The Young Philosopher: A Novel ...T. Cadell, Jun. and W. Davies, 1798 - 402 pages |
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Page i
... tool of Pride ; When no vain Science led his mind aftray , But NATURE was his law , and GoD his guide . VOL . I. LONDON : PRINTED POR T. CADELL , JUN . AND W. DAVIES , IN THE STRAND . THE NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY 2126 ATOR , LENOX AND 1798 .
... tool of Pride ; When no vain Science led his mind aftray , But NATURE was his law , and GoD his guide . VOL . I. LONDON : PRINTED POR T. CADELL , JUN . AND W. DAVIES , IN THE STRAND . THE NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY 2126 ATOR , LENOX AND 1798 .
Page 8
... mind , " added fhe , " go on . We fhall get to the top of this rifing ground presently , and then we shall see our way , and eafily discover the high road to the town . " The horfes again were urged to exer- tion , but the hill feemed ...
... mind , " added fhe , " go on . We fhall get to the top of this rifing ground presently , and then we shall see our way , and eafily discover the high road to the town . " The horfes again were urged to exer- tion , but the hill feemed ...
Page 15
... mind , and to defpife all feminine fear as puerile and even vulgar , was not entirely free from terror when she found herself exposed in fuch a fituation to the double - danger of the ftorm and the reftiveness of the horfes , young ...
... mind , and to defpife all feminine fear as puerile and even vulgar , was not entirely free from terror when she found herself exposed in fuch a fituation to the double - danger of the ftorm and the reftiveness of the horfes , young ...
Page 16
... mind , and Winflow found himself called upon to act for the fafety of others , while his fears for his perfonal fecurity ( a matter to which he was in habits of giving very great attention ) al- moft annihilated the flender faculties he ...
... mind , and Winflow found himself called upon to act for the fafety of others , while his fears for his perfonal fecurity ( a matter to which he was in habits of giving very great attention ) al- moft annihilated the flender faculties he ...
Page 23
... . She at length became more calm , and looked round the room with complacency , observing , that she had ne- ver feen any place fitted in the cot- tage ftyle " half fo elegant . up CHA P. II . " The determination of mind , PHILOSOPHER . 23.
... . She at length became more calm , and looked round the room with complacency , observing , that she had ne- ver feen any place fitted in the cot- tage ftyle " half fo elegant . up CHA P. II . " The determination of mind , PHILOSOPHER . 23.
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Common terms and phrases
affure againſt almoſt anſwer Armitage aunt becauſe brother Caroline Colonel Delmont confequence confiderable converfation Crewk Crewkherne curricle daugh daughter dear defire Doctor eſtabliſhed expreffed faid fame faſhion father feemed feen felf fenfe fervant fhall fhould fifters fince firft firſt fociety fome fomething fometimes foon forry fortune fpirit fuch fuffered fuppofe fure George Delmont girl Glenmorris handfome heard herne herſelf himſelf horfes houfe houſe increaſed intereft Jemmatt juſt lady laft leaft leaſt lefs liften Lord Caftledanes Louifa madam mafter Medora Mifs Delmont Mifs Goldthorp moft mont moſt mother muſt myſelf never Nixon occafion paffed paffion perfon philofopher pleaſure poffeffed poffible praiſe prefent profeffion purpoſe queftion racter reafon refidence refpect ſaid ſeemed ſhe ſtate ſtudy thefe themſelves theſe thofe thoſe thought thouſand tion uncle underſtanding Upwood uſed vifit whofe whoſe wife Winflow woman worfe young yourſelf
Popular passages
Page 46 - But why should I his childish feats display? Concourse, and noise, and toil he ever fled; Nor cared to mingle in the clamorous fray Of squabbling imps; but to the forest sped, Or roam'd at large the lonely mountain's head, Or, where the maze of some bewilder'd stream To deep untrodden groves his footsteps led, There would he wander wild, till Phoebus
Page 171 - Beware of the relentlefs train, Who forms adore, whom forms maintain ? Left prudes demure, or coxcombs loud, Accufe thee to the partial crowd ; Foes who the laws of honour flight, A judge who meafures guilt by fpite. Behold the fage Aurelia ftand, Difgrace and fame at her command ! As if heaven's delegate defign'd, Sole arbiter of all her kind. Whether {he try fome favour'd piece, By rules devis'd in ancient Greece j Or whether modern in her flight, She tells what Paris thinks polite: For much her...
Page 175 - IV, 60-63. 90II, 221-222. She could not speak with patience of a man who had parted with his own wife, though it was her own wish. She hated a man who affected to revere, and had written in favour of the Americans; nay, who had aided and abetted, as far as in him lay, the atrocious French Revolution.
Page 132 - ... climate gives, from the lower classes of the Irish."85 At another time, Delmont's intended marriage to the American born Medora Glenmorris brings down upon his head the ire of his aunt, who thinks . . . nothing can be worse than for great families to demean themselves by low alliances and especially with folks not properly born according to the laws of England — and then an American too ! — a race that for my part...
Page 132 - American too ! — a race that for my part sctms to me not to belong to Christian society somehow, and who, I understand, are no better than atheists ; for I am told there are no clergy in America, as our's are, established by law, to oblige and compel people to think right ; but that all runs wild, and there are no tithes, nor ways of maintaining that holy order, as we have, but every body prays their own way, if indeed such free-thinkers ever pray at all, which I dare say they do not. — But I...
Page 176 - Rousseau'schen prinzipien aufgebaut ist. for he had been present at Paris at the taking the Bastille, and had applauded the speech of Mirabeau, in the Jeu-dePaumes ; and on his return, had ventured to write a pamphlet, in which, while he exhorted the French people not to suffer themselves to be led by the first effervescence of liberty, into such...
Page 133 - ... oblige and compel people to think right ; but that all runs wild, and there are no tithes, nor ways of maintaining that holy order, as we have, but every body prays their own way, if indeed such free-thinkers ever pray at all, which I dare say they do not. — But I am assured that they are excessive bad people, and that it is a dangerous thing to have any communication with them, which certainly redoubles one's concern, if it be true that Mr. Delmont who might, we all know, do so much better,...
Page 54 - From detestation against individuals, such as justices and overseers, he began to reflect on the laws that put it in their power thus to drive forth to nakedness and famine the wretched beings they were empowered to protect ; and he was led to enquire if the complicated misery he...
Page 92 - Having learned to use his own opinion on every point, "he determined to yield his freedom to none of those motives which the love of power or of wealth might hold out to him, but to live on his little farm unfettered by the rules he must submit to if he entered any profession," knowing, however, that he must bear the ridicule of his relatives and friends.
Page 176 - Jeu-dePaumes ; and on his return, had ventured to write a pamphlet, in which, while he exhorted the French people not to suffer themselves to be led by the first effervescence of liberty, into such licentiousness as would risk the loss of it, he hazarded a few opinions on the rights of nations, and the purposes of government...