Some Account of the Life and Death of John Wilmot, Earl of Rochester, who Died July 26, 1680Munroe and Francis, 1812 - 144 pages |
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Page 20
... fall under . It may seem liable to great exception , that I should disclose so many things , that were discovered to me , if not under the seal of confession , yet under the confidence of friendship ; but this noble lord himself not ...
... fall under . It may seem liable to great exception , that I should disclose so many things , that were discovered to me , if not under the seal of confession , yet under the confidence of friendship ; but this noble lord himself not ...
Page 24
... fall on myself , as cautious that nothing should pass , that might obstruct my only design of writing , which is the doing what I can towards reforming a loose and lewd age . And if such a signal instance , concurring with all the ...
... fall on myself , as cautious that nothing should pass , that might obstruct my only design of writing , which is the doing what I can towards reforming a loose and lewd age . And if such a signal instance , concurring with all the ...
Page 32
... falling into company that loved these excesses , he was , though not without difficulty , and by many steps , brought back to it again ; and the natural heat of his fancy , being inflamed by wine , made him so extravagantly pleasant ...
... falling into company that loved these excesses , he was , though not without difficulty , and by many steps , brought back to it again ; and the natural heat of his fancy , being inflamed by wine , made him so extravagantly pleasant ...
Page 46
... from the necessity of using those that were most proper for him . He was then in a low state of health , and seemed to be slowly recovering from a great disease . He was in the milk diet , and apt to fall into hectick fits : any accident ...
... from the necessity of using those that were most proper for him . He was then in a low state of health , and seemed to be slowly recovering from a great disease . He was in the milk diet , and apt to fall into hectick fits : any accident ...
Page 47
Gilbert Burnet. and apt to fall into hectick fits : any accident weakened him , so that he thought he could not live long . And when he went from London , he said he should come to town believed he never more . Yet , during his being in ...
Gilbert Burnet. and apt to fall into hectick fits : any accident weakened him , so that he thought he could not live long . And when he went from London , he said he should come to town believed he never more . Yet , during his being in ...
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Popular passages
Page 119 - For he shall grow up before him as a tender plant, And as a root out of a dry ground. He hath no form nor comeliness; And when we shall see him, there is no beauty that we should desire him.
Page 42 - To this he answered, a man could not write with life, unless he were heated by revenge : for to make a satire without resentments, upon the cold notions of philosophy, was as if a man would in cold blood, cut men's throats who had never offended him : and he said, the lies in these libels came often in as ornaments that could not be spared without spoiling the beauty of the poem.
Page 144 - But if our Gospel be hid, it is hid to them that are lost: in whom the God of this world hath blinded the minds of them which believe not, lest the light of the glorious Gospel of Christ, who is the image of God, should shine unto them.
Page 95 - The restraining a man from the use of women, except one in the way of marriage, and denying the remedy of divorce, he thought unreasonable impositions on the freedom of mankind...
Page 38 - He remembering his dream, fell into some disorder; and the lady Warre reproving him for his superstition, he said he was confident he was to die before morning; but, he being in perfect health, it was not much minded.
Page 126 - Fellow : soon after I told him, I was glad to find his Style so reformed, and that he had so entirely overcome that ill habit of Swearing; Only that word of calling any damned, which had returned upon him, was not decent. His Answer was: Oh that Language of Fiends, which was so familiar to me, hangs yet about me: Sure none has deserved more to be damned than I have done.
Page 121 - I shall confine my discourse to the dead. He told me, he had overcome all his resentments to all the world, so that he bore ill-will to no person, nor hated any upon personal accounts. He had given a true state of his debts, and had ordered to pay them all, as far as his estate, that was not settled, could go ; and was confident, that if all that was owing to him were paid to his executors, his creditors would be all satisfied. He said, he found his mind now possessed with another sense of things...
Page 40 - ... they would have chosen sometimes to have gone naked, if they had not feared the people; so though some of them found it necessary for human life to talk of morality, yet he confessed they cared not for it...
Page 30 - Sometimes other men's thoughts mixed with his composures, but that flowed rather from the impressions they made on him when he read them, by which they came to return upon him as his own thoughts, than that he servilely copied from any : for few men ever had a bolder flight of fancy, more steadily governed by judgment, than he had.
Page 115 - ... shew a true repentance and amendment of life for the time to come : or else if the Lord pleaseth to put an end to my worldly being now, that he would mercifully accept of my death-bed repentance, and perform that promise that he hath been pleased to make, that at what time soever a sinner doth repent, he would receive him. Put up these prayers, most dear doctor, to almighty God for your most obedient and languishing servant, ROCHESTER.