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" I gave laws, was regulated in the following manner : By sunrise we all assembled in our common apartment, the fire being previously kindled by the servant ; after we had saluted each other with proper ceremony, (for I always thought fit to keep up some... "
Vicar of Wakefield - Page 20
by Oliver Goldsmith - 1901 - 222 pages
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Goethe's Hermann und Dorothea

Johann Wolfgang von Goethe - 1899 - 268 pages
...Goldsmith, Vicar of Wakefield, ch. iv : " After we had saluled each other with proper ceremony — for I always thought fit to keep up some mechanical forms...gratitude to that Being who gave us another day." 1. 46. bes îïïorgens, each morning; adverbial gen. — !Knird)en, curtsies. 1. 47. Segensroünfфe,...
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Studies in English and American Literature

Goodloe Harper Bell - American literature - 1900 - 612 pages
...being previously kindled by the servant. After we had saluted each other with proper ceremony (for I always thought fit to keep up some mechanical forms...son and I went to pursue our usual industry abroad, vvhile my wife and daughters employed themselves in providing breakfast, which was always ready at...
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Vicar of Wakefield

Oliver Goldsmith - Clergy - 1900 - 230 pages
...the place. servant. After we had saluted each other with proper ceremony, for I always thought lit to keep up some mechanical ' forms of good breeding,...gave us another day. This duty being performed, my sou and I went to pursue our usual industry abroad, while my wife and daughters employed themselves...
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The New McGuffey Fifth Reader

William Holmes McGuffey - Readers - 1901 - 376 pages
...being previously kindled by the servant. After we had saluted each other with proper ceremony — for I always thought fit to keep up some mechanical forms...gratitude to that Being who gave us another day. This duty 100 being performed, my son and I went to pursue our usual industry abroad, while my wife and daughters...
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Composition and Rhetoric for Schools, Volume 1

Robert Herrick, Lindsay Todd Damon - English language - 1902 - 444 pages
...being previously kindled by the servant. After we had saluted each other with proper ceremony—for I always thought fit to keep up some mechanical forms...good breeding, without which freedom ever destroys friendship—we all bent in gratitude to that Being who gave us another day. This duty being performed,...
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Composition and Rhetoric for Schools, Volume 1

Robert Herrick, Lindsay Todd Damon - English language - 1902 - 444 pages
...being previously kindled by the servant. After we had saluted each other with proper ceremony — for I always thought fit to keep up some mechanical forms of good breeding, without wyhich freedom ever destroys friendship — we all bent in __ gratitude to that Being who gave us another...
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Goethe's Hermann und Dorothea: with introduction and notes

Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, James Taft Hatfield - 1898 - 384 pages
...Goldsmith, Vicar of Wakefield, ch. iv : " After we had saluted each other with proper ceremony — for I always thought fit to keep up some mechanical forms...gratitude to that Being who gave us another day." 1. 46. bes ïïïorgens, each morning; adverbial gen. — Knijdjeit, curtsies. 1. 47. Segensroiinfcfye,...
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An Exposition of the Bible: A Series of Expositions Covering All ..., Volume 5

Marcus Dods, Robert Alexander Watson, Frederic William Farrar - Bible - 1903 - 938 pages
...devotion as well as show it in our life. He was one of the wisest of English writers who said, " I always thought fit to keep up some mechanical forms of good breeding (in my family), without which freedom ever destroys friendship." Precisely so, he who omits the outward...
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The British classical authors: with biographical notices. On the basis of a ...

Ludwig Herrig - English literature - 1906 - 844 pages
...previously kindled by the servant After we had saluted each 70 other with proper ceremony — for I always thought fit to keep up some mechanical forms...ever destroys friendship — we all bent in gratitude 76 to that Being who gave us another day. This duty being performed, my son and I went to pursue our...
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Goldsmith's The Vicar of Wakefield

Oliver Goldsmith - Abduction - 1911 - 236 pages
...(Page 26.) "The temper of a woman is generally formed from the turn of her features." (Page 26.) "I always thought fit to keep up some mechanical forms...good breeding, without which freedom ever destroys friendships." (Page 39.) "Disproportioned friendships ever terminate in disgust." (Page45.) "That virtue...
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