The Correspondence of Samuel Richardson ...: Selected from the Original Manuscripts, Bequeathed by Him to His Family, to which are Prefixed, a Biographical Account of that Author, and Observations on His Writings, Том 3R. Phillips, 1804 |
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Страница 19
... sure may hope for some spring - like weather , and your hurry of business will soon grow less , and then I will hope that a little retirement , and the air of your agreeable suburbane North - End , will restore you . While you was thus ...
... sure may hope for some spring - like weather , and your hurry of business will soon grow less , and then I will hope that a little retirement , and the air of your agreeable suburbane North - End , will restore you . While you was thus ...
Страница 39
... sure , she says , you . are a good man , though she is far from giving up her old friend , as an old friend . She and a lovely cousin of hers will dine with me here on Wednesday . We shall remember you again and again . What think you ...
... sure , she says , you . are a good man , though she is far from giving up her old friend , as an old friend . She and a lovely cousin of hers will dine with me here on Wednesday . We shall remember you again and again . What think you ...
Страница 62
... sure one , ) it must rest here at pre- sent . Poor Mr. Allen ! Your faithful and affectionate humble servant , S. RICHARDSON . TO MR . RICHARDSON . Turrick , May 1 , 753 . I FIND I have been like the woodcock , who , they say , hides ...
... sure one , ) it must rest here at pre- sent . Poor Mr. Allen ! Your faithful and affectionate humble servant , S. RICHARDSON . TO MR . RICHARDSON . Turrick , May 1 , 753 . I FIND I have been like the woodcock , who , they say , hides ...
Страница 67
... sure was a great mortification to me , who thought I had taken sufficient precautions to way - lay before you reached that place , especially as you must have already passed me before I heard the news : otherwise , had I met my friend ...
... sure was a great mortification to me , who thought I had taken sufficient precautions to way - lay before you reached that place , especially as you must have already passed me before I heard the news : otherwise , had I met my friend ...
Страница 87
... sure I mean . The man who depends on contingencies , which the will of women govern , can hardly ever determine , at distance , for himself . Mrs. Delany has run away with Miss Chapone to Ireland , and I am at present uncertain about ...
... sure I mean . The man who depends on contingencies , which the will of women govern , can hardly ever determine , at distance , for himself . Mrs. Delany has run away with Miss Chapone to Ireland , and I am at present uncertain about ...
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acquainted admire affectionate and obliged agreeable Ankerwyke Aylesbury believe Bishop of Bristol blessing charming child Clarissa Clementina compliments correspondence daugh daughter dear friend dear Miss Mulso dear Miss Westcomb dear papa DEAR SIR delight deserve diffidence Dunciad duty EDWARDS endeavour Enfield excuse fault favour fear friendship girl give glad Gloucestershire Hamburg happy Harriet hear heard heart honour hope humble servant Kentchurch kind kindly Klopstock knew Lady G leisure letter London Madam mamma marry mean mind never noble North-End occasion Oxfordshire Parson's Green passion perhaps person pleasure poem poor portunity pretty racter reason rejoice RICHARDSON rusal Scudamore Sir Charles Grandison sister sonnet soul suppose sure sweet tell tender thank thing thought tion told town truly Turrick verses walk wife winter wish word worthy write written young lady
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Страница 39 - Who sees with equal eye, as God of all, A hero perish, or a sparrow fall, H|l ft" Atoms or systems into ruin hurl'd, And now a bubble burst, and now a world.
Страница 148 - I startled as for a wrong thing. I answered that it was no love but friendship, as it was, what I felt for him ; we had not seen one another enough to love (as if love must have more time than friendship) ! This was sincerely my meaning, and I had this meaning till Klopstock came again to Hamburg.
Страница 151 - ... by fragments here and there, of a subject of which his soul is just then filled. He has many great fragments of the whole work ready. You may think that persons who love as: we do, have no need of two chambers; we are always in the same: I with my little work, still, still...
Страница 140 - I should have it no more to-day, as this is only my first English letter — but I have it ! It may be because I am now Klopstock's wife (I believe you know my husband by Mr. Hohorst), and then I was only the single young girl. You have since written the manly Clarissa without my prayer. Oh, you have done it to the great joy and thanks of all your happy readers ! Now you can write no more, you must write the history of an angel.
Страница 154 - I could fulfil your request of bringing you acquainted with so many good people as you think of. Though I love my friends dearly, and though they are good, I have however much to pardon, except in the single Klopstock alone. He is good, really good, good at the bottom, in all his actions, in all the foldings of his heart.
Страница 318 - Another extraordinary old man we have had here, but of a very different turn ; the noted Mr. Whiston, showing eclipses, and explaining other phenomena of the stars, and preaching the millennium and anabaptism (for he is now, it seems, of that persuasion) to gay people, who, if they have white teeth, hear him with open mouths, though perhaps shut hearts...
Страница 152 - ... of devotion and all the sublimity of the subject. My husband reading me his young verses and suffering my criticisms. Ten books are published, which I think probably the middle of the whole. I will, as soon as I can, translate you the arguments of these ten books, and what besides I think of them. The verses of the poem are without rhymes, and are hexameters, which sort of verses my husband has been the first to introduce in our language ; we beeing still closely attached to rhymes and iambics.
Страница 185 - Love various minds does variously inspire; It stirs in gentle bosoms gentle fire, Like that of incense on the altar laid; But raging flames tempestuous souls invade; A fire which every windy passion blows, With pride it mounts, or with revenge it glows.
Страница 9 - I tell him thus much professedly, though it be the losing of my rich hopes, as he calls them, that I think with them who, both in prudence and elegance of spirit, would choose a virgin of mean fortunes, honestly bred, before the wealthiest widow.
Страница 153 - ... another Young. How could the King make him only Bishop ! and Bishop of Bristol while the place of Canterbury is vacant ! I think the King knows not at all that there is a Young who illustrates his reign. And you, my dear, dear friend, have not hope of cure of a severe nervous malady ? How I trembled a?