| Mary Anne Lamb, Charles Lamb - 1874 - 392 strani
...throws me back again ; & when he begins to get a little chearful, then I do the same kind office for him. I heartily wish for the arrival of Coleridge...with him would wind us up, and set us a going again. " Do not say any thing, when you write, of our low spirits — it will vex Charles. You would laugh,... | |
| Mary Lamb, William Carew Hazlitt - 1874 - 386 strani
...marriage state;—that friend Coleridge has undergone no alteration by crossing the Atlantie,—for his friendliness to you, as well as all the oddities...mention, are just what one ought to look for from him; and that you, my dear Sarah, have proved yourself just as unfit to flourish in a little, proud Garrison... | |
| w. carew hazlitt - 1874 - 424 strani
...friend Coleridge has undergone no alteration by crossing the Atlantic, — for his friendliness to Cas well as all the oddities you mention, are just . what one ought to look for from him ; and that you, my dear Sarah, have proved yourself just as unfit to flourish in a little, proud Garrison... | |
| Charles Lamb - 1876 - 466 strani
...throws me back again ; & when he begins to get a little chearful, then I do the same kind office for him. I heartily wish for the arrival of Coleridge...with him would wind us up, and set us a going again. Do not say any thing, when you write, of our low spirits — it will vex Charles. You would laugh,... | |
| Charles Lamb - 1882 - 466 strani
...throws me back again ; & when he begins to get a little chearful, then I do the same kind office tor him. I heartily wish for the arrival of Coleridge...with him would wind us up, and set us a going again. Do not say any thing, when you write, of our low spirits — it will vex Charles. You would laugh,... | |
| Anne Burrows Gilchrist - 1883 - 414 strani
...throw me back again ; and when he begins to get a little cheerful, then I do the same kind office for him. I heartily wish for the arrival of Coleridge...sometimes passed with him would wind us up and set us going again. " Do not say anything when you write of our low spirits ; it will vex Charles. You would... | |
| Anne Burrows Gilchrist - 1883 - 280 strani
...[geography was evidently no part of Captain Starkey's curriculum] for his friendliness to you as well as the oddities you mention are just what one ought to look for from him ; and that you, my dear Sarah, have proved yourself just as unfit to flourish in a little proud garrison... | |
| Sir Thomas Noon Talfourd - 1892 - 338 strani
...throws me back again ; & when he begins to get a little chearful, then I do the same kind office (or him. I heartily wish for the arrival of Coleridge...with him would wind us up, and set us a going again. Do not say any thing, \vh™ you write, of our low spirits — it will vex Charles. You would laugh,... | |
| Edward Verrall Lucas - 1905 - 656 strani
...throws me back again; and when he begins to get a little chearful, then I do the same kind office for him. I heartily wish for the arrival of Coleridge;...with him would wind us up, and set us a going again. "Do not say any thing, when you write, of our low spirits — it will vex Charles. You would laugh,... | |
| Charles Lamb, Mary Lamb - 1905 - 596 strani
...throws me back again ; and when he begins to get a little chearful, then I do the same kind office for him. I heartily wish for the arrival of Coleridge...with him would wind us up, and set us a going again. though a kind of ease, is but an uneasy kind of ease, a comfort of rather an uncomfortable sort. I... | |
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