The British Novelists: With an Essay, and Prefaces, Biographical and Critical, المجلد 32،الجزء 1F. C. and J. Rivington, 1820 |
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الصفحة 12
... never discover the event of that journey . What is remarkable , however , added the esquire , if Kit were really the author of a thing of this kind , is , that although he did not approve of the Method- ists rambling about the country ...
... never discover the event of that journey . What is remarkable , however , added the esquire , if Kit were really the author of a thing of this kind , is , that although he did not approve of the Method- ists rambling about the country ...
الصفحة 14
... never read the Bible ( the Vulgate trans- lation of it , I suppose ) for fear of corrupting their style . Now , though I would not be so unreason- able , as to expect the gentle reader of this trifling history to have read his Bible ...
... never read the Bible ( the Vulgate trans- lation of it , I suppose ) for fear of corrupting their style . Now , though I would not be so unreason- able , as to expect the gentle reader of this trifling history to have read his Bible ...
الصفحة 27
... of the Methodists before his mother ; but she would never hear him with patience on the subject . She said , if the clergy would but do their D 2 THE SPIRITUAL QUIXOTE . 27 and he was much pleased with the journals of their ...
... of the Methodists before his mother ; but she would never hear him with patience on the subject . She said , if the clergy would but do their D 2 THE SPIRITUAL QUIXOTE . 27 and he was much pleased with the journals of their ...
الصفحة 33
... never showed itself but in a harmless pun once a year , in wearing a sprig of rue and thyme on the eleventh of June ( the accession of his late majesty , ) as the tenth was honoured with a white rose . As for Jerry's moral character ...
... never showed itself but in a harmless pun once a year , in wearing a sprig of rue and thyme on the eleventh of June ( the accession of his late majesty , ) as the tenth was honoured with a white rose . As for Jerry's moral character ...
الصفحة 35
... never reform one sinner , nor " make men wise unto salvation . " Besides , says he , if we could live a good moral life , and practise all the good works which the doctor so earnestly recommends , all this would be little to the purpose ...
... never reform one sinner , nor " make men wise unto salvation . " Besides , says he , if we could live a good moral life , and practise all the good works which the doctor so earnestly recommends , all this would be little to the purpose ...
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عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
acquaintance affected agreeable amongst amuse appearance attended Bardolph Bath began behaviour Birdlime Blackman Booby Bristol called Calomel CHAPTER Charlotte Christian church Cirencester conversation creature cries cure of souls daughter distress dress fancy father fond footman fortune frequently gave genteel gentleman Geoffry Gloucester going goose happy head hear heard honour humour kind knight-errant Lady Sherwood ladyship live lodgings London madam maid master Mickleton Miss Townsend Miss Woodville morning mother neighbours nerally never night observed occasion opinion parlour pepper-box periwigs person poor Pottle preaching probably quadrille racter religion replies Wildgoose Richard Graves Rivers Rivers's road Rouvill Rueful Sarsenet says Jerry says Tugwell says Wildgoose servant short sister soon sort spirits story continued suppose sure talk taste Tetbury thing thou thought tion told took town trifling Tugwell's whilst Whitfield wife Wild Wildgoose's woman Woodville's young
مقاطع مشهورة
الصفحة 59 - These are thy glorious works, Parent of good, Almighty, thine this universal frame, Thus wondrous fair ; thyself how wondrous then 1 Unspeakable, who sitt'st above these heavens, To us invisible, or dimly seen In these thy lowest works ; yet these declare Thy goodness beyond thought, and power divine.
الصفحة 245 - For modes of faith let graceless zealots fight; His can't be wrong whose life is in the right.
الصفحة 191 - For thither the tribes go up, even the tribes of the LORD : to testify unto Israel, to give thanks unto the Name of the LORD.
الصفحة 256 - Love's but the frailty of the mind When 'tis not with ambition joined; A sickly flame, which if not fed expires, And feeding, wastes in self-consuming fires.
الصفحة 215 - ... to the foolish ambition of being seen in, what is called, good company. In short, nothing can be more trifling than the life of a Lady, nor more insipid than that of a Gentleman, at Bath : the one is a constant series of flirting and gadding about ; the other of sauntering from place to place, without any scheme or pursuit. Scandal or fashions engross the conversation of the former; the news of the day, the price of fish, the history of the preceding night at the tavern, or savoury anticipations...
الصفحة 72 - Wildgoose's consent, they went to one of the booths, and were refreshing themselves with the aforesaid potation, when the company began to divide; and proclamation was made, that a Holland shift, which was adorned with ribbands, and displayed on a pole, was going to be run for, and six young women began to exhibit themselves before the whole assembly, in a dress hardly reconcileable to the rules of decency.
الصفحة 167 - Thorn — or any romantic accounts of the Holy Land, and the like, he had thought it rather a dry discourse, and beginning to spit sixpences, as his saying was, he gave hints to Mr. Wildgoose to stop at the first public-house they should come to. But there was none till they came to Tetbury, where they went into a second-rate inn, for fear of meeting with the same insults which they had received at the Bell at Gloucester. CHAP. VII A Hurley-hurley in the modern Taste WILDGOOSE having been thoroughly...
الصفحة 199 - The greatest charity we can bestow on people of fashion, at a public place, is the furnishing them something new to talk of. A new singer, a new philosopher, a new rope-dancer, or a new preacher, are objects equally amusing to the idle and indolent that frequent Bath.
الصفحة 43 - ... vogue among the young people of the University. The Sunday evenings they appropriated to religious authors, which soon convinced 'them of the great neglect of practical religion in that place, as well as in other parts of the kingdom. In consequence of these convictions, they formed themselves into a society, and raised a small fund for charitable uses ; to relieve the necessitous, buy medicines for the sick, and to disperse books amongst the ignorant. They agreed also to go occasionally and...
الصفحة 8 - Nay, I am convinced that Don Quixote or Gil Bias, Clarissa or Sir Charles Grandison, will furnish more hints for correcting the follies and regulating the morals of young persons, and impress them more forcibly on their minds, than volumes of severe precepts seriously delivered and dogmatically enforced.