The English Humourists of the Eighteenth Century: A Series of LecturesHarper, 1853 - 297 strani |
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Zadetki 1–5 od 32
Stran 9
... Queen Anne . After her death , his party disgraced , and his hopes of ambition over , Swift returned to Dublin , where he remained twelve years . In this time he wrote the famous " Drapier's Let- Though merely writ , at first , for ...
... Queen Anne . After her death , his party disgraced , and his hopes of ambition over , Swift returned to Dublin , where he remained twelve years . In this time he wrote the famous " Drapier's Let- Though merely writ , at first , for ...
Stran 9
... Queen Anne . After her death , his party disgraced , and his hopes of ambition over , Swift returned to Dublin , where he remained twelve years . In this time he wrote the famous “ Drapier's Let . VER ! FASA TAS HARVARD COLLEGE LIBRARY ...
... Queen Anne . After her death , his party disgraced , and his hopes of ambition over , Swift returned to Dublin , where he remained twelve years . In this time he wrote the famous “ Drapier's Let . VER ! FASA TAS HARVARD COLLEGE LIBRARY ...
Stran 9
... Queen Anne . After her death , his party disgraced , and his hopes of ambition over , Swift returned to Dublin , where he remained twelve years . In this time he wrote the famous " Drapier's Let- Though merely writ , at first , for ...
... Queen Anne . After her death , his party disgraced , and his hopes of ambition over , Swift returned to Dublin , where he remained twelve years . In this time he wrote the famous " Drapier's Let- Though merely writ , at first , for ...
Stran 13
... Queen , the Dean speaks in the most edifying manner of the licentiousness of the press and the abusive language of the other party : " It must be acknowledged that the bad practices of printers have been such as to deserve the severest ...
... Queen , the Dean speaks in the most edifying manner of the licentiousness of the press and the abusive language of the other party : " It must be acknowledged that the bad practices of printers have been such as to deserve the severest ...
Stran 25
... Queen with the red bag , and told him aloud , he had something to say to him from my Lord Treasurer . He took out his gold watch , and telling the time of day , complained that it was very late . A gentleman said he was too fast . ' How ...
... Queen with the red bag , and told him aloud , he had something to say to him from my Lord Treasurer . He took out his gold watch , and telling the time of day , complained that it was very late . A gentleman said he was too fast . ' How ...
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75 cents acquaintance Addison admire asked beauty Bolingbroke called Captain character CHARLES ANTHON charming Congreve court daughter Dean dear death delightful dinner Dublin Duke Dunciad England English eyes famous fancy father fortune genius gentle gentleman give Goldsmith hand happy heart History Hogarth honest honour humour humourist Iliad Ireland John Johnson Joseph Addison Julius Cæsar kind lady laugh Lawrence Sterne letters literary lived London look Lord Lord Bolingbroke Lord Treasurer manner married MATTHEW PRIOR Muslin nature never Nicholas Nickleby night paper periwig pity pleasure poet poor Pope Pope's portrait pretty Queen satire says Sheep Sir William Temple speak Spence's Anecdotes Stella Sterne story Struldbrugs sweet Swift Tatler tell tender thee thought told Tom Jones truth Vanity Fair verses vols whilst wife William woman writing wrote young