Letters, Written, Volume 2T. Davies, 1766 |
Contents
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Common terms and phrases
Adieu affairs affure againſt Amesbury anſwer Arbuthnott ARBUTHNOTT to Dr becauſe Beggar's Opera believe beſt Bolingbroke to Dr buſineſs cafe cauſe dean DEAR SIR defign defire duchefs duke elſe eſteem fafe faid fame favour feem fend fenfe fent ferve fervice feven fhall fhew fide fince fincere firſt fome foon forry fpirits friends friendſhip ftate ftill fuch fummer fure GAY to Dr give greateſt happineſs hath hear Herefordshire himſelf honour hope houſe humble fervant intereft Ireland John Gay juſt lady laft laſt leaſt letter London lord Bathurst Lord BOLINGBROKE lord Harley minifters moft Monfieur moſt muſt myſelf neceffary never occafion paſs perfon pleaſe pleaſure Pope prefent promiſed publiſhed purpoſe reaſon refpect ſay ſee ſeems ſhall ſhe ſhould Sir William Wyndham ſome ſpeak ſtate ſtill ſuch SWIFT tell theſe thing thofe thoſe Twickenham uſe wiſh writ write your's yourſelf
Popular passages
Page 368 - I find it is the most difficult of any that I ever undertook. After I have invented one fable, and finished it, I despair of finding out another ; but I have a moral or two more, which I wish to write upon.
Page 66 - I have several times taken up my pen to write to you, but have been always interrupted by some impertinence or other ; and to tell you unreservedly, I have been unwilling to answer so agreeable a letter as that I received from you, with one written in form only ; but I must still have continued silent, had I deferred writing, till I could have made a suitable return.
Page 65 - Derry, who has scarcely left behind him his equal in humanity, agreeable conversation, and all kinds of learning. We have often talked of you with great pleasure, and upon this occasion I cannot but reflect upon myself, who, at the same time that I omit no opportunity of expressing my esteem for you to others, have been so negligent in doing it to yourself. I have several times taken up my pen to write to you, but have...
Page 50 - Our friend Prior, not having had the vicissitude of human things before his eyes, is likely to end his days in as forlorn a state as any other poet has done before him, if his friends do not take more care of him than he did of himself.
Page 127 - I lodge at present in Burlington-house, and have received many civilities from many great men, but very few real benefits. They wonder at each other for not providing for me, and I wonder at them all.
Page 297 - I really think, you may safely venture to Amesbury, though indeed the lady here likes to have her own way as well as you ; which may sometimes occasion disputes : and I tell you beforehand, that I cannot take your part.
Page 371 - I have not seen Dean Berkeley, but have read his book, and like many parts of it ; but in general think, with you, that it is too speculative, at least for me.
Page 6 - I can delight so much in as Dr. Swift's, and yet that is the smallest thing I ought to value you for. That hearty sincere friendship, that plain and open ingenuity in all your commerce, is what I am sure I never can find in another man. I shall want often a faithful monitor, one that would vindicate me behind my back, and tell me my faults to my face. God knows I write this with tears in my eyes.
Page 339 - Does Pope talk to you of the noble work, which, at my instigation, he has begun in such a manner, that he must be convinced, by this time, I judged better of his talents than he did...
Page 296 - The duchess is a more severe check upon my finances than ever you were, and I submit, as I did to you, to comply to my own good. I was a long time before I could prevail with her to let me allow myself a pair of shoes with two heels, for I had lost one, and the shoes were so decayed that they were not worth mending.