The Speaker: Or, Miscellaneous Pieces, Selected from the Best English Writers, and Disposed Under Proper Heads, with a View to Facilitate the Improvement of Youth in Reading and Speaking. To which are Prefixed Two Essays |
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Doth glance from heaven to earth , from earth to heaven ; And as imagination
bodies forth The form of things unknown , the Poet's pen Turns them to shape ,
and gives to airy nothing A local habitation and a name .. Heaven doth with us as
we ...
OH , world , thy slippery turns ! Friends now fast sworn , Whose double bosoms
seem to wear one heart , Whose hours , whose bed , whose meal and exercise
Are still together ; who twine ( as ' twere ) in love Inseperable ; shall within this
hour ...
WHEN states and empires have their periods of de clension , and feel in their
turns what distress and poverty ism I stop not to tell the causes which gradually
brought the house d ' E **** in Britany into decay . The Marquis d ' E **** had
fought ...
Well then , at once to ease your doubt , " Replies the man , “ l'll turn him out : “
And when before your eyes l've set him , don't find him black , l'll eat him . ” He
said ; then full before their sight Produc'd the beast , and lo ! -- twas white . 66 lf
you ...
Things change their titles , as our manners turn : His Compting house employ'd
the Sunday morn : Seldom at church ( ' twas such a busy life ) But duly sent his
family and wife . There ( so the Devil ordain'd ) one Christmas tide My good old ...
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This reader was initially published as a British reader, and then imported to America. According to Henry W. Simon, it was first published in America in Philadelphia in 1799. He was unaware of this second American printing. There is also another printing -- from New York in 1812 -- of which he too was unaware. Thus far, these are the only three American printings of which I am aware. In a visit to the Harvard archives, I noticed in their records that the Institute of 1770, an early literary society there, often read aloud from Enfield in their meetings in the 1770s and 1780s (though this would have been a British version of the text, not the American one depicted here).
joseph.p.haughey@gmail.com
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