The Picadilly ambulator; or, Old Q, memoirs of the private life of that ever-green votary of Venus'.1808 |
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... chapter , suppressed in man Copies , giving a dramatic as a of the Duke's last amour with a woman at the famous Star & Garter Hotel , Richmond Hill , where he is seized with paralysis and hurries home to die " The Duke was a member of ...
... chapter , suppressed in man Copies , giving a dramatic as a of the Duke's last amour with a woman at the famous Star & Garter Hotel , Richmond Hill , where he is seized with paralysis and hurries home to die " The Duke was a member of ...
Page 16
J P. Hurstone. example , to make amends for the scan- dal which they might have disse- minated . { ... : j CHAPTER II . The first Deviation of the infamous Duchess 16.
J P. Hurstone. example , to make amends for the scan- dal which they might have disse- minated . { ... : j CHAPTER II . The first Deviation of the infamous Duchess 16.
Page 17
... the contrary , it is said , that he merely seemed to regard it as la fortune de la guerre , and that having met with the Pr - n - e shortly after- wards at Newmarket , he jocosely re- R — I marked " Although your R - I CHAPTER II. ...
... the contrary , it is said , that he merely seemed to regard it as la fortune de la guerre , and that having met with the Pr - n - e shortly after- wards at Newmarket , he jocosely re- R — I marked " Although your R - I CHAPTER II. ...
Page 33
J P. Hurstone. marriage with the Duke of King his grace did not more bask in the sun- shine of her smiles than Lord March- mont . $ 1 . CHAPTER III . The Opera Goddess . - Some particulars C 5 33.
J P. Hurstone. marriage with the Duke of King his grace did not more bask in the sun- shine of her smiles than Lord March- mont . $ 1 . CHAPTER III . The Opera Goddess . - Some particulars C 5 33.
Page 34
... account his lordship was not ready to embark in another privateering adventure of the amorous kind ; for it appears that a celebrated opera - singer next supplied the vacuity in his affections , occasioned by his cruel CHAPTER III. ...
... account his lordship was not ready to embark in another privateering adventure of the amorous kind ; for it appears that a celebrated opera - singer next supplied the vacuity in his affections , occasioned by his cruel CHAPTER III. ...
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admirer adventure amorous anecdote appearance arms ascend ber-maid bers bewitching boarding schools Brd of Paradise butt captain cham chamber adjacent CHAPTER character charms circumstance complied daily print desired door dress-maker Duke of Quiz duke's Earl easily be conceived effect endeavoured exert eyes fair female flight follies frail Fraxe gallant girl gout Grace of Quiz heart hero hitherto honour inclined infamous Italian locked Lord March Lord Marchmont lordship lovely marchioness marquis marriage married ladies matrimonial means memoirs mind Miss C's mistress night noble duke nobleman observed occasion old couple old Q old Queensberry once Opera pair perfect PICCADILLY AMBULATOR present prove Quaker Queen-square quent quickly remark rendered reputation retire returned Sarah scene Signora situation small pleasure Soho soon spirit staircase subse tend to turn tete ther tion tive took unwelcome utmost vices virtue vis à vis wards world of gallantry young lady youth
Popular passages
Page 108 - Our revels now are ended: these our actors, As I foretold you, were all spirits, and Are melted into air, into thin air: And, like the baseless fabric of this vision The cloud-capp'd towers, the gorgeous palaces, The solemn temples, the great globe itself, Yea, all which it inherits, shall dissolve, And, like this insubstantial pageant faded, Leave not a rack behind: We are such stuff As dreams are made of, and our little life Is rounded with a sleep.
Page 42 - Let subtle schoolmen teach these friends to fight, More studious to divide than to unite ; And grace and virtue, sense and reason split, With all the rash dexterity of wit. Wits, just like fools, at war about a name, Have full as oft no meaning, or the same.
Page 1 - ... contempt; but want. of feeling excites indignation. You have shocked me, and I leave you. From exalted rank like yours, my lord, men look for exalted virtue ; and when these are coupled, they command respect, and grace each other ; but the coronet which gives and receives splendour when fixed on the brow of merit, glitters on the worthless head, like a mark of disgrace, to render vice, folly, and inhumanity conspicuous.
Page 1 - Ambulator ; or, Old Q. : containing Memoirs of the Private Life of that Ever-green Votary of Venus ! Throughout which are interspersed Anecdotes of the most noted Fashionables, his Contemporaries. In two volumes. By JP HURSTONE, Esq.
Page 106 - ... conforms to the temper of the times, wisely preferring elegance to tawdry finery. The Duke of Queensborough spends a great portion of the year in the metropolis, and indeed the view of...