The Lover: To which is Added, The Reader;J. Tonson ... J. Brown ... and O. Lloyd, 1715 - 297 pages |
From inside the book
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... ing Good than growing Rich . The pitiful Artifices which Empyricks are guil- . ty of to drain Cash out of Valetudinarians , are the Abhorrence of your gene- rous rous Mind ; and it is as common with Garth Dedication .
... ing Good than growing Rich . The pitiful Artifices which Empyricks are guil- . ty of to drain Cash out of Valetudinarians , are the Abhorrence of your gene- rous rous Mind ; and it is as common with Garth Dedication .
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... common with Garth to fup- ply Indigent Patients with Money for Food , as to re- ceive it from Wealthy ones for Phyfick . How much more amiable , Sir , would the Generosity which is already applauded by all that know You , appear to ...
... common with Garth to fup- ply Indigent Patients with Money for Food , as to re- ceive it from Wealthy ones for Phyfick . How much more amiable , Sir , would the Generosity which is already applauded by all that know You , appear to ...
Page 3
... common Eyes , or by his Delineation of its Limbs . Mr. Severn is now in the twenty fifth Year of his Age , a Gentleman of great Modefty B 2 and and Courage , which are the radical Virtues which lay N ° 1 . 3 The LOVER .
... common Eyes , or by his Delineation of its Limbs . Mr. Severn is now in the twenty fifth Year of his Age , a Gentleman of great Modefty B 2 and and Courage , which are the radical Virtues which lay N ° 1 . 3 The LOVER .
Page 11
... common De- cency and Modefty were almost abandoned as formal and unnatural . The Writers for the Stage fell in with the Court , and the Theatre diffus'd the Malignity into the Minds of the Nobility and Gentry , by which means the ...
... common De- cency and Modefty were almost abandoned as formal and unnatural . The Writers for the Stage fell in with the Court , and the Theatre diffus'd the Malignity into the Minds of the Nobility and Gentry , by which means the ...
Page 15
... common Way : I am to fignifie , therefore , that I am more acceffible than any other Knights ever were before me , and in plain Terms , that there is a Coffee - house under my Apartment ; nay further , that a Letter direct- ed , To Mr ...
... common Way : I am to fignifie , therefore , that I am more acceffible than any other Knights ever were before me , and in plain Terms , that there is a Coffee - house under my Apartment ; nay further , that a Letter direct- ed , To Mr ...
Common terms and phrases
againſt alfo Beauty becauſe beſt Bufinefs Cafe called Caufe Circumftance Confcience confequently Confideration Converfation Coufin Dancing Defign defire Difcourfe Duke of Cambridge Dunkirk Eyes fafe faid fame feems feen felf felves fent feveral fhall fhew fhould filly fince firft fome fomething foon fpeak French Wine Friend ftand ftill fuch fure Gentleman give greateſt Happineſs Heart himſelf honeft Honour Houfe Houſe Humble Servant juft Juftice Lady laft laſt leaft lefs Letter loft Love Lover Mafter moft moſt muft muſt MYRTLE Nature neceffary never Night Nonfenfe Number obferve Occafion paffed Paffion Paper Perfon pleafed pleaſe Pleaſure poffible portunity prefent pretend Publick Purpoſe racter Reader Reafon refolved reprefent ſay Senfe ſhall ſhe Sir Anthony ſpeak thefe themſelves ther theſe thing thofe Thomas d'Urfey thoſe thought tion Town underſtand uſed Vifit whofe Wife Woman Words World young
Popular passages
Page 269 - That fleets of above thirty sail have come together out of Dunkirk, during the late war, and taken ships of war as well as merchantmen.
Page 46 - I shall sacrifice the prayers of a Christian and the groans of an afflicted wife. And when you are not (which sure by sympathy I shall know), I shall wish my own dissolution with you that so we may go hand in hand to Heaven.
Page 169 - ... .This, principle hath not only productions * that naturally flow from it, but where it is, it ' ferments and affimilates, and gives a kind of ' tincture even to other actions that do not in ' their own. nature follow from it, as the nature 'and civil actions of our lives ;• under the ' former was our Lord's parable of a grain of « muftard feed, under the latter of .his com' parifon of leaven, juft as we fee in other * things of nature.
Page 192 - Just beneath, is Time, bringing Truth to light; near which is a figure of Architecture, holding a large drawing of part of the Hospital, with the cupola, and pointing up to the royal founders, attended by the little genii of her art.
Page 45 - Those dear embraces which I yet feel and shall never lose, being the faithful testimonies of an indulgent husband, have charmed my soul to such a reverence of your remembrance that were it possible I would with my own blood cement your dead limbs to live again, and (with reverence) think it no sin to rob Heaven a little longer of a martyr.
Page 171 - ... can intimate to the heart. Such a pair give charms to virtue, and make pleafant the ways of innocence : a deviation from the rules of fuch a commerce would be courting pain; for fuch a life is as much to be preferred to any thing that can be communicated by criminal fatisfactions (to fpeak of it in the mildeft terms), as fobriety and elegant converfation are to intemperance and rioting, *»..* In a fhort time will be publifhed,
Page 252 - If it affirms any thing, you cannot lay hold of it ; or if it denies, you cannot confute it. In a word, there are greater depths and obscurities, greater intricacies and perplexities, in an elaborate and well-written piece of nonsense, than in the most abstruse and profound tract of school-divinity.
Page 47 - I thank you for all your goodness to me, and will endeavour so to die as to do nothing unworthy that virtue in which we have mutually...
Page 52 - ... so criminal a commerce, and leading a new life, before he could bring her mind to a temper fit for one who was so near her end. Upon the day of her execution she dressed herself in all her ornaments, and walked towards the scaffold more like an expecting bride than a condemned criminal.
Page 169 - ... but the exercife of that fpark of life is large and comprehenfive in its operation ; it produceth a great tree, and in that tree the fap, the body, the bark, the limbs, the leaves, the fruit ; and fo it is with the principle of True Religion ; the principle itfelf lies in a narrow compafs, but the activity and energy of it is diffufive and various.