Poetical WorksLittle, Brown, 1862 |
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Page xxxvii
... manner , an invitation which he had given to him and Goldsmith to spend some part of the autumn with him and his lady , the Countess of Rothes , at their seat in Lincolnshire . With this obliging request , how- ever , he was unable to ...
... manner , an invitation which he had given to him and Goldsmith to spend some part of the autumn with him and his lady , the Countess of Rothes , at their seat in Lincolnshire . With this obliging request , how- ever , he was unable to ...
Page xxxix
... manners obscured the goodness of his heart . Mr. Cumberland , in his own Memoirs , has a passage peculiarly illustrative of this , where he says that Sir Joshua Reynolds was very good to him , and would have drilled him into better trim ...
... manners obscured the goodness of his heart . Mr. Cumberland , in his own Memoirs , has a passage peculiarly illustrative of this , where he says that Sir Joshua Reynolds was very good to him , and would have drilled him into better trim ...
Page xli
... manner , contradicted him , and pro- nounced that there were not forty good lines to be found in the whole play ; adding , Pooh ! what stuff are these lines : " - What feminine tales hast thou been listening to , of unaired shirts ...
... manner , contradicted him , and pro- nounced that there were not forty good lines to be found in the whole play ; adding , Pooh ! what stuff are these lines : " - What feminine tales hast thou been listening to , of unaired shirts ...
Page xliv
... manner the confused state of the Doc- tor's affairs . At first he intended , as I have already stated , to have made a grand funeral for him , assisted by several sub- scriptions to that intent , and to have buried him in the Abbey ...
... manner the confused state of the Doc- tor's affairs . At first he intended , as I have already stated , to have made a grand funeral for him , assisted by several sub- scriptions to that intent , and to have buried him in the Abbey ...
Page xlv
... manner possible , observing that the most pompous funerals are soon past and forgotten , and that it would be much more pru- dent to apply what money could be procured to the purpose of a more substantial and more lasting memorial of ...
... manner possible , observing that the most pompous funerals are soon past and forgotten , and that it would be much more pru- dent to apply what money could be procured to the purpose of a more substantial and more lasting memorial of ...
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Common terms and phrases
admiration appeared Archer beauty blest bliss booksellers Boswell breast BULKLEY Burke called character charms comedy Cradock cried David Garrick dear death Deserted Village dinner Doctor Edmund Burke epigram Epilogue epitaph eyes fame fate flies Garrick genius gentleman give Gold happy heart Heaven Hermes honour hope Horneck humour Johnson King lady laugh Lord mind mirth MISS CATLEY monarch never night o'er OLIVER GOLDSMITH once pain Phoebus pity plain play pleas'd pleasure poem poet poor praise pride PRIEST printed Queen rage Recitative Richard Burke round sable scene Sir Joshua Reynolds smile soul Stoops to Conquer strange matter stranger talk terror thee thing THOMAS BABINGTON MACAULAY thou thought told took truth turn Twas venison verses Vicar of Wakefield wealth weep Westminster Abbey Whitefoord wish wretch write wrote