Autobiographies: A Collection of the Most Instructive and Amusing Lives Ever Published, Volumen1Whittaker, Treacher, and Arnot, 1830 |
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... honour , as my sense is in the delight , of your society ! When I see you lay aside the advan- tages of superiority , and by your own cheerfulness of spirits call out all that nature has given me to meet them ; then ' tis I taste you ...
... honour , as my sense is in the delight , of your society ! When I see you lay aside the advan- tages of superiority , and by your own cheerfulness of spirits call out all that nature has given me to meet them ; then ' tis I taste you ...
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... honour to Mr - ? Were I to set him in the most laudable lights that truth and good sense could give him , or his own likeness would require , my officious mite would be lost in that general esteem and regard which people of the first ...
... honour to Mr - ? Were I to set him in the most laudable lights that truth and good sense could give him , or his own likeness would require , my officious mite would be lost in that general esteem and regard which people of the first ...
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... honour will never send a challenge to a cripple . The inward wounds that are given by the inconsiderate insults of wit to those that want it , are as dangerous as those given by oppression to inferiors ; as long in healing , and perhaps ...
... honour will never send a challenge to a cripple . The inward wounds that are given by the inconsiderate insults of wit to those that want it , are as dangerous as those given by oppression to inferiors ; as long in healing , and perhaps ...
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... honour to his cloth , obliged his patron to take some gentle notice of it ; but as his patron knew the patient was squeamish , he was induced to sweeten the medi- cine to his taste , and therefore with a smile of good- humour told him ...
... honour to his cloth , obliged his patron to take some gentle notice of it ; but as his patron knew the patient was squeamish , he was induced to sweeten the medi- cine to his taste , and therefore with a smile of good- humour told him ...
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... honour is in- satiable in its revenge , it loses what it contends for , and sinks itself , if not into cruelty , at least into vain glory . This so singular concern which 1 have shown for others , may naturally lead you to ask me , what ...
... honour is in- satiable in its revenge , it loses what it contends for , and sinks itself , if not into cruelty , at least into vain glory . This so singular concern which 1 have shown for others , may naturally lead you to ask me , what ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Autobiographies: A Collection of the Most Instructive and Amusing ..., Volumen1 Vista completa - 1826 |
Autobiographies: A Collection of the Most Instructive and Amusing Lives Ever ... BiblioBazaar Sin vista previa disponible - 2013 |
Términos y frases comunes
acted actors actress affairs allowed applause approbation audience auditors Beggar's Opera better Betterton Booth Cato character Cibber Colley Cibber Collier comedian comedy confess court delight Dogget Drury-lane entertainment equal excellence excuse extraordinary farther favour folly fortune friends gave gentleman give Haymarket Haymarket theatre honour hope humour imagined inclination judge judgment king knew labour laugh least Leigh less liberty license lord lord chamberlain Love for Love managers master ment merit nature never Nonjuror notwithstanding obliged observed occasion Oldfield opera opinion Othello particular passion patentees performance perhaps person play pleased pleasure pounds Powel pretend profits racter reader reason scenes seemed share sir John Vanbrugh sir Richard Steele sometimes speak spectators spirit stage sure Swiney taste Tatler temper terton theatre theatrical thought tion Tony Leigh took tragedy true truth vanity voice Whig Wilks