Select British Classics, Volume 25J. Conrad, 1803 - English literature |
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Page 10
... keep that sex under any manner of government , that I have often resolved to give them over entirely , and leave them to their own inventions , I was in hopes , that I had brought them to some order , and was employing my thoughts on ...
... keep that sex under any manner of government , that I have often resolved to give them over entirely , and leave them to their own inventions , I was in hopes , that I had brought them to some order , and was employing my thoughts on ...
Page 24
... keep me in " countenance , that I am very well reconciled both to 66 you and my condition . We live very lovingly toge- " ther ; for as death makes us all equal , it makes us very much delight in one another's company . Our " time ...
... keep me in " countenance , that I am very well reconciled both to 66 you and my condition . We live very lovingly toge- " ther ; for as death makes us all equal , it makes us very much delight in one another's company . Our " time ...
Page 47
... pressed by an oath , which he had taken to keep silence , returned for answer , that he had taken the oath with his tongue , but not with his heart . Had a per- son of a vicious character made such a speech it THE TATLER . 47.
... pressed by an oath , which he had taken to keep silence , returned for answer , that he had taken the oath with his tongue , but not with his heart . Had a per- son of a vicious character made such a speech it THE TATLER . 47.
Page 51
... keep off beg- gars . At our approach they all fell a barking , and would have very much terrified us , had not an old wo- man , who had called herself by the forged name of Competency , offered herself for our guide . She car- ried ...
... keep off beg- gars . At our approach they all fell a barking , and would have very much terrified us , had not an old wo- man , who had called herself by the forged name of Competency , offered herself for our guide . She car- ried ...
Page 67
... keep his face turned from him , and to feign himself asleep , when , to his utter confusion , the widow at last puts out her arm , and pulls the bell at her bed's head . In came her friend , and two or three companions to whom the ...
... keep his face turned from him , and to feign himself asleep , when , to his utter confusion , the widow at last puts out her arm , and pulls the bell at her bed's head . In came her friend , and two or three companions to whom the ...
Common terms and phrases
acquaintance admired agreeable Anticyra Apartment appear bag-pipes beautiful behaviour Bickerstaff called character Cicero confess death delight desire discourse dress entertain esteem eyes father favour February 27 fortune Gascon gentleman give Great-Britain greatest hand happy hath heart honour humble servant humour husband imagination impertinent Isaac Bickerstaff kind King of Sweden lady lately learned letter live look lover mankind manner marriage ment mind Nando's nation nature never night observe occasion OVID particular pass passion persons petitioner petticoat pleased pleasure poet present proper Pyrrha racter reader reason received Roman censors Rome says sense Sheer-lane shew sion soul speak spirit Stratonice Styx Tatler Telemachus tell temper Terentia thing thought THURSDAY Timoleon tion told town turn Ulysses upholsterer VIRG Virgil virtue walk whole wife woman words write young