The Connoisseur, 第 1 巻R. Baldwin, 1767 |
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... remarkable in persons of quality , whose conver- verfation flows with an even tenor , undisturbed by fentiment , and unruffled by paffion : infomuch that husbands and wives , brothers , fifters , cou- fins , and in fhort the whole ...
... remarkable in persons of quality , whose conver- verfation flows with an even tenor , undisturbed by fentiment , and unruffled by paffion : infomuch that husbands and wives , brothers , fifters , cou- fins , and in fhort the whole ...
55 ページ
... remarkable by a fhew of exceffive love . They begin with great eclat , are lavish of their fondnefs at firft , but their whole ftock is foon wafted ; and their poverty is the more in- fupportable , as their former profufion has made it ...
... remarkable by a fhew of exceffive love . They begin with great eclat , are lavish of their fondnefs at firft , but their whole ftock is foon wafted ; and their poverty is the more in- fupportable , as their former profufion has made it ...
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... , fmile , and languish at each other ! But this affectation is ftill more remarkable , when a liquorifh old fool is continually fondling a young wife : Though D 5 No. 7 . Though perhaps the fight is not so N ° . 7. The CONNOISSEUR . 57.
... , fmile , and languish at each other ! But this affectation is ftill more remarkable , when a liquorifh old fool is continually fondling a young wife : Though D 5 No. 7 . Though perhaps the fight is not so N ° . 7. The CONNOISSEUR . 57.
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... remarkable in pieces of modern wit and humour : and it may be ob- served , that where there is the least of these lively qualities , the author is moft defirous of fubftituting these arts in their room ; imagining , that by a judicious ...
... remarkable in pieces of modern wit and humour : and it may be ob- served , that where there is the least of these lively qualities , the author is moft defirous of fubftituting these arts in their room ; imagining , that by a judicious ...
79 ページ
... his pillow . The principal cha- character in the Eneid is a general of remarkable piety and courage ; and great part of the poem is made E 4 up of war . These studies cannot surely fail made No. 10. The CONNOISSEUR . 79.
... his pillow . The principal cha- character in the Eneid is a general of remarkable piety and courage ; and great part of the poem is made E 4 up of war . These studies cannot surely fail made No. 10. The CONNOISSEUR . 79.
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abfurd againſt alfo almoſt alſo bagnio becauſe behaviour beſt Bona Dea Burletta buſineſs called COAST OF GAIN coffee-houſe conftantly CONNOISSEUR converfation courſe defire diſcover diſtinguiſhed Epithalamium faid falutation fame faſhion fcarce feemed feen fent ferve feveral fhall fhew fhort fince firft firſt fleep fleſhe fome fomething foon ftill ftrong fubject fuch fuffer fure GENIUS gentlemen Gernutus herſelf himſelf honour horſe houſe huſband itſelf Jews juſt ladies ladies grouped laft laſt lately laugh leaft leaſt leſs lord Lord Bolingbroke modern moft moſt muft muſt myſelf NUMB obferved obliged occafion paffion party perfons pleaſed pleaſure poffibly preſent publiſher reader reft retailed weekly ſame ſcarce ſcenes ſee ſeems ſeen ſerve ſervice ſet ſeveral Shakespeare ſhall ſhe ſhould ſome ſpirit ſtage ſtudy ſuch ſuppoſe thefe themſelves theſe thofe thoſe Thurſday tion town toy'd Univerſities uſed veffel whiſper whofe whole whoſe wife
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23 ページ - To make up one Hermaphrodite ; Still amorous, and fond, and billing, Like Philip and Mary on a shilling...
52 ページ - ... colonels of twenty men in a company, to quaff out or convey into secret hoards, the wages of a delusive list, and...
3 ページ - ... on his head he wore a turban of imperial paper; and there hung a calf-skin on his reverend limbs, which was gilt on the back, and faced with robings of morocco, lettered (like a rubric-post) with the names of the most eminent authors. In his left hand he bore a printed scroll, which from the marginal corrections I imagined to be a proof-sheet; and in his right hand he waved the quill of a goose. He immediately accosted me. "Town1...
93 ページ - Our ballad has the air of a narrative written before Shakespeare's play ; I mean, that if it had been written after the play, it would have been much more full and circumstantial. At present, it has too much the nakedness of an original...
91 ページ - To them in streets that lie. His life was like a barrow hogge, That liveth many a day, Yet never once doth any good, Until men will him slay. Or like a filthy heap of dung, That lyeth in a whoard ; Which never can do any good, Till it be spread abroad.
96 ページ - ... which we may include Westminster, with great accuracy, yet they have not set it out in the full light which at present it deserves. They have not distinguished it as an University. Paris is an University, Dublin is an University, even Moscow is an University. But London has not yet been honoured with that title. I will allow our metropolis to have been intended originally, only as a city of trade ; and I will...
105 ページ - ... of Trajan worth fifty shillings, and a queen Anne's farthing value five pounds. He was with much ado dissuaded from carrying on his suit; as the magistrate convinced him, that however highly he might rate his own treasures, a jury, who were no Virtuosos, would consider a farthing merely as a farthing, and look upon a copper coin of a Roman Emperor as no better than a king George's halfpenny.
113 ページ - Mayoress, a taylor's wife, and Mrs. Alderman Gascoigne, who sells pins and needles on one side of the shop, while her husband works at his pestle and mortar on the other. These ordinary wretches are constant attendants on my tea-table .•"'I am obliged to take them and their brats out an airing in my coach every evening; and am afterwards often doomed to sit down to whist and swabbers, or one and thirty bone-ace for farthing.
112 ページ - are open to every dirty fellow in the country that is worth forty shillings a year ; all my best floors are spoiled by the hobnails of farmers stumping about them ; every room is a pig-stye, and the Chinese paper in the drawing-room stinks so abominably of punch and tobacco, that it would strike you down to come into it.
xviii ページ - ... better knows to build, and who to dance, Or this from Italy, or that from France, Our Connoisseur will ne'er pretend to scan, But point the follies of mankind to man. Th' important knowledge of ourselves explain, Which not to know all knowledge is but vain.