Miscellaneous and Fugitive Pieces, 第 3 巻T. Davies, 1774 - 375 ページ |
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... Interest here ; and who therefore cannot be fuppofed to have that natural Affection for us , or that political Attachment to us , which Natives , or those who have a large landed Intereft here , may be fuppofed to have . Another ...
... Interest here ; and who therefore cannot be fuppofed to have that natural Affection for us , or that political Attachment to us , which Natives , or those who have a large landed Intereft here , may be fuppofed to have . Another ...
13 ページ
... Interest of France and Spain . This should have been attempted by all poflible Applica- tion to their Minds and their Bodies We should have endeavoured to have given them juft Notions of Life , natural , civil , and religious ; and ...
... Interest of France and Spain . This should have been attempted by all poflible Applica- tion to their Minds and their Bodies We should have endeavoured to have given them juft Notions of Life , natural , civil , and religious ; and ...
21 ページ
... Interest in leaving the Quef- tion undecided : Thus it will happen , without great Caution on either Side , that after long Treaties fo- lemnly ratified , the Rights that had been difputed are ftill equally open to Controversy . In ...
... Interest in leaving the Quef- tion undecided : Thus it will happen , without great Caution on either Side , that after long Treaties fo- lemnly ratified , the Rights that had been difputed are ftill equally open to Controversy . In ...
109 ページ
... Interest to surprise . By these Means , as he himself continues to inform us , the Government of England was put on its Guard , fo that before he came to Paris , what was doing had been discovered . The little Armament made at Havre de ...
... Interest to surprise . By these Means , as he himself continues to inform us , the Government of England was put on its Guard , fo that before he came to Paris , what was doing had been discovered . The little Armament made at Havre de ...
118 ページ
... Interest . ' It is not to be fuppofed , that one fo very delicate to preserve his Honour would previously have bafely betrayed his Employer : A Man confcious of acting fo infamous a Part , would have undertaken no De- fence , but let ...
... Interest . ' It is not to be fuppofed , that one fo very delicate to preserve his Honour would previously have bafely betrayed his Employer : A Man confcious of acting fo infamous a Part , would have undertaken no De- fence , but let ...
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Affiftance affured againſt alfo ANTIPAROS Appetites Beauty becauſe Befides Bolingbroke Caufe Cauſe Clodio confequently confiderable Courſe Defign Defire diftinguiſhed diſcover Eachard eafily Earl of Mar Expreffion faid fame fays feemed fenfible fent ferve fettled feveral fhall fhew fhould fince firft firſt fome fometimes foon French Friends ftill fuch fuffered fufficient fuppofe fure greateſt himſelf Houfe Houſe human Ideas Impreffion Inftincts Intereft itſelf John Eachard juft laft laſt lefs Lord Lord Bolingbroke Love Mafter Meaſures Mind moft moſt Mufe Mufic muft muſt myſelf Nature neceffary neral never Number obferved Objects Occafion paffed Paffions Parnell Perfon Philofophy pleafing pleaſe Pleaſure Pleaſure and Pain Poet Pope Power prefent Pretender Purpoſe raiſed Reaſon refolved Reft reprefented rife ſee ſeems Self-intereft Self-love Senfe ſpeak Species Sublime Syftem thefe themſelves theſe Thing thofe THOMAS PARNELL thoſe thouſand tion Underſtanding univerfal uſeful Whigs whofe Words write Zoilus
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49 ページ - Looks through the horizontal misty air Shorn of his beams, or from behind the moon, In dim eclipse, disastrous twilight sheds On half the nations, and with fear of change Perplexes monarchs.
17 ページ - The time is now come, in which every Englishman expects to be informed of the national affairs ; and in which he has a right to have that expectation gratified. For, whatever may be urged by ministers, or those whom vanity or interest make the followers of ministers, concerning the necessity of confidence in our...
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199 ページ - I may claim some merit this way, in hastening this testimonial from your friends abovewriting : their love to you indeed wants no spur, their ink wants no pen, their pen wants no hand, their hand wants no heart, and so forth, (after the manner of Rabelais, which is betwixt some meaning...
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193 ページ - I write to you with the same warmth, the same zeal of good-will and friendship, with which I used to converse with you two years ago, and can't think myself absent, when I feel you so much at my heart. The picture of you which Jervas brought me over, is infinitely less lively a representation than that I carry about with me, and which rises to my mind whenever I think of you. I have many an agreeable reverie through those woods and downs where we once rambled together ; my head is sometimes at the...
106 ページ - Commercy ; and this instance was grounded on the message which the bearer of the letter had brought me from England. In the progress of the conversation with the messenger, he related a number of facts, which satisfied me as to the general disposition of the people ; but he gave me little satisfaction as to the measures taken to improve this disposition, for driving the business on with vigour, if it tended to a revolution, or for supporting it to advantage, if it spun into a war.
102 ページ - I left the town so abruptly, that I had no time to take leave of you or any of my friends. You will excuse me, when you know that I had certain and repeated informations, from some who are in the secret of affairs, that a resolution was taken, by those who have power to execute it, to pursue me to the scaffold. My blood was to have been the cement of a new alliance, nor could my innocence be any security, after it had...
194 ページ - I'll beg your's and the Dean's acceptance of). You must look on me no more a poet, but a plain commoner, who lives upon his own, and fears and flatters no man. I hope before I die to...
247 ページ - And to some peaceful brandy-shop retires; Where in full gills his anxious thoughts he drowns, And quaffs away the care that waits on crowns.