The Works, of the Right Honourable Sir Chas. Hanbury Williams ...: From the Originals in the Possession of His Grandson the Right Hon. the Earl of Essex [and Others], Band 2E. Jeffery and son, 1822 |
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Seite 18
... things you had said . He smiled at my folly , and gave me to know , Your wit , and not mine , by your writings you show ; " And then , " says the God , more vain , " still to make you " He hath promis'd that I shall enlighten your brain ...
... things you had said . He smiled at my folly , and gave me to know , Your wit , and not mine , by your writings you show ; " And then , " says the God , more vain , " still to make you " He hath promis'd that I shall enlighten your brain ...
Seite 25
... thing alone was double . Enrag'd , he curst the silly book , The bishop and the tar ; And swore the beggar's blessing was A better boon by far . * Bishop Berkeley . AN ODE TO SIR CHARLES HANBURY WILLIAMS . DEAR merry.
... thing alone was double . Enrag'd , he curst the silly book , The bishop and the tar ; And swore the beggar's blessing was A better boon by far . * Bishop Berkeley . AN ODE TO SIR CHARLES HANBURY WILLIAMS . DEAR merry.
Seite 39
... useless to God , to make useful to man ; " Besides ' tis a true christian duty , we read , " The poor and the hungry with good things Derry down , & c . to feed . " Then again on the walls he bestow'd consecra- tion , 39.
... useless to God , to make useful to man ; " Besides ' tis a true christian duty , we read , " The poor and the hungry with good things Derry down , & c . to feed . " Then again on the walls he bestow'd consecra- tion , 39.
Seite 42
... thing , endeavoured nothing ; a ridiculous fear was predominant in him.-W. 1760 , the Duke of Newcastle cried for his old master , desponded for himself , protested he would retire , and has Thro ' foreign realms is running ; Some ...
... thing , endeavoured nothing ; a ridiculous fear was predominant in him.-W. 1760 , the Duke of Newcastle cried for his old master , desponded for himself , protested he would retire , and has Thro ' foreign realms is running ; Some ...
Seite 44
... things , With princes set , expecting kings To talk and plots unravel . Not Gallic plots , for Gallia now , As Holly thinks , is forc'd to bow By his superior knowledge ; Alas ! in politics how mad ! And yet no blockhead when a lad At ...
... things , With princes set , expecting kings To talk and plots unravel . Not Gallic plots , for Gallia now , As Holly thinks , is forc'd to bow By his superior knowledge ; Alas ! in politics how mad ! And yet no blockhead when a lad At ...
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The Works, of the Right Honourable Sir Chas. Hanbury Williams ...: From the ... Horace Walpole,Charles Hanbury Williams Keine Leseprobe verfügbar - 2018 |
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
affairs BALLAD believe Bishop blest Broadbottom chang'd CHARLES HANBURY WILLIAMS charms Clive Colley Cibber Count Bruhl Countess Countess of Yarmouth Court cry'd dear Derry Dresden drinking Duke of Newcastle e'er EDMUND WALLER Electoral England ev'ry fair Fame Father Guerini fear gentleman grace Hanover hate head heart Hervey House humour king's Lady late Lord Lord Anson Lord Hervey Lordship lovely Peggy Majesty master merit minister Muse ne'er never night o'er passion Pelham person Pitt Poet Poney pow'r praise Prince Pultney Queen Quoth RIGHT HONOURABLE Rushout SAMUEL SANDYS satire Saxon Secret Committee SIR CHARLES HANBURY Sir John Rushout Sir Richard Sir Thomas Robinson smile speech talk Tar-water tell thee thing THOMAS WINNINGTON thou thought thro troops Twas verse Walpole Wilmington Woffington woman word write
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 183 - Julius bleed for justice' sake? What villain touch'd his body, that did stab, And not for justice? What, shall one of us, That struck the foremost man of all this world, But for supporting robbers; shall we now Contaminate our fingers with base bribes? And sell the mighty space of our large...
Seite 103 - As these are useless when the sun is set: So those, but when more glorious Reason shines. Reason should judge in all; in reason's eye, That sedentary shadow travels hard. But such our gravitation to the wrong...
Seite 191 - In spite of outward blemishes, she shone, For humour fam'd, and humour all her own. Easy, as if at home, the stage she trod, Nor sought the critic's praise, nor fear'd his rod. Original in spirit and in ease, She pleas'd by hiding all attempts to please. No comic actress ever yet could raise, On humour's base, more merit or more praise.
Seite 43 - Rigby; the first of whom did not deign to notice him; but he must come to it. You would have died to see Newcastle's pitiful and distressed figure, — nobody went near him : he tried to flatter people, that were too busy to mind him ; in short, he was quite disconcerted; his treachery used to be so sheathed in folly, that he was never out of countenance ; but it is plain he grows old. To finish his confusion and anxiety, George Selwyn...
Seite 181 - If from thy hands alone my death can be, I am immortal and a god to thee. If I would kill thee now, thy fate's so low, That I must stoop ere I can give the blow : But mine is...
Seite 242 - Fox always spoke to the question ; Pitt to the passions. Fox, to carry the question ; Pitt to raise himself. Fox pointed out, Pitt lashed the errors of his antagonists. Pitt's talents were likely to make him soonest ; Fox's to keep him First Minister longest.
Seite 51 - ... of his genius evaporate by the process ; for though his first view of the question would be a wide one, and clear withal, when he came to exercise the subtlety of his disquisitorial powers upon it, he would so ingeniously dissect and break it into fractions, that as an object, when looked upon too intently for a length of time, grows misty and confused, so would the question under his discussion, when the humour took him to be hypercritical.
Seite 272 - Gideon, who is dead worth more than the whole land of Canaan, has left the reversion of all his milk and honey, after his son and daughter and their children, to the Duke of Devonshire, without insisting on his taking the name, or even being circumcised.
Seite 253 - He had all his life imitated the French manners till he came to Paris, where he never conversed with a Frenchman. If good breeding is not different from good sense...
Seite 245 - ... of nobility, — pride of what one can neither cause nor prevent. " I say nothing of his integrity, because I know nothing of it, but that it has never been breathed upon even by suspicion : it will be time enough to vindicate it, when it has been impeached. He is as well-bred as those who colour over timidity with gentleness of manners, and as...