The Works of Dr. Jonathan Swift ...G. Hamilton, J. Balfour, & L. Hunter, 1757 |
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Side 56
... Madam , the mighty pow'r of use " Now strangely pleads in my excuse . " If you unus'd have scarcely strength " To gain this walk's untoward length ; " If frighten'd at a scene fo rude , " Through long difufe of folitude ; " If long ...
... Madam , the mighty pow'r of use " Now strangely pleads in my excuse . " If you unus'd have scarcely strength " To gain this walk's untoward length ; " If frighten'd at a scene fo rude , " Through long difufe of folitude ; " If long ...
Side 115
... Madam your wife They'll please to the life ; Be the barren , be the old , 1 Be fhe flut , or be the fcold , Eat my oyfters , and lie near her , She'll be fruitful , never fear her . } 5 TO 15 10 1-5 HER- BE HERRING S. not sparing ...
... Madam your wife They'll please to the life ; Be the barren , be the old , 1 Be fhe flut , or be the fcold , Eat my oyfters , and lie near her , She'll be fruitful , never fear her . } 5 TO 15 10 1-5 HER- BE HERRING S. not sparing ...
Side 128
... I fhall read and think with pleasure ; Converfation learn to relish , And with books my mind embellish . Now , methinks , I hear you cry , Mr Dean , you must reply . 80 85 00 MADAM , I allow ' tis true : All these 128 VERSES ON A LADY .
... I fhall read and think with pleasure ; Converfation learn to relish , And with books my mind embellish . Now , methinks , I hear you cry , Mr Dean , you must reply . 80 85 00 MADAM , I allow ' tis true : All these 128 VERSES ON A LADY .
Side 129
Jonathan Swift. MADAM , I allow ' tis true : All these praises are your due . You , like fome acute philofopher , Ev'ry fault have drawn a glofs over ; Placing in the ftrongest light All your virtues to my fight . THO ' you lead a ...
Jonathan Swift. MADAM , I allow ' tis true : All these praises are your due . You , like fome acute philofopher , Ev'ry fault have drawn a glofs over ; Placing in the ftrongest light All your virtues to my fight . THO ' you lead a ...
Side 141
... Madam bad the chariot stand , 50 Call'd to the clerk in manner mild ,, Pray reach that thing here to the child ; That thing , I mean , among the kale ; And here's to buy a pot of ale . 55 THE clerk faid to her in a heat , What ! fell my ...
... Madam bad the chariot stand , 50 Call'd to the clerk in manner mild ,, Pray reach that thing here to the child ; That thing , I mean , among the kale ; And here's to buy a pot of ale . 55 THE clerk faid to her in a heat , What ! fell my ...
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THE WORKS OF THE Dr. Jonathan Swift, Dean of St. Patrick's, Dublin, Volum 7 Jonathan Swift Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1760 |
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
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Populære avsnitt
Side 203 - ... durable qualities. You have but a very few years to be young and handsome in the eyes of the world, and as few months to be so in the eyes of a husband who is not a fool ; for I hope you do not still dream of charms and raptures, which marriage ever did, and ever will, put a sudden end to.
Side 169 - Simplicity, without which no human Performance can arrive to any great Perfection, is no where more eminently useful than in this.
Side 36 - In bulk there are not more degrees, From elephants to mites in cheese, Than what a curious eye may trace In creatures of the rhyming race. From bad to worse, and worse, they fall ; But who can reach the...
Side 85 - When beasts could speak, (the learned say They still can do so every day,) It seems, they had religion then, As much as now we find in men. It happen'd, when a plague broke out, (Which therefore made them more devout,) The king of brutes (to make it plain, Of quadrupeds I only mean) By proclamation gave command, That every...
Side 40 - Let them rave at making laws ; While they never hold their tongue, Let them dabble in their dung : Let them form a grand committee, How to plague and starve the city ; Let them...
Side 31 - Then, poet, if you mean to thrive, Employ your Muse on kings alive ; With prudence gathering up a cluster Of all the virtues you can muster, Which, form'd into a garland sweet, Lay humbly at your monarch's feet :. Who, as the odours reach his throne, Will smile, and think them all his own...
Side 197 - ... and, although they may be, and too often are, drawn by the temptations of youth, and the opportunities of a large fortune, into some irregularities when they come forward into the great world, it is ever with reluctance and compunction of mind, because their bias to virtue still continues.
Side 178 - I have been better entertained, and more informed by a few pages in the Pilgrim's Progress, than by a long discourse upon the will and the intellect, and simple or complex ideas.
Side 375 - Your good behaviour on this article will concern your whole community: deny the fact with all solemnity of imprecations: a hundred of your brethren, if they can be admitted^, will attend about the bar, and be ready upon demand to give you a...
Side 204 - ... so your sex employs more thought, memory, and application to be fools, than would serve to make them wise and useful. When I reflect on this, I cannot conceive you ' to" be human creatures, but a sort of species hardly a degree above a monkey/ who...