Another travller! or Cursory remarks and tritical observations made upon a journey through part of the Netherlands, by Coriat junior, Volume 1, Part 11767 |
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Page 17
... thought I , to make fuch a noife for nothing . What my companion felt , I know not ; and if he had any fears he was wife enough to keep them to himself , CHA P. II . Wherein the Author indulges his fancy upon a Subject , which some of ...
... thought I , to make fuch a noife for nothing . What my companion felt , I know not ; and if he had any fears he was wife enough to keep them to himself , CHA P. II . Wherein the Author indulges his fancy upon a Subject , which some of ...
Page 19
... bacon and a tankard of ale - he naufeates the thoughts of a rafher and ale , and contents himself with a glass of spring water and a few barthorn drops . They They proceed on their journey , and he grows worse CORIAT JUNIOR . 19.
... bacon and a tankard of ale - he naufeates the thoughts of a rafher and ale , and contents himself with a glass of spring water and a few barthorn drops . They They proceed on their journey , and he grows worse CORIAT JUNIOR . 19.
Page 25
... mercy on us how it blows ? —I am just come up from the beach , and I think I never faw a greater fea ! -why it breaks over the head as white as a fheet ! VOL . I. B A A pretty description , thought I , if one was CORIAT JUNIOR . 25.
... mercy on us how it blows ? —I am just come up from the beach , and I think I never faw a greater fea ! -why it breaks over the head as white as a fheet ! VOL . I. B A A pretty description , thought I , if one was CORIAT JUNIOR . 25.
Page 26
Samuel Paterson. A pretty description , thought I , if one was not just going to sea ! Why furely , continued he , these gentlemen ( meaning my companion and me ) will never think of going this tide ? ' I fhall do juft as the captain ...
Samuel Paterson. A pretty description , thought I , if one was not just going to sea ! Why furely , continued he , these gentlemen ( meaning my companion and me ) will never think of going this tide ? ' I fhall do juft as the captain ...
Page 38
... Cards of a funday ! thought I , O monftrous ! -but I remember that used to be the heathenish practice in France , when I was there formerly . Finding Finding myself no longer in the dear land of liberty 38 CORIAT JUNIOR .
... Cards of a funday ! thought I , O monftrous ! -but I remember that used to be the heathenish practice in France , when I was there formerly . Finding Finding myself no longer in the dear land of liberty 38 CORIAT JUNIOR .
Other editions - View all
Another Travller! Or Cursory Remarks and Tritical Observations Made Upon a ... Samuel Paterson No preview available - 2016 |
Another Travller! Or Cursory Remarks and Tritical Observations Made Upon a ... No preview available - 2020 |
Common terms and phrases
abominate Dr abuſe againſt agreeable almoſt anſwer barge becauſe beft beſt Bruges cafe CHAP chufe church confideration confidering confifting converſation CORIAT JUNIOR count count of Boulogne courſe cuftoms curiofity defire eafily Engliſh eſpecially faft faid fame faſhion fave favour fecond feems fenfible fervants ferve feveral fhall fhop fhort fhould fide fince firſt Flanders fome fometimes foul ftanding ftate ftill ftory ftrange ftranger fubject fuch fuffer fure gentleman Ghent Godeliva guifes himſelf houſe impoffible juſt ladies leaft lefs madam mafter meaſure moft moſt muft muſt myſelf neceffary Netherlands never Nieuport obferve occafionally Oftende paffage paffengers perfons pleafing pleaſes pleaſure poffible prefent purpoſe reader reaſon reſpective Saint ſee ſeen ſet ſeven ſhall ſhe ſhort ſmall ſome ſpace ſpeak ſpoken ſtay ſuch thefe themſelves theſe thing thofe thoſe thought TOM JONES traveller underſtand vifit whofe whoſe
Popular passages
Page 134 - ... of those opinions, which we regard as quite characteristic of the author, but of the soundness of which we entertain some doubts. " The shops of booksellers should always be visited by the curious traveller ; since they may be considered as the abstracts of the genius and learning of the country. A well-read, and at the same time a well-bred man, might in half an hour learn to dress his conversation by them ; chusing such subjects as were most for his own information, and best suited to the humour...
Page 135 - ... To strengthen this opinion, and to guard against the fleers of some of my merrily-disposed readers, give me leave to observe, that if I had been hoodwinked, and privately conveyed from London, not knowing whither I was going, and had been set down in Myn Heer Van Praet's shop, at Bruges, as soon as mine eyes had been uncovered, and that I could look about me, I should not have hesitated a moment to pronounce, that the religion of the country was popish, and the bulk of the inhabitants bigots....
Page 150 - Well, be that as it may — I here give it under my hand, that as often as I find men called to a Christian temper, to love mercy, and walk humbly, that I shall not dispute the fitness of their call ; and, if they chuse to walk in some particular habits, (wherever such distinctions are warranted) I shall be apt to say, that, from custom, one habit is as eligible as another, if they prefer solitude...
Page 97 - ... but angels catch the enrapturing music of thy voice ! •' What a pity it is, to see so many delicate young creatures shut up from society ! — the very ends of their being blasted ! — created to charm, to chear, to be admired — to love, and to be loved — to taste the riches of increase — to rejoice in their maker's bounty, not limited to them alone, but extended to their numerous offspring ! " What a perversion of scripture is here? — Virgins and lamps! — vessels of honour, and...
Page 37 - British attitudes to abroad: / beg leave then to proceed in my own way — and tho' it is become so much the fashion among my countrymen of late to decry foreign customs and manners, and to cry up whatever is of British growth, whether right, or wrong; I shall nevertheless take the liberty so far to differ from them, as to commend whatever in my judgment has appeared commendable, without dread of the forfeiture of my allegiance; and even to do justice to a monk where I have found him worthy, and...
Page 135 - ... at it (and they have free leave so to do), that I do not know whether, in some situations, I would not pay the bookseller a visit, even before I had sent for the dresser. " To strengthen this opinion, and to guard against the fleers of some of my merrily-disposed readers, give me leave to observe, that if I had been hoodwinked, and privately conveyed from London, not knowing whither I was going, and had been set down in Myn Heer Van Praet's shop, at Bruges, as soon as mine eyes had been uncovered,...
Page 96 - ... blossoms will wither, thy roses fade, thy lilies shrink from their whiteness ! — thy silken locks for ever be concealed — thy crystal orbs cease to emit their wonted fires ! — thy fragrant breath, which late out-vied the morning's freshness, be thenceforth spent in broken and causeless sighs ! — thine eyes will be directed to turn inwards, there to behold the spotless chamber of thy soul! — wretched conceit! — alas! that thou mightest well do, hadst thou no eyes at all ! — who then...
Page 35 - Boarding the ship for Ostend, Coriat Junior and his companion stand politely back, only to find that every other passenger presses forward, 'and my companion and I were fain to lay, the one upon a bulk, the other upon the cabin floor'.
Page 165 - ... mistake not, after this manner most of my countrymen travel : they set out with prejudices against the natives they are going to visit ; they know their characters before-hand— a Frenchman, is a puppy; an Italian, a cheat; a German, a pedant; and a Dutchman, a brute — for this reason, they chuse to keep their own company, to be waited upon by their own servants, to journey in their own carriages, and to return home almost as wise as they set out.
Page 151 - ... conclude, they find more comfort in contemplation, than in speech — how they cross their arms, some will say, and what odd gestures they use ! — so much the better — I admire attitudes, of all things — especially when they are graceful. "The small remnant of the once flourishing Carthusian abbey of Shene, (I think they are of the foundation of Shene-abbey, but I cannot be positive) are now settled at Nieuport, where they have resided ever since the general wreck of monasteries in England,...