The Epistolary Correspondence, Visitation Charges, Speeches, and Miscellanies, of the Right Reverend Francis Atterbury: With Historical Notes, 第 2 巻J. Nichols, 1783 |
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... ftill in my ftomach . Till that be remedied , I shall not be quite well . When I am better , you shall hear more from me , who am , Sir , Your very humble fervant , C. BOYLE . I SIR , LETTER VII . Mr. BOYLE to Mr. ATTERBURY . May 10 ...
... ftill in my ftomach . Till that be remedied , I shall not be quite well . When I am better , you shall hear more from me , who am , Sir , Your very humble fervant , C. BOYLE . I SIR , LETTER VII . Mr. BOYLE to Mr. ATTERBURY . May 10 ...
36 ページ
... ftill keep my neighbour Atter- " bury in fufpence about the deanry of Chrift- " church , which has been above fix months va- " cant ; and he is heartily angry . " . June 26.- " This is the laft night I lie at Chelsea ; and I got " home ...
... ftill keep my neighbour Atter- " bury in fufpence about the deanry of Chrift- " church , which has been above fix months va- " cant ; and he is heartily angry . " . June 26.- " This is the laft night I lie at Chelsea ; and I got " home ...
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... ftill kept in town , foliciting my unfortu- " nate bufinefs . I have found great favour from ❝ his Majefty . But form is a tedious thing to " wait upon . Since it is my fate , I must bear it with patience , and perfect it if I can ...
... ftill kept in town , foliciting my unfortu- " nate bufinefs . I have found great favour from ❝ his Majefty . But form is a tedious thing to " wait upon . Since it is my fate , I must bear it with patience , and perfect it if I can ...
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... ftill undefaced , while a cock " of barley in our next field has been confumed " to afhes . Would to GOD that this heap of " barley had been all that had perifhed ! for un- " happily beneath this little fhelter fat two much " more ...
... ftill undefaced , while a cock " of barley in our next field has been confumed " to afhes . Would to GOD that this heap of " barley had been all that had perifhed ! for un- " happily beneath this little fhelter fat two much " more ...
84 ページ
... ftill continued the purfuit , and ftuck in his fkirts to the laft , by writing in a Weekly Journal a refutation of his fpeech , and a vindication of the judgement paffed upon him , fo that a gentleman of wit and learning , allud- ing to ...
... ftill continued the purfuit , and ftuck in his fkirts to the laft , by writing in a Weekly Journal a refutation of his fpeech , and a vindication of the judgement paffed upon him , fo that a gentleman of wit and learning , allud- ing to ...
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afferted againſt alfo alſo anſwer April 20 Archdeacon atque Atterbury Atterbury's becauſe beſt Biſhop Bishop Atterbury cafe Canon caufe cauſe Chriftian Church Church of England circumftances Clergy confequence conftitution Convocation correfpondence counfel cùm Dean Deanry Decani defign defire ecclefiaftical eſtabliſhed faid fame fecure feems fent fervant fervice feveral fhall fhew fhould fide fince firſt fome foon fræna Francis Atterbury ftand ftill fubject fuch fuppofed fure Graces hath himſelf hinc honour Houfe Houſe Illington intereft juſt Kelly laft laſt lefs letter Lord Lordſhip Lordships Majefty malè meaſure moft moſt muft muſt myſelf neceffary never obferved occafion paffage paffed perfons pleaſed Pope prefent preferved Prelate Pretender propofal publiſhed purpoſe quæ raiſed reaſon refpect regni Religion ſay ſeem ſhall ſtill ſuch tamen thefe themſelves theſe thing thofe thoſe thought tion tranflated Ufque ultrà uſe vifit virtue whofe
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299 ページ - Spenser wrote last, and Waller first, there should not be much above twenty years' distance ; and yet the one's language, like the money of that time, is as current now as ever ; whilst the other's words are like old coins, one must go to an antiquary to understand their true meaning and value.
301 ページ - There was no distinction of parts, no regular stops, nothing for the ear to rest upon ; but as soon as the copy began, down it went like a larum, incessantly ; and the reader was sure to be out of breath before he got to the end of it : so that really verse, in those days, was but downright prose tagged with rhymes.
298 ページ - Our language owes more to him than the French does to Cardinal Richelieu, and the whole Academy. A poet cannot think of him without being in the same rapture Lucretius is in when Epicurus comes in his way.
32 ページ - Second, struck by those very graces, gave him five thousand pounds ; with which he immediately bought an annuity for his life, of five hundred pounds a year, of my grandfather, Halifax ; which was the foundation of his subsequent fortune.
409 ページ - Flavia the least and slightest toy Can with resistless art employ. This Fan in meaner hands would prove An engine of small force in love ; But she, with such an air and mien, Not to be told or safely seen, Directs its wanton motions so, That it wounds more than Cupid's bow ; Gives coolness to the matchless dame, To every other breast a flame.
65 ページ - John was fuiting feveral forts of poppies and field flowers to her complexion, to chufe her a knot for the wedding-day. While they were thus bufied, (it was on the laft of July between two or three in the afternoon) the clouds grew black, and fuch a ftorm of lightning and thunder enfued, that all the labourers made the beft of their way to what fhelter the trees and hedges afforded.
64 ページ - It was but this very morning that he had obtained her parents' consent, and it was but till the next week that they were to wait to be happy. Perhaps...
80 ページ - If you do, my lord, it is but lately. May I beg to know what new...
299 ページ - Waller first, there should not be much above twenty years distance; and yet the one's language, like the money of that time, is as current now as ever ; whilst the other's words are like old coins, one must go to an antiquary to understand their true meaning and value. Such advances may a great genius make, when it undertakes...
68 ページ - ... joy and harmony, if the lightning had not interrupted their scheme of happiness. I see no reason to imagine, that John Hughes and Sarah Drew were either wiser or more virtuous than their neighbours. That a well-set man...