The Letters of Horace Walpole, Earl of Orford, Volume 7R. Bentley, 1858 |
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Page 8
... gone , I believe , to Lady Holland , but returns to - morrow , as his mother is come to town not in a good way . I hope you saw and was delighted with the parody of Burgoyne's Despatch . I never saw more humour , nor better kept up . It ...
... gone , I believe , to Lady Holland , but returns to - morrow , as his mother is come to town not in a good way . I hope you saw and was delighted with the parody of Burgoyne's Despatch . I never saw more humour , nor better kept up . It ...
Page 10
... gone . My feelings for my friends are stronger and more sincere than my philosophy ; and great is the difference between advising them to act as they ought , and being indifferent to the consequence . 1693. TO SIR HORACE MANN ...
... gone . My feelings for my friends are stronger and more sincere than my philosophy ; and great is the difference between advising them to act as they ought , and being indifferent to the consequence . 1693. TO SIR HORACE MANN ...
Page 14
... gone to him at Saratoga , from Quebec . I am grateful for your Ladyship's hint , and , indeed , did hope to be invited to keep my gambols at Ampthill , which I do most stedfastly design ; though I was alarmed last night with a swelled ...
... gone to him at Saratoga , from Quebec . I am grateful for your Ladyship's hint , and , indeed , did hope to be invited to keep my gambols at Ampthill , which I do most stedfastly design ; though I was alarmed last night with a swelled ...
Page 18
... gone to Windsor to try to bring her sister to town , who insists on staying there till he is buried , and every one of their windows looks on St. George's Chapel ! but I will not sadden your Ladyship with the distress I am witness too ...
... gone to Windsor to try to bring her sister to town , who insists on staying there till he is buried , and every one of their windows looks on St. George's Chapel ! but I will not sadden your Ladyship with the distress I am witness too ...
Page 21
... gone . I think the time is coming when the Sermon will have more weight , and as it has been preached , it cannot be recalled . The taxes , the treaty with the Americans , and the probable imminent war with France , will make it little ...
... gone . I think the time is coming when the Sermon will have more weight , and as it has been preached , it cannot be recalled . The taxes , the treaty with the Americans , and the probable imminent war with France , will make it little ...
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Common terms and phrases
Adieu Admiral Keppel America Ampthill answer Arlington Street army arrived believe Bishop bootikins Burgoyne Burgoyne's called certainly Charles Fox Chatterton COUNTESS OF OSSORY daughter dead dear Lady Ossory dear Sir doubt Duchess Duke Earl England expect father fleet France French friends Gazette Giardini give gone gout Harcourt hear heard honour hope HORACE WALPOLE House impatient King Lady Holland Ladyship late least letter look Lord Chatham Lord North Lord Ossory Lordship Madam Madame du Deffand Ministers morning nephew never night Nuneham obliged one's Opera papers Parliament peace perhaps Pray present reason received Sappho Scots seen sent short SIR HORACE MANN sorry Strawberry Hill suppose sure talk tell thank thing thought thousand to-day to-morrow told town trust truth week whole WILLIAM COLE WILLIAM MASON wish word write written yesterday York
Popular passages
Page 348 - That the influence of the Crown has increased, is increasing, and ought to be diminished"?
Page 145 - Spurning the idea of being purchased, he replied, " that he was not worth purchasing, but such as he was, the king of Great Britain was not rich enough to do it.
Page 117 - Conspicuous scene ! another yet is nigh, (More silent far) where kings and poets lie ; Where MURRAY (long enough his country's pride) Shall be no more than TULLY, or than HYDE ! Rack'd with sciatics, martyr'd with the stone, Will any mortal let himself alone?
Page 130 - Office ; but -no man knows what is good for him. My invariable rule therefore is, to ask nothing, to refuse nothing, to let others place me, and to do my best wherever I am placed.
Page 169 - Yes, madam, I do think the pomp of Garrick's funeral perfectly ridiculous. It is confounding the immense space between pleasing talents and national services. What distinctions remain for a patriot hero when the most solemn have been showered on a player? But when a great empire is on its decline, one symptom is, there being more eagerness on trifles than on essential objects.
Page 106 - Je ne suis fait comme aucun de ceux que j'ai vus; j'ose croire n'être fait comme aucun de ceux qui existent.
Page 395 - Mercy on us ! we seem to be plunging into the horrors of France, in the reigns of Charles VI. and VII. ! — yet, as extremes meet, there is at this moment amazing insensibility. Within these four days I have received five applications for tickets to see my house ! One from a set of company who fled from town to avoid the tumults and fires. I suppose ^Eneas lost Creilsa by her stopping at Sadlers
Page 381 - Old Haslang's' Chapel was broken open and plundered ; and, as he is a Prince of Smugglers as well as Bavarian Minister, great quantities of run tea and contraband goods were found in his house. This one cannot lament; and still less, as the old wretch has for these forty years usurped a hired house, and, though the proprietor for many years has offered to remit his arrears of rent, he will neither quit the house nor pay for it.
Page 191 - ... brains with the pistol, and is more wounded by those blows than by the ball Lord Sandwich was at home expecting her to supper at half an hour after ten. On her not returning an hour later, he said something must have happened : however, being tired, he went to bed...
Page 473 - Besides this, it has been remarked that the words ' thou shalt not make unto thee any graven image, or any likeness of anything that is in heaven above, or on the earth beneath, or...