The English Humorists of the Eighteenth Century: Critical Reviews. The Second Funeral of NapoleonKnight & Millet, 1901 - 418 páginas |
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Página 64
... hear me ; I mean - " Lady Plyant . - Hear you ? No , no ; I'll deny you first , and hear you afterwards . For one does not know how one's mind may change upon hearing — hearing is one of the senses , and all the senses are fallible . I ...
... hear me ; I mean - " Lady Plyant . - Hear you ? No , no ; I'll deny you first , and hear you afterwards . For one does not know how one's mind may change upon hearing — hearing is one of the senses , and all the senses are fallible . I ...
Página 130
... hear the third writer - death , sorrow , and the grave being for the moment also his theme . " The first sense of sorrow I ever knew , " Steele says in the " Tatler , " " was upon the death of my father , at which time I was not quite ...
... hear the third writer - death , sorrow , and the grave being for the moment also his theme . " The first sense of sorrow I ever knew , " Steele says in the " Tatler , " " was upon the death of my father , at which time I was not quite ...
Página 206
... hear him on the question of the Academy : — " To pester the three great estates of the empire , about twenty or thirty students drawing after a man or a horse , appears , as must be acknowledged , foolish enough : but the real motive is ...
... hear him on the question of the Academy : — " To pester the three great estates of the empire , about twenty or thirty students drawing after a man or a horse , appears , as must be acknowledged , foolish enough : but the real motive is ...
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Términos y frases comunes
acquainted Addison admirable Æsop artist asked beauty Belle Poule called Captain character charming coffin Congreve court Cruikshank Dean dear death delightful Dick dinner Duke Dunciad Elvington English eyes face famous fancy father fellow fortune French genius gentleman George Cruikshank give Goldsmith hand happy head heart hero Hogarth honest honor humor Jack Sheppard Johnson Jones Joseph Addison kind lady Larry Sterne laugh letters live London look Lord Lord Bolingbroke manner married MATTHEW PRIOR moral morning Napoleon nature never night passed person picture pleasure poet poor Pope Pope's pretty Prince de Joinville Richard Steele ROGER STERNE satire smiling speak Spence's Anecdotes Steele Stella Sterne story Struldbrugs sweet Swift Tatler tell tender thought Tom Jones truth understrapper verses whilst wife woman wonderful writing wrote young