The Novelist's Magazine, Band 11Harrison and Company, 1783 A collection of separately paged novels. |
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
admire affure anfwer aunt Bartlett Beaumont becauſe bleffed Bologna brother cafe Camilla chevalier confent converfation coufin Count of Belvedere creature dear Lady G dearest deferve defired Emily excufe eyes fake faluted fame Father Marefcotti favour feemed felf fent fervants fhall fhew fhould fifter filly fince firft fituation fome foon foul fpirits friends ftill fubject fuch fuffer fuppofe fure girl give grandmamma Greville Grosvenor Square hand happineſs happy Harriet heart herſelf himſelf honour hope houfe Italy Jeronymo juft Lady Clementina Lady Grandifon laft lefs letter look Lord G Lucy Madam marchionefs Mifs Byron mind moft moſt mother muft muſt myſelf nefs never noble Northamptonshire obferved obliged occafion paffed perfon pleafed pleaſed pleaſure poor prefent promife propofed reafon Selby ſhall ſhe Sir Charles Grandifon tell thefe ther theſe thing thofe thoſe thought told uncle vifit whofe woman worfe yourſelf
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 985 - by an eminent divine of our country. ' There is no manner of inconvenience in having a pattern propounded to us ' of fo great perfection, as is above our reach to attain to : and there may be' ' great advantages in it. The way to excel in any kind, is optima
Seite 866 - and build for them ; travel and toil for them ; run through, at the call of Providence, or of our king and country, dangers and difficulties; and, at laft, lay all our trophies, all our acquirements, at your feet; enough rewarded in the confcience of duty done, and your favourable acceptance.
Seite 627 - lord,' to her brother — (for the marquis withdrew, in grief» upon this inftance of her wandering ;) ' come, and ' fit down by the chevalier and me.' They did. She fpread it on the table, and, in an attentive pofture, her elbow on the table, her head on one hand, pointing with
Seite 831 - faid, the honour done him by me, and. by us all, in the demonstrations we had given of our tender regard for him. I was, by the time of their return to us, pretty well recovered. Sir Charles approached me, without taking notice of the emotion I had been in,
Seite 826 - of the admirable Clementina, will allow me to glory in my gratitude to her. You will ftill more readily allow me fo to do, when you have perufed this letter. Shall not the man who hopes to be qualified for the fupreme love, of which the pureft earthly is but a type, and who aims
Seite 784 - when he was enumerating the friends he hoped to have near him, or about him, I had forgot to remind him of my Emily. Ungrateful Harriet !—But don't tell her that I was fo abforbed in felf, and that the converfation was fo interefting, that my heart was more of a
Seite 638 - But then the man came out with his gew-gaw japan-china tafte. Why is it the privilege of people of quality now, to be educated in fuch a way, that their time can hardly ever be worthily filled up ; and as if it were a difgrace to be either manly or
Seite 722 - between referve and opennefs of heart, you had not greatnefs of mind enough to break through the low reftraints o'f cuftom ; and to reward the latter in preference to the former. Yet who, better than you, knows, that women in love are actuated by one view, and
Seite 689 - and, as you, my dear Dr. Bartlett, know, in different countries ; and particularly the unexpected turn which this excellent creature had taken. She approached me with an air of majefty, yet mixed with tendernefs. I met her, and with a bent knee, taking her hand—
Seite 741 - I were to fuffer by it. You will be fo good as to read thefe letters to your daughter Byron, to her Lucy, to Mr. and Mrs. Selby, and to whom elfe you will think fit to call to the confultation : they will be thofe, I prefume, who