The World, by Adam Fitz-Adam. [209 Nos. in 4 Vols. With a Final No. Entitled A World Extraordinary, Signed Vandyke.]., Volumen1 |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 24
Página 15
... fure of laying up ; that as an author I was vain , and as a parfon wit would intro- ambitious ; always imagining that duce me to the minifter , or my orthodoxy to the bishop ; and exclufive of thefe circumstances , if it be alfo con ...
... fure of laying up ; that as an author I was vain , and as a parfon wit would intro- ambitious ; always imagining that duce me to the minifter , or my orthodoxy to the bishop ; and exclufive of thefe circumstances , if it be alfo con ...
Página 17
... fure way to mortification . I must deal plainly with you . He that lends his money has a right to deal plainly . You began the world with about two thou- fand pounds in your pocket . Seventeen hundred , fir . And thefe feventeen hundred ...
... fure way to mortification . I must deal plainly with you . He that lends his money has a right to deal plainly . You began the world with about two thou- fand pounds in your pocket . Seventeen hundred , fir . And thefe feventeen hundred ...
Página 51
... fure of having almost as many admirers as readers , is nevertheless subject to great difficulties ; it being abfolutely neceffary that the author who undertakes it should have no feeling of certain evils , common to humanity , which are ...
... fure of having almost as many admirers as readers , is nevertheless subject to great difficulties ; it being abfolutely neceffary that the author who undertakes it should have no feeling of certain evils , common to humanity , which are ...
Página 53
... given fufficient proof that they think it the highest entertainment the ftage is capable of affording the most innocent , we are fure it is ; for where where nothing is faid , and nothing meant , very No. 9 . THE WORL D. 53.
... given fufficient proof that they think it the highest entertainment the ftage is capable of affording the most innocent , we are fure it is ; for where where nothing is faid , and nothing meant , very No. 9 . THE WORL D. 53.
Página 57
... fure , would follow from this system , but as holy things ought to be the first con- fideration of a religious nation , the inconveniencies fhould be overlooked . The thorn can never blow but on the true Christmas - day ; and ...
... fure , would follow from this system , but as holy things ought to be the first con- fideration of a religious nation , the inconveniencies fhould be overlooked . The thorn can never blow but on the true Christmas - day ; and ...
Términos y frases comunes
acquaintance ADAM FITZ ADAM FITZ-A affure againſt almoſt anſwer author are taken becauſe beſt BRENTFORD buſineſs cafe called cauſe confequence confiderable continued every THURSDAY COOPER correfpondent daughter defire diſcovered DODSLEY in Pall-Mall drefs Engliſh faid fame faſhion fecond fecret feems feen fent fervice feven fhall fhort filk fince fingle firft firſt Fitz-Adam fold folly fome fometimes foon fortune fpeaking ftill fubject fuch fufficient fure gentleman Globe in Pater-Nofter-Row happineſs herſelf himſelf honour horſe houfe houſe humble fervant huſband itſelf lady laft laſt leaft leaſt lefs letters LONDON madam manner moft moſt muſt myſelf never NUMBER obferve occafion paffed paffion paper perfons pleaſed pleaſure poffibly prefent readers reafon ſay ſeems ſhall ſhe ſhort ſhould ſtory thefe themſelves theſe thing thofe thoſe thouſand town uſe vifit whofe wife Wilfon wiſh woman young
Pasajes populares
Página 84 - I have been bullied by an usurper; I have been neglected by a court ; but I will not be dictated to by a subject : your man shan't stand. " ANNE Dorset, Pembroke and Montgomery.
Página 68 - Let but that commanding word go forth, and no camelion catches his colours quicker than we are ready to imbibe follies from each other. Whereas TASTE, in my opinion, ought to be applied to nothing but what has as strict rules annexed to it, though perhaps imperceptible by the vulgar, as Aristotle, among the critics, would require, or Domenichino, among the painters, practise.
Página 34 - There is not a citizen who does not take more pains to torture his acre and half into irregularities, than he formerly would have employed to make it as formal as his cravat.
Página 176 - Many totally neglect, and many mistake it. The ancients began the education of their children, by forming their hearts and their manners. They taught them the duty of men and of citizens ; we teach them the languages of the ancients, and leave their morals and manners to shift for themselves.
Página 35 - Ovid's metamorphosis succeeded to all the transformations which Chloe and other great professors had introduced into the science of hieroglyphic eating. Confectioners found their trade moulder away, while toymen and china-shops were the only fashionable purveyors of the last stage of polite entertainments.
Página 151 - I have made confiderable improvements in the celebrated map of the realms of love in Clelia. I have adorned the banks of the gentle and...
Página 203 - ... with chairs and coaches; offending themselves, and pleasing nobody; and all this for the vain boast of having drawn together a greater mob than my lady Somebody, or the honourable Mr. Such-a-one? That nothing but witchcraft can be the occasion of so much folly and absurdity, must be obvious to the common sense of all mankind.
Página 146 - ... the divine, and the lover. And I think it my duty to inform the public, that my good friend Mr.
Página 267 - ... in her place, we need look no farther for the author of the griefs which poifon our peace. IN relation to matters purely fpeculative, none who are ever...
Página 104 - I CONSIDER you as fupplemental to the law of the land. I take your authority to begin, where the power of the law ends. The law is intended to ftop the progrefs of crimes by punifhing them ; your paper feems calculated to check the courfe of follies by expofing them.