and ...
Side 22
... himself . My Lord , replied the youth , I now ftand before a tribunal that is infinitely more awful than that of your Lordship . And , provided I approve my truth be- fore God , I fhall be the lefs afflicted for having fallen under your ...
... himself . My Lord , replied the youth , I now ftand before a tribunal that is infinitely more awful than that of your Lordship . And , provided I approve my truth be- fore God , I fhall be the lefs afflicted for having fallen under your ...
Side 36
... himself ; but I held him faft . I believe , faid he , you must be Mr. Clement . I congratulate you , Sir , with all my foul . But you owe me nothing ; I barely did my duty . O , my friend , my brother , my prefer ver ! I cried ; I owe ...
... himself ; but I held him faft . I believe , faid he , you must be Mr. Clement . I congratulate you , Sir , with all my foul . But you owe me nothing ; I barely did my duty . O , my friend , my brother , my prefer ver ! I cried ; I owe ...
Side 38
... himself to us , during my wife's confinement : but he feared that the difcovery of any acquain- tance or correfpondence between us , might prejudice Arabella upon her trial ; and that , therefore , he had made ufe of the little ...
... himself to us , during my wife's confinement : but he feared that the difcovery of any acquain- tance or correfpondence between us , might prejudice Arabella upon her trial ; and that , therefore , he had made ufe of the little ...
Side 52
... himself appeared , and told me with a voice in- terrupted by fighs , that his only fon , my pupil in expectance , had been lately carried off by a malignant fmall - pox , my mourning paffed all fhews and fuits of forrow . I took my ...
... himself appeared , and told me with a voice in- terrupted by fighs , that his only fon , my pupil in expectance , had been lately carried off by a malignant fmall - pox , my mourning paffed all fhews and fuits of forrow . I took my ...
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The Fool of Quality: Or, The History of Henry, Earl of Moreland, Volum 2 Henry Brooke Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1767 |
The Fool of Quality: Or, The History of Henry, Earl of Moreland, Volum 2 Henry Brooke Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1767 |
The Fool of Quality: Or, the History of Henry, Earl of Moreland Henry Brooke Ingen forhåndsvisning tilgjengelig - 2020 |
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
affections affure againſt alfo alſo anfwered Arabella beauty bleffed bluſh bofom cafe caft Clement coufin countenance cried dada dear defire diftinction dreffed exclaimed eyes faid faluted fame faſhion fave fays fecret feem feen feized fenfe fenfible fent fentiments Fenton ferve fhall fhould fide fince fingle firft firſt fome fomething foon foul fpeak fpirit friendſhip ftill ftory fubject fuch fudden fuddenly fuffer fure gave Gentleman Hammy hand happineſs Harry heart heaven herſelf himſelf honour houfe houſe huſband inftances juft Lady Cribbage laft lefs Longfield look Lord Lord Mansfield Madam matter ment Mifs moft moſt muft muſt myſelf nature obferved occafion paffed paffion perfon pleaſed pleaſure poffible prefent preffed purpoſe refpect ſhe Snarle Sneer ſpeak tears thefe themſelves ther theſe thing thofe thoſe thouſand tion took vifit virtue whofe wife woman worfe yourſelf
Populære avsnitt
Side 180 - Let there be no strife, I pray thee, between me and thee, and between my herdmen and thy herdmen ; for we be brethren. Is not the whole land before thee ? separate thyself, I pray thee, from me : if thou wilt take the left hand, then I will go to the right ; or if thou depart to the right hand, then I will go the left.
Side 123 - In taverns and some other places, he who is the most of a bully, is the most of — a Gentleman. With heralds, every Esquire is, indisputably, — a Gentleman. And the highwayman, in his manner of taking your purse; and your friend, in his manner of deceiving your wife, may, however, be allowed to have — much of the Gentleman. Plato, among the philosophers, was " the most of a man of fashion " ; and therefore allowed, at the court of Syracuse, to be — the most of a Gentleman.
Side 185 - I would to God that not only thou, but alfo all that hear me this day, were both almoft, and altogether fuch as I am, except thefe bonds.
Side 190 - ... them by the ears ; and this provoked and began to make me very angry with him ; and thus one fault brought me into another after it, like — Water my chickens come clock.
Side 177 - John was made prisoner, and soon after conducted by the Black Prince to England. The prince entered London in triumph, amid the throng and acclamations of millions of the people. But then this rather appeared to be the triumph of the French king than that of his conqueror. John was seated on a proud steed royally robed, and attended by a numerous and gorgeous train of the British nobility...
Side 124 - Now, as underlings are ever ambitious of imitating and usurping the manners of their superiors; and as this state of mortality is incident to perpetual change and revolution, it may happen, that when the populace, by encroaching on the province of gentility, have arrived to their ne plus ultra of insolence, irreligion, &c.
Side 179 - No, my lord, said Sir Joseph; they are lilies of the valley, they toil not, neither do they spin, yet you see that no monarch, in all his glory, was ever arrayed like one of these.
Side 122 - There is no term in our language more common than that of gentleman ; and, whenever it is heard, all agree in the general idea of a man some way elevated above the vulgar. Yet, perhaps, no two living are precisely agreed respecting the qualities they think requisite for constituting this character. When we hear the epithets of a " fine gentleman, a pretty gentleman...
Side 122 - ... some way elevated above the vulgar. Yet, perhaps, no two living are precisely agreed respecting the qualities they think requisite for constituting this character. When we hear the epithets of a " fine gentleman, a pretty gentleman, much of a gentleman, gentleman,like, something of a gentleman, nothing of a gentleman...
Side 124 - ... embellished by manners that are fashionable in high life. In this case, fortune and fashion are the two constituent ingredients in the composition of modern Gentlemen; for whatever the fashion may be, whether moral or immoral, for or against reason, right or wrong, it is equally the duty of a Gentleman to conform.