| English literature - 1803 - 752 pages
...diflrufts, being all of your own making, are more immoveablc, than if there were fome real ground fur them. Our aunts and grandmothers always tell us, that...when they are ill-ufed. 'Twas a kind of paradox I cou Id never believe: experience has taught me the truih of it. You are the firlt 1 ever had a cor.... | |
| Books - 1804 - 994 pages
...fancy ; and your distrusts being all of your own making, are more immovable than if there were some real ground for them. Our aunts and grandmothers always tell us, that men are a sort of animals, that ¡fever they are constant, 'tis only where they are ill used. Twas a kind of... | |
| 1804 - 552 pages
...fancy ; and your distrusts, being all of your own making, are more immoveable than if there were some real ground for them. Our aunts and grandmothers always tell us, that ram are a sort of animals, that if ever they are constant, 'tis only where they are ill used. 'Twas... | |
| Lady Mary Wortley Montagu - 1817 - 366 pages
...fancy ; and your distrusts being all of your own making, are more immoveable than if there were some real ground for them. Our aunts and grandmothers always tell us that men are a sort of animals, that if ever they are constant, 'tis only where they are ill used. Twas a kind of... | |
| British prose literature - 1821 - 396 pages
...fancy ; and your distrusts being all of your own making, are more immoveable than if there were some real ground for them. Our aunts and grandmothers always tell us that men are a sort of animals, that if ever they are constant, it is only where they are ill used. It was a kind... | |
| lady Mary Wortley Montagu - 1825 - 352 pages
...fancy ; and your distrusts being all of your own making, are more immoveable than if there were some real ground for them. Our aunts and grandmothers always tell us that men are a sort of animals/that if ever they are constant, it is only where they are ill used. It was a kind of... | |
| Lady Mary Wortley Montagu - Authors, English - 1837 - 430 pages
...fancy; and your distrusts being all of your own making, are more immovable than if there were some real ground for them. Our aunts and grandmothers always tell us that men are a sort of animals, that if ever they are constant, 'tis only where they are ill used. 'Twas a kind of... | |
| Lady Mary Wortley Montagu - Authors, English - 1837 - 512 pages
...fancy ; and your distrusts being all of your own making, are more immovable than if there were some real ground for them. Our aunts and grandmothers always tell us that men are a sort of animals, that if ever they are constant, 'tis only where they are ill used. 'Twas a kind of... | |
| Lord Francis Jeffrey Jeffrey - English essays - 1844 - 622 pages
...fancy ! and your distrusts, being all of your own making, are more immoveable than if there were some real ground for them. Our aunts and grandmothers always tell us, that men are a sort of animals, that if ever they are constant, 'tis only where they are ill-used. 'Twas a kind of... | |
| Lord Francis Jeffrey Jeffrey - Edinburgh review - 1846 - 754 pages
...fancy ! and your distrusts, being all of your own making, are more immoveable than if there were some real ground for them. Our aunts and grandmothers always tell us, that men are a sort of animals, that if ever they are constant, 'tis only where they are ill-used. 'Twas a kind of... | |
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