Fireside Studies, Band 1Chatto and Windus, 1876 |
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Seite 17
... true Irishman : he pinned his faith and love on one woman , and he tenderly courted her to the day of his death . She was very stupid and very ill - tempered at times , but it made no differ- ence to him ; she certainly had , like the ...
... true Irishman : he pinned his faith and love on one woman , and he tenderly courted her to the day of his death . She was very stupid and very ill - tempered at times , but it made no differ- ence to him ; she certainly had , like the ...
Seite 32
... hideous horrors , has satirised this supposed habit of women in a way which makes one inclined to assist Mr. Calcraft in hanging him . But is the fact true with the majority of women , or was it ever true 32 FIRESIDE STUDIES .
... hideous horrors , has satirised this supposed habit of women in a way which makes one inclined to assist Mr. Calcraft in hanging him . But is the fact true with the majority of women , or was it ever true 32 FIRESIDE STUDIES .
Seite 33
Henry Kingsley. the majority of women , or was it ever true ? Men don't want women to rush into their arms ; but a woman who keeps a man at bay too long , through sheer humbug , may gain an ardent lover , but will find herself linked to ...
Henry Kingsley. the majority of women , or was it ever true ? Men don't want women to rush into their arms ; but a woman who keeps a man at bay too long , through sheer humbug , may gain an ardent lover , but will find herself linked to ...
Seite 44
... true , and Steele was in the wrong ; but Addison was the dearest friend which Steele ever had , and Steele's friendship for Addison outlasted everything . Lord Macaulay , in one of his essays , declares 44 FIRESIDE STUDIES .
... true , and Steele was in the wrong ; but Addison was the dearest friend which Steele ever had , and Steele's friendship for Addison outlasted everything . Lord Macaulay , in one of his essays , declares 44 FIRESIDE STUDIES .
Seite 79
... without thought No man was ever more true and firm in his friendships , but the high- flying Churchman , Dr. Sacheverell , ( whose or reason . design at bottom was the singular one of an Erastian THE FATHERS OF THE SPECTATOR . 79.
... without thought No man was ever more true and firm in his friendships , but the high- flying Churchman , Dr. Sacheverell , ( whose or reason . design at bottom was the singular one of an Erastian THE FATHERS OF THE SPECTATOR . 79.
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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