The Lucubrations of Isaac Bickerstaff, Esq, Volume 3H. Lintot, 1754 - English essays |
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Page 3
... Town , was to carry the War into my own Quarters . I do therefore folemnly declare , ( notwithstanding that I am a great Lover of Art and Ingenuity ) that if I hear he opens any of his People's Mouths against me , I fhall not fail to ...
... Town , was to carry the War into my own Quarters . I do therefore folemnly declare , ( notwithstanding that I am a great Lover of Art and Ingenuity ) that if I hear he opens any of his People's Mouths against me , I fhall not fail to ...
Page 4
... Town with great Pomp and Ceremony , in order to be buried with his Anceflors at the Peak . It is a Maxim in Morality , That we are to fpeak nothing but Truth of the Living , nothing but Good of the Dead . As I have carefully obferved ...
... Town with great Pomp and Ceremony , in order to be buried with his Anceflors at the Peak . It is a Maxim in Morality , That we are to fpeak nothing but Truth of the Living , nothing but Good of the Dead . As I have carefully obferved ...
Page 17
... , he has fuch cogent Reasons to offer to your Court , that Ruffs and Fardin- gals are infeparable , that he questions not but two • Thirds • Thirds of the greatest Beauties about Town will have No 118 . 17 The TATLER .
... , he has fuch cogent Reasons to offer to your Court , that Ruffs and Fardin- gals are infeparable , that he questions not but two • Thirds • Thirds of the greatest Beauties about Town will have No 118 . 17 The TATLER .
Page 18
Sir Richard Steele. • Thirds of the greatest Beauties about Town will have Cambrick Collars on their Necks before the End of Eafter Term next . He further fays , That the Defign of our Great Grandmothers in this Petticoat , was to appear ...
Sir Richard Steele. • Thirds of the greatest Beauties about Town will have Cambrick Collars on their Necks before the End of Eafter Term next . He further fays , That the Defign of our Great Grandmothers in this Petticoat , was to appear ...
Page 31
... Town . She chanced to lose a Parrot laft Year , which , to tell you truly , brought me into her Service ; for the turned off her Woman upon it , who had lived with her ten Years , becaufe fhe neglected to give him Water , though every ...
... Town . She chanced to lose a Parrot laft Year , which , to tell you truly , brought me into her Service ; for the turned off her Woman upon it , who had lived with her ten Years , becaufe fhe neglected to give him Water , though every ...
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admired Affembly afked agreeable antient appear arife beautiful becauſe beft Bickerstaff Bufinefs caft Cenfor Circumftances Company confefs confider Confideration Converfation Correfpondents defcribed deferve Defign defired Difcourfe difcovered Drefs Eyes fafe faid fame fays feems feen felf felves fent feveral fhall fhew fhort fhould fince firft fome fomething foon Fortune fpeak Friend ftand ftill fuch fure Gentleman give greateſt herſelf himſelf Honour Houfe Houſe Hufband Humour Inftances Inftrument itſelf juft Lady laft lefs Letter likewife live look Love Mankind Manner Marriage Mind moft moſt muft muſt myfelf Nature neceffary never Number obferve Occafion ourſelves paffed Paffion Perfons Petticoat Place pleafed Pleafure pleaſed Poet Poffeffion poffible prefent proper publick racter raiſe Reafon received Refpect reprefented Senfe ſhall ſhe Sheer-Lane Sifter Tatler thefe themſelves theſe Thing thofe thoſe thought tion ufually uſed Vifit Virgil Virtue whofe whole Wife World
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Page 267 - with a real Underftanding why no Body was willing to play with me; I remember I went into the Room where his Body lay, and my Mother fat weeping alone by it. I had my Battle • dore in my Hand, and fell a beating the Coffin, and calling Papa; for, I- know not how, I had
Page 267 - roe in her Embraces, and told me in a Flood of Tears, Papa could not hear me, and would play with me no more, for they were going to put him under Ground, whence he could never come to us again. She was a very beautiful Woman, of a noble Spirit, and there was a Dignity in her Grief
Page 267 - my very Soul, and has made Pity the Weaknefs of my Heart ever fince. The Mind in Infancy is, methinks, like the Body in Embryo, and receives Impreffions fo forcible, that they are as hard to be removed by Reafon, as any Mark with which a Child is
Page 267 - me no more, for they were going to put him under Ground, whence he could never come to us again. She was a very beautiful Woman, of a noble Spirit, and there was a Dignity in her Grief amidft all the Wildnefs of her Tranfport, which, methought,
Page 267 - WE that are very old, are better able to remember Things which befel us in our diftant Youth, than the Paffages of later Days. For this Reafon, it is that the Companions of my ftrong and vigorous Years prefent themfelves more immediately to me in this
Page 64 - we old Men know you are. THE greateft Wit of our Company, next to myfelf, is a Bencher of the neighbouring Inn, who in his Youth frequented the Ordinaries about Charing-Crofs, and pretends to have been intimate with Jack Ogle. He has about ten Diftichs of
Page 27 - Path which they were engaged in, again led them into the Wood. The feveral Alleys of thefe Wanderers had their particular Ornaments: One of them I could not but take Notice of in the Walk of the mifchievous Pretenders to Politicks, which had at every Turn the Figure of a Perfon, whom by the
Page 28 - open for our Reception. We were led through an hundred Iron Doors before we entered the Temple. At the upper End of it fat the God of Avarice, with a long filthy Beard, and a meagre fiarved Countenance, inclofed with Heaps of Ingots, and Pyramids of Money, but half naked and
Page 284 - for his Client, and fo favourably received by the Court, that he went on with great Fluency to inform the Bench, That he humbly hoped they would not let the Merit of the Caufe fuffer by the Youth and Inexperience of the Pleader, that in all Things he fubmitted to their Candour; and modeftly