Fireside Studies, Band 1Chatto and Windus, 1876 |
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Seite 18
... asked it in vain sometimes . He was born , as some say , in 1671 , at Dublin , the son of a barrister of good family . His mother was a Gascoigne , of whom we know very little . He lost his father very early — a loss which has pro ...
... asked it in vain sometimes . He was born , as some say , in 1671 , at Dublin , the son of a barrister of good family . His mother was a Gascoigne , of whom we know very little . He lost his father very early — a loss which has pro ...
Seite 39
... asking for her mother's consent , and concealing the fact that they were married . He compli- ments his wife on her filial virtue in only consenting to come to his arms with her mother's blessing . It is very probable that Mrs. Steele's ...
... asking for her mother's consent , and concealing the fact that they were married . He compli- ments his wife on her filial virtue in only consenting to come to his arms with her mother's blessing . It is very probable that Mrs. Steele's ...
Seite 43
... asked continually . answer . At last , at the dénoûment , when she might have been of some use , the question is asked , but is answered with a slight difference . Madame has been at home , but is once more gone out . Mrs. Steele , or ...
... asked continually . answer . At last , at the dénoûment , when she might have been of some use , the question is asked , but is answered with a slight difference . Madame has been at home , but is once more gone out . Mrs. Steele , or ...
Seite 53
... asking him what was the next card . There was no other . Steele , the soldier , the playwright , the Bohemian , stood simply on his own legs , and said , " Here am I , Richard Steele : you , Jonathan Swift , can't say or do anything ...
... asking him what was the next card . There was no other . Steele , the soldier , the playwright , the Bohemian , stood simply on his own legs , and said , " Here am I , Richard Steele : you , Jonathan Swift , can't say or do anything ...
Seite 65
... asked him to get over a stile before him , demanded whether he , the Spectator , thought that they had no manners in the country ? Our Will Wimble was even more ceremonious , when ap- proaching a stile in company with a lady , he would ...
... asked him to get over a stile before him , demanded whether he , the Spectator , thought that they had no manners in the country ? Our Will Wimble was even more ceremonious , when ap- proaching a stile in company with a lady , he would ...
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Addison admirable afterwards Andrew Marvell Bartholomew Fair Ben Jonson better Bobadil borough Brainworm Budgell Burrell Cato certainly character Charles Charles II Church conscience court Cromwell Cuckfield death demyship Downright Drummond Duchess Duchess of Portsmouth Duke England English Erastian fact father friends gave gentle gentleman Giles Moore give hand Horsted Keynes husband John Coachman Jonson King Kitely Lady Steele Lancelot Addison Latin lived Lord Cutts Lord Macaulay married Marvell's Masque matter Milton mother nearly never Old Knowell once paper Parker parliament person play poem poet Pope pounds Prince probably quarrel Queen readers religion seems Sejanus servant Shakespeare shillings singular Sir Richard Steele Sir Roger speak Spectator splendid Steele's Sussex Swift tells things Tickell tion tolerable took verses Volpone Wellborn Whig wife Wimble Winestead woman write written wrote Young Knowell